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Hot Mic Mishap Shakes UN

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol gathered international attention when he made a scathing comment on Biden’s pledge to increase U.S. contributions to the U.N. Global Fund. The comment was made while Yoon’s microphone was still activated. President Yoon dismissed Biden’s promise to raise funding and railed against Biden’s inability to control the U.S. Congress. Yoon’s criticism of Biden is just the latest example of the lack of confidence foreign leaders have for the U.S. President.


FOX NEWS: South Korean President Yoon’s profane reaction to Biden speech caught on hot mic

Timothy H.J. Nerozzi; September 22, 2022

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol went viral for his hot mic reaction to President Biden’s remarks at the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday.

Yoon, who took office in May, reacted to Biden’s pledge to increase the U.S. contribution to the U.N. Global Fund, which would require congressional approval.

“How could Biden not lose damn face if these f—ers do not pass it in Congress?” Yoon asked his aides on a hot mic Wednesday, according to the South China Morning Post.

Biden has repeated the talking point that America has been respected again on the world stage since his election in 2020. 

Yoon’s comments raised concern in his home country — strong U.S.-Korean relations are pivotal for mutual defense in the East Asian region.

“He wasn’t speaking publicly on the stage but in passing, and although I don’t know who recorded it and how, I actually think it should be verified,” a South Korean official told reporters afterward, according to Yonhap.

“I think it’s highly inappropriate to draw a link between private remarks and diplomatic accomplishments,” the official added, referring to criticism that Yoon had created a diplomatic disaster. “It’s quite regrettable that a diplomatic disaster is being talked about over something like that when he is doing everything to complete a demanding schedule in the national interest of the Republic of Korea.”

U.S., South Korean and Japanese military forces cooperated last month in a trilateral missile defense exercise — the first formal cooperation of its kind since December 2017. The drills began Aug. 8 and ran through Sunday.

The exercise served to reassure the allied nations of their individual and joint commitments to mutual defense. Notably, the cooperation between South Korea and Japan could serve to ease cultural tensions that have lingered in recent years.

Photo: Evan Vucci/AP Photo

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