Korean Embassy in the US Undergoes Major Revamp: New Appointments and Their Impact on North American Diplomacy
Daniel Kim Views
Translation result.
The Foreign Ministry is overhauling its North America diplomatic lineup, replacing the economic and public diplomacy minister-counselors at the Korean Embassy in Washington and appointing a new director-general for the North American Affairs Bureau at ministry headquarters.
On the 29th, diplomatic sources said the ministry plans to replace the embassy’s minister-counselor posts for economic affairs and public diplomacy. Kim Sun-young, director of the Bilateral Economic Diplomacy Bureau, was named minister-counselor for economic affairs, and Yoon Joo-seok, director of the Consular Security Bureau, was appointed minister-counselor for public diplomacy. Both are expected to assume their posts next month. A successor to the vacant political affairs minister-counselor position is also expected to be appointed shortly.
Ahn Se-ryeong, who served as the embassy’s minister-counselor for economic affairs, and Kim Hak-jo, the outgoing minister-counselor for public diplomacy, will return to Seoul to take on senior roles at the ministry’s headquarters.
The ministry has also changed the director-general of the North American Affairs Bureau. It appointed Lee Won-woo, a senior official in the North America Bureau, as the new director-general. Nam Jin, a senior official in the Northeast and Central Asia Bureau, will lead that bureau, and Park Hyung-chul, a senior official in the European Bureau, has been named director of the European Bureau. Oh Jin-hee, a senior official in the Asia-Pacific Bureau, will head the Public Culture and Diplomacy Bureau, and Kim Seok-woo, a senior official in the Bilateral Economic Diplomacy Bureau, will lead that bureau.
A Foreign Ministry official said the changes reflect routine personnel rotations after extended tenures for many of the officials involved. The ministry had effectively suspended regular personnel moves since former President Yoon Seok-yeol declared martial law on Dec. 3, 2024.
The ministry also carried out changes to several major diplomatic postings. It appointed Kwon Hyuk-woon, currently ambassador to Senegal, as ambassador to France; Kim Jang-hyun, minister at the embassy in Japan, as ambassador to Kuwait; Yoon Seong-mi, former chair of the 2025 APEC Senior Officials’ Meeting, as ambassador to Geneva; Kang Seok-hee, Gyeongsangbuk-do’s international relations envoy, as consul general in Fukuoka; and Kim Sang-ho, former mayor of Hanam, Gyeonggi Province, as consul general in New York.
- Customers who quit Coupang lost money… the Fair Trade Commission overhauled abusive contract terms [Pick Economy]
- South Korea faces rising depression and anxiety — spent more than 1 trillion KRW (approximately 750 million USD) on mental health treatment
- New credit loans exempt from annual-income cap… relief for vulnerable borrowers
- Will KOSPI and KOSDAQ keep rallying? With ‘Super Week’ ahead, investors watch South Korea’s market direction [Weekly Market Outlook]
- Despite blocking the Strait of Hormuz, Iran rolled out a ‘three-step’ plan… Trump says he won’t meet unless Iran abandons its nuclear program [Global Morning Briefing]
- Families of the Dec. 29 disaster blame Boeing for structural defects and demand a full investigation [Incident Plus]
- OpenAI missed revenue targets, raising red flags over its ability to cover investment costs
- Plan to cut oil-based plastics by 30% by 2030 and expand use of recycled feedstock [Pick Economy]
- Search for Jensen Huang’s eldest daughter sparks a 7.7% stock surge… investors eye Nvidia’s physical-AI partnership [ZupZup Report]
- Trump rejects a ‘three-step’ peace plan… Iran opens an account to collect tolls for Hormuz passage [Global Morning Briefing]











Most Commented