North Korea: Dealing with the “Rocket Man” via Negotiation, not Threats


September 20, 2017

North Korea: Dealing with the “Rocket Man”via Negotiation, not Threats

by Editorial Board, East Asia Forum

http://www.eastasiaforum.org

Image result for kim jong un and trump

War? “Look at the Map”, says French President Emmanuel Macron in an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour at United Nations, New York

The North Korean nuclear threat has ratcheted up in recent months, following new rounds of missile and nuclear weapons tests by Pyongyang. In July, North Korea undertook two tests of an intercontinental-range ballistic missile (ICBM). Then on 3 September, it undertook its sixth nuclear test of a new thermonuclear bomb designed to be used with its ICBMs. US President Donald Trump responded to the ICBM tests by promising to deliver ‘fire and fury’ if North Korea again threatened the United States, to which North Korea responded in turn by threatening to deploy missiles into the seas near US military bases in Guam. And in the midst of all this, Pyongyang continued to unnerve the Japanese government and population by launching two ballistic missiles into the seas beyond the island of Hokkaido.

Image result for kim jong un and trump

The “Rocket Man” says to President Donald Trump: “Show me some respect. I am the leader of North Korea,an independent and sovereign nation. My duty is to protect my people from warmongers like you and to act in the best interest of my country. Aren’t you doing the same for your people when you say to the world, “America First”?

North Korea’s most recent tests and launches are significant. Like it or not, they demonstrate that the regime has crossed the technical threshold of being able to target the continental United States — as well as US allies in Asia — potentially with a nuclear warhead.

Throughout the growing crisis, the Trump administration — along with most of the international community — has viewed China as the key player in bringing North Korea to heel. This perception of China’s special leverage stems from China’s decades-old treaty of friendship and mutual assistance with the North Korean regime and, even more importantly, the fact that around 90 per cent of North Korean trade now takes place with or through China. Given North Korea’s near total dependence on China for its international economic ties, the United States and others have consistently called for China to tighten economic sanctions.

China had resisted tightening sanctions on North Korea for fear that economic pressure could prompt massive inflows of refugees into China’s Northeast, or even the collapse of the North Korean regime. Although North Korea remains China’s most troublesome and unpredictable neighbour, it also serves as a strategic ‘buffer’ between China and US forces stationed in Japan and South Korea.

Yet a combination of growing international pressure, and Beijing’s own frustration with Pyongyang over its unwelcome nuclear program, has made China more willing to apply sanctions and other economic measures. In February, in the wake of North Korea’s test of a short-range missile into the Sea of Japan, and the assassination in Malaysia of Kim Jong-un’s half-brother, China announced it was suspending coal imports from North Korea for the remainder of 2017. More significantly, on 11 September China (and Russia) agreed to a new round of UN Security Council sanctions which will ban North Korean textile exports, freeze its imports of crude oil at current levels and introduce a cap on its imports of refined petroleum. These are the most far-reaching sanctions that have so far been applied to North Korea. In addition, Chinese state-run banks have begun to ban North Koreans from opening new accounts and to suspend transactions on accounts already held by North Koreans.

Yet the key problem in all of this is that there is little evidence that sanctions applied in the past have worked in checking North Korea’s nuclear program. Most regional analysts are fairly pessimistic that even this latest round of sanctions will have much effect on the regime’s nuclear development plans.

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In our two lead pieces this week, Chen Dongxiao of the Shanghai Institute for International Studies, and Jia Qingguo of Peking University, underscore the urgent need for new thinking in managing the North Korean nuclear issue. Both highlight diplomatic engagement, with Pyongyang and among other key states in the region, as the only way forward.

Chen suggests that it is futile to hope that increased Chinese pressure will somehow encourage North Korea to relinquish its nuclear weapons. He underlines Pyongyang’s lack of regard for China’s interests to date, suggesting that, ‘Pyongyang will never shy away from pressing for more concessions by leveraging its nuclear weapons program, even at the expense of China’s national security interests and overall regional stability’.

Instead, the region must find new diplomatic and economic incentives to encourage Pyongyang to come back to the negotiating table. As a first step, both authors nominate China’s ‘two suspensions’ proposal as a way to reduce the dangerous tensions between Pyongyang and Washington. This proposal would see ‘North Korea…suspend nuclear and missile tests in exchange for suspension of joint US-South Korea military exercises’, explains Jia.

As a second step, Jia calls on Beijing to begin active ‘contingency planning’ talks with Washington and Seoul. In the past, Beijing has been hesitant to take part in such talks, out of concern for the signals that this would send to Pyongyang. Jia and Chen carry clear messages for Pyongyang and Washington. Given the gravity of the situation and the risk that North Korea may continue to ignore Beijing’s diplomatic efforts, it is now time for China to put aside its hesitation and engage in serious talks with Washington and Seoul, Jia argues.

Contingency planning talks should cover a range of critical issues including: who would control North Korea’s nuclear weapons arsenal in the event of a collapse of the regime; how to deal with the North Korean refugee problem; who would be responsible for restoring domestic order in North Korea in the event of a crisis; post-crisis political arrangements on the Korean Peninsula; and removal of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system when and if North Korea’s nuclear program has ended.

