South Korean outrage grows as Washington courts Korean capital without offering legal protections for workers
The detention of 332 South Koreans during a U.S. immigration raid at a Hyundai-LG battery plant site in Georgia last week has reignited scrutiny of how the U.S. treats Korean labor, investment and sovereignty in an era shaped by protectionism and immigration politics.
The incident, which led to viral images of South Korean engineers and technicians chained by U.S. authorities, has challenged perceptions of alliance reliability, strained business confidence and exposed the limited influence Seoul holds when legal enforcement collides with diplomatic goodwill.
The detention of 332 South Koreans during a U.S. immigration raid at a Hyundai-LG battery plant site in Georgia last week has reignited scrutiny of how the U.S. treats Korean labor, investment and sovereignty in an era shaped by protectionism and immigration politics.
The incident, which led to viral images of South Korean engineers and technicians chained by U.S. authorities, has challenged perceptions of alliance reliability, strained business confidence and exposed the limited influence Seoul holds when legal enforcement collides with diplomatic goodwill.
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