experts
Chung Min Lee
Senior Fellow, Asia Program

about


Chung Min Lee is a senior fellow in the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Prior to joining Carnegie, he taught for twenty years at the Graduate School of International Studies (GSIS) in Yonsei University in Seoul. Chung Min is a council member of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). From 2013 to 2016, he served as ambassador for national security affairs for South Korea, and from 2010 to 2011 as ambassador for international security affairs.

Chung Min works primarily on Asian security with a focus on Northeast Asia and the Korean Peninsula. Specifically, he closely follows defense planning, force structures, military strategies and weapons systems, domestic political trends, net assessment in conflict-prone areas, and political-military intelligence estimates in key Asian states. While his major area of expertise lies in Asian security and defense, Chung Min has been an avid follower of European political and security developments through his long-term association with the IISS. Chung Min received his BA in political science from Yonsei University in 1982 and his MALD and PhD from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in 1988.

He began his think tank career at the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis (1985-1988) in Cambridge, Massachusetts and worked at the Sejong Institute in Seoul (1989-1994) as a research fellow. He then moved to Tokyo’s National Institute for Defense Studies as a visiting fellow (1994-1995), and subsequently worked at the RAND Corporation as a policy analyst from 1995 to 1998. He also served as a visiting professor at the Graduate Research Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo (2004-2005) and at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore (2005-2007).

At Yonsei University, Chung Min served as dean of the GSIS, the Underwood International College, and the Division of International Exchange and Education. When he was in Korea, Chung Min served on various advisory panels including the president’s foreign policy advisory council, the national security council secretariat, the ministry of defense, and the ministry of foreign affairs.

Since the late 1980s, Chung Min has written extensively on Asian and Korean security issues primarily in English but also in Korean. His latest book, Fault Lines in a Rising Asia, was published by Carnegie in 2016 and he is currently working on a book on North Korea’s political and military developments. Chung Min has conducted extensive interviews with major media groups such as CNN and BBC and is a contributing columnist in the global opinions section of the Washington Post. He has also written a number of op-eds for the Wall Street Journal. Chung Min has lived in ten countries including Korea, United States, Japan, Uganda, Germany, France, Indonesia, Republic of Congo, and Singapore.


affiliations
education
PhD, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University MALD, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University BA, Yonsei University
languages
English, Korean, Spanish

All work from Chung Min Lee

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65 Results
Protesters take part in a demonstration against the South Korean President on December 05, 2024 in Seoul, South Korea.
article
Yoon’s Failed Political Coup and South Korea’s Mounting Crisis

Yoon’s martial law decree lasted only three hours, but the ramifications for his political future and the country’s political divide will go on much longer.

· December 5, 2024
U.S.-South Korea technology alliance
paper
Building a New U.S.-Korea Technology Alliance: Strategies and Policies in an Entangled World

As the United States and the ROK prepare to celebrate the seventy-fifth anniversary of their security and defense alliance in 2025, forging a durable technology alliance is going to become an increasingly critical element of their cooperation.

· November 13, 2024
event
The Future of Korean Power: Is More With Less Possible?
October 30, 2024

Korean Power (K-Power)—a new comprehensive approach to tackling South Korea’s challenges through economic, technological, military, and cultural power—has been on the rise over the past 20 years, dominated by advanced manufacturing, high-tech exports, and increasingly sophisticated military power.

  • +1
paper
The Future of K-Power: What South Korea Must Do After Peaking

South Korea’s economic growth will almost certainly slow over the coming decades—but writing off the country’s potential would be a mistake.

· August 22, 2024
article
The Hollowing Out of Kim Jong Un’s North Korea

Despite North Korea’s presence on the world stage with its nuclear weapons, the Kim dynasty is slowly and irreversibly breaking down.

· April 29, 2024
article
Yoon’s Next Three Long Years

In South Korea’s recent assembly election, the opposition won hands down—but President Yoon Suk-yeol’s battle is just beginning.

· April 15, 2024
article
Why California and South Korea Need to Build Joint Soft Power Plus

In matters ranging from trade, economy, and climate change to entertainment and education, California and South Korea are uniquely situated for strong collaboration to help both partners adapt to the challenges of the twenty-first century.

· November 8, 2023
event
Rethinking South Korea’s Security
December 15, 2022

As South Korea faces a growing spectrum of security threats, Seoul must conduct a comprehensive national security review including the enhancement of economic and technology expertise, a bottom-up review including the intelligence community, and the configuration of optimal defense capabilities.

  • +2
  • Victor Cha
  • Gordon Flake
  • Jina Kim
  • Chung Min Lee
  • Hideshi Tokuchi
event
The Future of Korean Competitiveness
December 9, 2022

Carnegie’s Chung Min Lee will be joined by Lee Jeung-un, Hana Anderson, Jacob Feldgoise, and Juhern Kim to discuss their new compendium, How South Korea Is Honing a Competitive Edge.

  • +2
research
Korea Net Assessment 2022: Shoring Up South Korea’s National Security Apparatus

Facing growing geopolitical tensions from all sides, South Korea needs an overhaul of its national security protocol.

· December 5, 2022