Each of these issues is a source of considerable anxiety in Beijing, and so far they’ve stymied closer regional cooperation on the North Korean nuclear issue. Indeed, these issues have, in Chen Dongxiao’s words, showcased the ‘deeply entrenched strategic suspicion’ between the US and China. Dialogue and negotiation on these questions may therefore help to alter the current impasse between China and the United States, and lessen Pyongyang’s ability to exploit the lack of unity among its neighbours.

As is now widely understood, both in Pyongyang and around the region, there are no good military options for resolving the North Korean nuclear issue. That will crucially require countries to get much better at talking to their adversaries and negotiating on fundamental, long-term political and security questions.

The EAF Editorial Board is comprised of Peter Drysdale, Shiro Armstrong, Ben Ascione, Amy King, Liam Gammon, Jillian Mowbray-Tsutsumi and Ben Hillman, and is located in the Crawford School of Public Policy in the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific.

18 thoughts on “North Korea: Dealing with the “Rocket Man” via Negotiation, not Threats

  1. The only success in negotiations with North Korea was the signing of the Armistice Agreement by the representatives of the three Military involved in the Korean War. Since then the South has made numerous efforts but to no avail. The last and most promising attempt was by President Kim Dae Jung with his ambitious Sunshine Policy.

    Both sides want reunification, but, on their terms. To be fair President Obama invested eight years trying to extend a hand of friendship. President Clinton even went as far as to send Secretary of State M Albright together with President Carter to North Korea.And this has been going on for 60 years with both sides playing on the emotional issue of Family Reunion. That generation will no longer provide an avenue because of the law of nature.

    Perhaps the solution lies in a Two-State solution with both sides giving up on reunification with the freedom to develop in the manner they want to.

  2. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein refuted the Bush-Bliar claim that Iraq possess WMD and paid with his life , destruction of his country and 300,000 victims of invasion and imperial occupation. Is Kim Jong Un going to make the same mistake? If Israel can threaten Iran with nuclear annihilation, why cannot North Korea have these weapons for self protection.

  3. ‘If Israel can threaten Iran with nuclear annihilation..’
    Actually it’s the other way around. But Iran would be secondary to nuking the 2 Holy Cities in the Hejaz, if there is another sneak attack like the ’73 Yom Kippur SNAFU. Nothing to lose when facing annihilation, is there? Furthermore, the Saudis, Jordanians and Turks are definitely more comfortable with an American-Israeli nuclear umbrella than a Russian-Iranian one.

    The so-called ‘Contingency Plan’ is a good idea, if a bit stale. Seoul and D.C already have theirs in place together with Tokyo. Beijing is a bit behind the curve, but will come around after their stage managed CCP-NC in Oct. Things like that, usually take a few years to resolve, but i think Taikor Xi has had it up to his nostrils with that delinquent, incontinent chubby cheeks. OBOR, risks ending up as NOMORE.

    USA will continue issuing bombastic threats, only to be replied with shriller and furrier ones from DPRK. All these only serve to improve my ‘belligerent’ grammar.

    As i said, the main strain is on PRC, not only South Korea, Japan and the US. Russia will be watching with glee, until Chubby presses the wrong button and sends missiles towards Irkutsk or Vladivostok.

    And if the US n Allies wanna strike militarily, the window will open briefly, in the midst of PRC’s Great Happening. THAAD will thus be expended and Seoul will be toast. Hmm.., I wonder why Gen Mattis doesn’t answer my calls?

    • Hey CLF, is there anything wrong with a sovereign nation who is a member of the UN wanting to arm itself for self defence against the hostilities of US. North Korea had at no time indicate it is in the game of attacking any enemy real or imaginary.

    • I wonder where Guam is?
      Didn’t Chubs intimate he will lob a coupla chubby missiles ‘off’ Anderson AFC, where the irritating B1B, B-2’s take-off from. And all the nice things he says about the American dogs-cats-animals? Or whup S.Korea by routinely shelling one of their islands? Fake news?

  4. I got a feeling that Trump will finally concede and gave the biggest concession to NK. Hahahaha! Make USA Shame again. Waiting for John Malott’s response

  5. The fierce and provocative rhetoric of Trump is aimed at N. Korea.
    The target is China.

    This runs parallel to the manipulated manner of the warring US to illegitimately and falsefully used WMD and terrorism as covers to initiate the Iraq War and regime change.

    Isis or Is was non-existence under Saddam Hussain rule. Like Iraq, N. Korea is not a threat to America or world peace. With tens of naval and military bases encircling N. Korea and neighbouring China, USA is the real theat.

    Jaw Jaw through direct negotiations is the real solution to world and regional peace .

    • Ah yes.., but DPRK is no Iraq. It’s a Hermitage, where sex is indiscriminate; and basketballs, grass or roots are favored foods for the proletariat.

      PRC ain’t as ‘powerful’ as they pretend. They worry cuz they are overstretched, from East Turkestan (Xinjiang) and Tibet facing the rowdy Indians – while being hemmed in by the East China Sea.

