Junotane

My name is Jeffrey Robertson, aka Junotane. On this site, I write on foreign policy, diplomacy and the Korean Peninsula.

As an advisory warning, it’s direct, no holds barred, cutting commentary from in-country. It may offend. There’s no government baloney, no corporate cream, and no thinktank spruiking. Just free-thinking insight - commentary, analysis and fiction.

From here you can head on over to read About Junotane, including subscriptions and contact details; or you can head straight to the Writing section where you will find Analysis, Commentary, and Fiction on the Korean Peninsula and the the region.

Thanks for visiting and remember: be thankful, be nice, and help people - life is short :)

Australia, Korea, and the rise and fall of middle powers
Australia, Korea, and the rise and fall of middle powers

Washington’s build-up toward possible military action in Venezuela and Iran has attracted concern that the attacks are part of an irreversible decline. For its distant middle power partners, this raises a question: must middle powers fall when their patron does?

2025 10 06

South Korea’s caution on Iran
South Korea’s caution on Iran

Just last month in New York, South Korea’s Foreign Minister Cho Hyun met with Seyed Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister. The meeting, held on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, came at a delicate moment.

2025 10 03

South Korea’s anti-China protests
South Korea’s anti-China protests

This week, South Korean authorities expressed concern regarding the potential impact of anti-China protests during APEC. Anti-China sentiment is today a regular feature at political demonstrations in Seoul and has grown substantially with the growth of extreme right sentiment on social media. Both Beijing and Seoul are concerned.

2025 10 01

Another Trump-Kim summit? Please no!
Another Trump-Kim summit? Please no!

A long time ago, in a university far, far away, I spent late evenings reading dusty and dated international relations texts.

2025 09 30

Caught in a rip: South Korea and the Taiwan question
Caught in a rip: South Korea and the Taiwan question

During the Biden Administration and now under the second Trump Administration, South Korea’s strategists have had their feet washed off the strategic sandbar and are caught in a rip.

2025 09 22

South Korea’s Sunshine Policy: Rocky dreams, Death Wish reality?
South Korea’s Sunshine Policy: Rocky dreams, Death Wish reality?

The Lee Administration seems hopeful that there’s purpose in securing a summit with North Korea. Let’s call it a Sunshine Policy sequel.

2025 09 16

Misunderstanding Seoul in Washington
Misunderstanding Seoul in Washington

John Mearsheimer makes a lot of sense to me. His work is easy to follow and his ability to communicate to an audience unparalleled. But when talking about the Korean Peninsula, he tends to leave a lot out.

2025 09 13

Korea shouldn’t celebrate on tariffs just yet
Korea shouldn’t celebrate on tariffs just yet

Sould secured a 15% cap on tariffs but look closer, and the foundation crumbles. There is no signed agreement. No formal declaration. No U.S. legal record. And already, the two sides are offering conflicting interpretations of what, exactly, was agreed to.

2025 08 03

Seoul’s pragmatic Palestine dance
Seoul’s pragmatic Palestine dance

Just yesterday, the head of the table said grace. He went beyond acknowledgement and thanks for the food to include a prayer for the strength and protection of the State of Israel. Before my first mouthful (and I eat real fast), a close friend raised her voice to say that we should all be praying for the Palestinian people.

2025 08 02

Foreign policy and neutral analysis online
Foreign policy and neutral analysis online

Two pieces put out this week invited scorn. The first, “South Korea’s special envoys for… what exactly???”, used diplomatic tradition to criticize the sending of special envoys at the beginning of a presidential administration, invited praise from the right, and anger from the left. The second, “The challenges to Korean conservatism”, used American debates and local knowledge to criticize the ongoing failure to reform the conservative movement in Korea, invited praise from the left and anger from the right. I’m a born charmer.

2025 07 31