In the shadow of growing North Korean threats, South Korea needs to reform its intelligence apparatus to restore public confidence while enhancing the country’s intelligence capacity.
A series of intelligence scandals has plagued South Korea since the fall of 2012, exposing the risk of intelligence failure, the politicisation of intelligence and direct intervention by intelligence agencies in domestic politics. In its latest report, Risks of Intelligence Pathologies in South Korea, the International Crisis Group examines measures needed to reduce those vulnerabilities and explains why failure or manipulation of intelligence in South Korea could have serious consequences for security on the peninsula and beyond.
The report’s major findings
and recommendations are:
- With both
Koreas ramping up their military capabilities, sound intelligence is
crucial to manage tensions and reduce the risk of conflict, or to respond
effectively if a crisis erupts. Should intelligence failure lead to
military conflict, the costs would be enormous. Due to South Korea’s
defence treaty with the U.S., it would trigger immediate U.S. involvement.
A similar treaty between North Korea and China could elicit Chinese
military intervention. Moreover, sound intelligence is needed for
non-conflict scenarios, such as the North’s collapse or a humanitarian
crisis.
- Four broad
reforms, independently identified by the main opposition party and the
former National Intelligence Service (NIS) director, need to be
implemented: 1) ending the embedding of NIS officers in South Korean
institutions such as political parties, the legislature, ministries and
media firms; 2) establishing greater oversight to ensure intelligence
officers obey the law; 3) providing greater protection for
whistle-blowers; and 4) restricting cyberspace operations to North Korean
entities and not South Korean citizens or institutions.
- These
should be complemented by institutional reforms. Criminal investigation
powers held by the NIS should be transferred to the Supreme Prosecutors
Office. NIS directors should receive confirmation from the National
Assembly’s Intelligence Committee following presidential nomination. Consideration
could be given to forming special courts to handle sensitive national
security cases while ensuring appropriate respect for due process.
“South Korea’s ability to use tactical intelligence will be vitally important during a crisis or escalation. But it is no less important for other scenarios”, says Daniel Pinkston, Deputy North East Asia Project Director. “In case of a North Korean state collapse and a sudden unification, Seoul would have to make quick decisions to prevent a rapid deterioration of the situation”.
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