      Their Blue water fleet is still basically green and power projection is still confined within the First Island Chain. Only their subs can move beyond that and that’s why PLAN is mightily pissed off when Lil Dot allowed USN to base their P-8 Poseidon in Changi. Try as they might, the whole of the Indian Ocean is still within the cross hairs of Diego Garcia and Darwin. The Pacific is vast and that’s why Diaoyu-Senkaku Islands are essential. The fake news here is about ‘potential’ OnG reserves.

      Also the 9-dash claim is moot and their ‘best practices’ way to settle the issue is to talk tough, carrying a big-stick to intimidate the small futs. A more holistic approach is to offer ‘shares’ to the littoral states – which they won’t because they are the Middle Kingdom, ya?

      I’m no fan of destroying Pyongyang, but a great fan of the humor of Chubs KJ-U – whom some physicians think is suffering from ‘Roid Rage’ i.e steroid induced psychosis, due to his prolonged use of steroids for his gouty arthritis.. Ginseng doesn’t help, you see.

    • POTUS need to rev up the tensions so that the sanction stays and the North Koreans and the Iranians cannot compete with them on the arms sales market.

    • There is little doubt that China military power capability, ICT, science are still 10 – 40 years behind US, in varying levels.

      But China has shown it is genuinely aiming for peace and prosperity in sharing benefits and responsibilities with the rest of the world and for its people.

      Historical records had shown China had little or no territorial ambition.
      Self-defense and non-interference are the main-stay of its policy—essentially capitalist fundamentally conducted/ propelled with regimental communistic disciplines, taking full advantage of data base ICT with resources drawn from its human and land masses, history and culture, to improve the quality of its people lives and those it engaged in swift progress.

      The result is, lifting at least 600 million of its own people to above the poverty line in a short time (35 yrs), no country in history or the modern world, despite their socio-economic, industrial and scientific advancements developed nations, had ever achieved in such a short time.

      That, in itself, is an immeasurable contribution to the world and regional peace—truly deserves a Noble award. The region would have been swamped/burdened with huge economic refugees and untold human sufferings.

      Unless US and west truly understand and appreciate what China stands for, there will not be sustainable world peace, relatively.
      Or
      The US and the west are pretending and bent on profiting from it and in doingso , purposefully provoking and creating chaos/wars.

      “Rocket Man” is just another excuse for US, dragging in Japan and a few allies to go to war.

      Behind the warring rhetoric aiming at Pyongyang,
      what do US really want from China?

    • “Historical records had shown China had little or no territorial ambition.”
      C’mon, stop repeating rubbish. Go do some proper research okay?

      “..industrial and scientific advancements developed nations, had ever achieved in such a short time.”
      Yup. Reverse engineering at it’s best, but without the safeguards. So at what cost?

      “..what do US really want from China?”
      Cheap labor (not true nowadays), a socio-cultural-economic facsimile and free market access, among many other things.

      Sometime ago, a deputy minister from PRC asked “How do we counter the belligerent US attitude towards trade and monetary manipulation?”
      I answered:
      1. Stop playing around with your trade statistics. Follow WTO process accountability and auditing wholesale.
      2. Keep the monetary policy to yourself for the benefit of your people.
      3. Stop reverse engineering on an industrial scale and organically grow your own initiatives and abilities. Easier said than done.
      4. Stop building Disneyland and promoting Cinderellas/Donald Ducks.
      5. Environmental awareness.
      6. Deal with corruption from the highest to the lowest.
      7. Stop toilet activities in the open.

      Since i was a banana, he barely understood. But this is what is happening now. You see, some of us Huaren see PRC as it is, not as a Romantic ‘Middle’ Kingdom – but as a ‘Millstone around our neck’. Yet it remains the source of our ancestral genes.

    • Then, cut the “Millstone” around the necks of warring posturing, of those others who are affected, and put the items on the negotiating table.

      In return, ask what China really wants from US for a win win solution,and in sharing responsibility for the benefits of both, that would also be extended to the rest of the world.

      It is a matter of “trade off” , yah ?
      Most have concluded miitary action is not a good option.

  6. All options being on the table and not knowing or not daring to use the most lethal option and always threatening to respond with fire and fury. This is Donald Trump. He bullies all Muslim countries save for Pakistan, mainly because it has nuclear bombs. Hell may not have fury like Pakistan scorned or threatened. It can turn an enabler for many other Muslim countries to go nuclear. Iran becoming a nuclear-power is a matter of time. The US threatens to wipe out North Korea but fears the country retaliating with nuclear strikes on America’s mainland. Unless it strikes North Korea now and may be Iran later, America will only be seen as a barking dog, not a biting one. Without show of lethal strike against rising adversaries, America’s economic and military power may have just reached the beginning of decline.

    • American economic has now declined to a level where they depend on MO1’s EPF and Khazanah money to deveop their infrastucture and the sale of arms to keep them going. Making America great is only a slogan and with POTUS around only the dictators will help but with what?

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