South Korea says martial law attempt undercut political momentum with Trump

South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Tae-yul said on Wednesday that President Yoon Suk Yeol’s short-lived hiss to impose martial legislation had created some limitations talking with the team of US President-elect Donald Trump and undercut all aspects’ political momentum.

At a rare joint info convention for international media, Cho and Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok sought to reassure Seoul’s allies and quiet market jitters for the explanation that martial legislation are attempting that disturbed the nation and triggered the largest political crisis in many years.

Cho said Seoul had constructed a network and conversation channels with Trump’s campaign that had been “stronger than these of any numerous country”, but the martial legislation elaborate undermined “the political momentum” between the two aspects.

“It is some distance correct that there were some disruptions with conversation right throughout the final two weeks attributable to this effort,” Cho said.