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US - S. Korean Beef deal on the rocks?

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    US - S. Korean Beef deal on the rocks?

    Wheels coming off U.S.-South Korean beef deal

    Posted by Truth About Trade & Technology
    Thursday, 05 June 2008
    Brownfield Ag Network
    by Peter Shinn
    Original Publish Date: June 4, 2008

    Anyone who thought the U.S. had a deal with South
    Korea over beef may well be mistaken. It now
    appears political pressure in South Korea may
    unravel a pact initially announced in April.

    The U.S.-South Korean beef deal, which was
    supposed to have taken effect Tuesday, is now in a
    state of flux, as daily street protests in Seoul
    against the agreement are threatening to de-rail it
    completely. South Korean President Lee Myung-
    bak's approval rating is between 20% and 30% and
    his government is asking if the U.S. would agree to
    ship only beef from cattle 30 months of age and
    younger.

    On April 1st, South Korean Ambassador Lee Tae-
    sik assured Brownfield during a joint press
    conference with Nebraska Governor Dave Heineman
    in Omaha that a new deal on beef would comply
    with World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)
    guidelines. So what’s happened since?

    John Reddington is Vice President of International
    Trade for the American Meat Institute (AMI). He told
    Brownfield the seeds of the current debacle were
    sown through Internet rumors spread by a pair of
    South Korean teenagers.

    "This started with a couple of high school bloggers
    who used misinformation that was picked up by
    other school kids, by the school teachers' union,"
    Reddington said.

    Among the inaccuracies that were swiftly
    disseminated were stories that South Korean's are
    genetically predisposed to contract variant
    Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD), the human form
    of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), and
    that U.S. consumers refuse to eat American beef.
    Those falsehoods, according to Reddington, were
    then seized upon by opponents of the pending U.S.
    – South Korean free trade agreement and a mass-
    movement developed.

    So will the U.S. renegotiate the beef deal?
    Reddington said AMI is still waiting to hear from
    USDA. And in the meantime, as South Korea’s ban
    on U.S. beef moves through its fifth year,
    Reddington had this sentiment.

    "It's frustrating to everybody," he sighed. "We're just
    beside ourselves with frustration."

    The bigger issue may be the pending U.S.-Korea
    Free Trade Agreement (FTA). And if the wheels do
    come of the U.S.-South Korean beef deal, Nebraska
    Democratic Senator Ben Nelson told Brownfield
    Congressional approval of the FTA is out of the
    question.

    "The answer is no," Nelson said. "In the absence of
    a functioning agreement regarding the full
    importation of U.S. beef under the OIE guidelines,
    there is no way the trade agreement is going to be
    approved. It just can't happen."

    Nelson added that he hates to tell anyone "he told
    them so." But Nelson also pointed out he publicly
    warned back in April against getting too excited
    about any so-called deal on beef with South Korea
    until such a deal was actually in place and working
    for a while.
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