South Korea names first civilian defence minister since 1961

President Lee works on his new cabinet while parliament holds review hearings on his nominees


Reuters June 23, 2025
Photo: Reuters

Listen to article

South Korea's President Lee Jae Myung named veteran lawmaker Ahn Gyu-back as the country's first civilian defence minister in 64 years on Monday, making good on a campaign promise made after December's martial law shook faith in the military.

Lee, who took office on June 4 after winning a snap election called when former President Yoon Suk Yeol was removed from office over the martial law attempt, also named 10 other cabinet ministers including former UN ambassador Cho Hyun as foreign minister and a North Korea diplomacy advocate, Chung Dong-young, as unification minister, his office said.

Read: Lee Jae-myung wins South Korea presidency months after martial law protest

Yoon's defence minister, Kim Yong-hyun, played a leading role in recommending and planning martial law, and is in jail amid an ongoing trial on insurrection charges.

The nominations, which do not require parliamentary approval but will be reviewed in at-times contentious hearings, come as Lee works to form a new cabinet and staff his office.

He took office the day after the election without a transition period, as Yoon was ousted in April for breaching the duties of his office with December's martial law declaration, which he reversed after parliament defied him.

Read more: President Yoon indicted for insurrection over martial law move in South Korea

Lee has worked with an acting prime minister and a cabinet carried over from Yoon's administration as he tackles the job of uniting a bitterly divided country and formulating a response to US President Donald Trump's new tariffs.

He has pledged to pursue diplomacy pillared on pragmatism with a focus on support for the export-heavy economy's global companies in the fields of automobiles, semiconductors and steelmaking.

Earlier this month, he named a long-term member of parliament and a key political ally, Kim Min-seok, to be his prime minister, a post that requires parliamentary approval.

Lee on Monday also nominated new ministers for agriculture, environment, labour and maritime affairs, among others.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