SEOUL, Nov 18 — South Korean and US officials resumed talks today to narrow a US$4 billion (RM16.6 billion) gap in how much they want Seoul to pay for the cost of hosting the American military amid public protests of “highway robbery” against sharply increased US demands.

US President Donald Trump's demand that Seoul take on a greater share of the cost of stationing 28,500 US troops as deterrence against North Korea has tested South Korea's confidence in the security alliance with Washington.

Reports of Trump's US$5 billion demand earlier this month were greeted with shock in Seoul and today, progressive groups protested at the negotiation venue against what they said was “highway robbery” by “greedy” Americans.

South Korea's negotiating team is led by a former top financial regulator with experience in tough bargaining at times of crisis for Asia's fourth-largest economy, unprecedented in fronting a non-military expert in nearly 30 years of talks for the cost-sharing deals.

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James DeHart, the chief US negotiator, said there was a lot of work to do but sounded a note of optimism as he arrived in South Korea yesterday.

“I'm very confident that we will reach an agreement that is mutually acceptable, that both sides can support, and that will ultimately strengthen our great alliance,” he told reporters.

Today's meeting marked the third round of talks for him and the second for South Korea's Jeong Eun-bo, who was named to the job after the first round in September. He was previously vice chairman of the Financial Services Commission and a deputy finance minister.

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“His metier is budget, payment. I think the (South Korean) government decided that was the expertise needed this time,” said a person who had worked with Jeong, declining to be identified because of the sensitivity of the ongoing talks.

Jeong was involved in South Korea's debt negotiations with international financial agencies during the 1998 Asian financial crisis, and currency swap deals during the 2008 global financial crisis, the person said.

A South Korean lawmaker said earlier this month that US officials had demanded up to US$5 billion a year, more than five times the 1.04 trillion won (RM3.7 billion) Seoul agreed to pay this year.

South Korea “is a wealthy country and could and should pay more,” US Secretary of Defence Mark Esper said after his meeting with South Korea's Defence Minister Jeong Kyeong-doo last week.

Trump has long railed against what he says are inadequate contributions from allies towards defence costs. The United States is due to begin separate negotiations for new defence cost-sharing deals with Japan, Germany and Nato next year. — Reuters