• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • TP について/About
  • Topics/トピクス
    • Gender/ジェンダー
    • Globalisation/グローバリゼーション
    • Japan and Asia/日本とアジア
    • Japanese/日本語
    • Media/メディア
    • News/ニュース
    • Social Justice/社会正義
    • War and Empire/戦争&支配権力
    • Environment/環境
    • Other Stories/他の記事
  • Links/リンク
  • Contact

TokyoProgressive

Linking Progressives East and West Since 1997

東西のプログレッシブをつなぐ − 1997年設立  |  Linking Progressives East and West Since 1997

Crafting a More Effective Approach toward North Korea 

April 15, 2009 by tokyoprogressive Leave a Comment

 

JPRI Critique , Vol. XV, No. 2 (February 2009)
Crafting a More Effective Approach toward North Korea
by Peter M. Beck


Testimony
before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific and
Global Environment Hearing: “Smart Power: Remaking U.S. Foreign Policy
in North Korea,” February 12, 2009.

I feel very honored to have the opportunity to discuss with you today how to more effectively deal with North Korea.

As
with the economy, we face a much more grave and complex situation with
the North today than when President Bush took office eight years ago. I
wish I could offer you a magic formula for success with the North. What
I do know is what does not work: namely, the name-calling and
disengagement of the early Bush years, or the unconditional engagement
of the previous two South Korean governments. I believe we stand the
greatest chance of succeeding if we maintain a two-track (bilateral and
multilateral) approach that carefully balances carrots and sticks, in
close coordination with the other key players.

I would like to
share with you seven propositions that help define where we currently
stand. First, I am agnostic when it comes to whether the North is
prepared to completely give up its nuclear programs, materials and
weapons. Anyone who tells you with conviction what the North is or is
not prepared to do is revealing more about their own worldview than
about Pyongyang’s intentions. As time goes by and North Korea’s nuclear
arsenal grows, I grow increasingly pessimistic. However, that does not
mean that we should stop trying to engage the North. Alas, any new
nuclear deal with North Korea would indeed be, to borrow from Samuel
Johnson’s adage about remarriage, “the triumph of hope over
experience.”

Second, one thing I am reasonably certain of is
that the North will undertake one or more provocative acts in the
coming weeks and months. The rumor du jour is a long-range
missile launch. A second nuclear test cannot be ruled out either. Given
how poorly the previous missile and nuclear tests went, it is difficult
to say which system the North is more desperate to test. As a
Californian, I do not stay up at night worrying about North Korean
bombs raining down on my family and friends. A military skirmish with
the South cannot be ruled out, but is unlikely if for no other reason
than it would most likely provide further confirmation of the North’s
military inadequacies. Recent Washington Post hand-wringing
aside, we will have to see a provocation for what it is: a scream for
attention. Unfortunately, ignoring North Korea is not an option.

Third,
we must assume that Kim Jong-il has now made a full recovery from his
probable health problems last summer. Since he will soon turn 67 (or
68) and is not the picture of health, we must be prepared for a serious
disruption in any negotiations, given the underwhelming nature of his
three sons and (not coincidentally) lack of a clear succession plan. As
long as he is reasonably healthy, I find assertions about a divide
between hardliners and softliners in the North to be highly speculative
at best and at worst disingenuous. The notion of factions in a one-man
totalitarian system is almost absurd. That is not to say that the North
Korean military has not played a more prominent role of late. However,
I think this is most likely by design: The North is probably playing a
game of good cop, bad cop.

Fourth, having made several visits
over the past five years to the China-North Korea border, where I have
spoken with dozens of Chinese and North Koreans, the North is not “on
the precipice of famine.” There are two reasons for this. The North had
a decent harvest last fall and China is covering most of the shortfall.
That is not to say that there is sufficient food or that there are no
pockets of hunger, but wide-scale famine is not in the cards unless
Mother Nature strikes hard. That means that the modest humanitarian
assistance currently being provided by the United States (500,000
metric tons of grain) is unlikely to provide much in the way of
leverage over the North. The U.S. and the rest of the world have sought
to maintain the Ronald Reagan principle that “a hungry child knows no
politics,” but the reality is that Northern good behavior almost
invariably precedes increased assistance.

Fifth, while the
human rights situation in the North is as abysmal as ever, it must
invariably take a back seat to our national security interests. The
nuclear negotiations are too complex and difficult for the issue to
become a focal point right now. However, this is not to say that the
issue should be merely given lip service by our diplomats. I was
encouraged by Congresswoman Ros-Lehtinen and this committee’s efforts
to reauthorize the North Korean Human Rights Act last fall. It took a
while, but we have finally put our money where are mouths are by making
it easier for North Korean refugees to resettle in the United States.
Increasing Korean language radio broadcasts to the North is also a most
worthy endeavor. The folks working at VOA and RFA are most impressive.
I have listened to and evaluated their broadcasts. My biggest wish is
that the funds be more expeditiously allocated than they were in the
original act. I also hope that a full-time human rights envoy will be
appointed this time. Two can play the good cop/bad cop game.

My
sixth proposition is that Japan will continue to be part of the problem
rather than part of the solution when it comes to engaging North Korea,
despite being one of our most important allies. By allowing the
abduction of a handful of its citizens decades ago to dominate all
policy considerations when it comes to the North, Tokyo has become
irrelevant at the nuclear talks. More importantly, Japan took the
biggest carrot the world had to offer the North, billions of dollars in
developmental assistance in lieu of reparations for colonial rule, off
the table. Pyongyang is either unwilling or unable to provide Tokyo
with the evidence it demands. Removing North Korea from the list of
state sponsors of terror did not weaken our negotiating position with
the North as it was essentially a symbolic gesture, but it did lead to
a sense of betrayal in Japan.

My final proposition arguably
describes the biggest constraint on our North Korea policy options.
There are virtually no conditions under which Beijing will curtail
(much less cut off) its assistance to the North. The Bush
Administration liked to insist that the reason North Korea came back to
the negotiating table in late 2006 was because China had gotten tough
with the North by backing the UN sanctions resolution after the North
conducted a nuclear test. While Beijing was clearly not happy, the
bottom line was that China never implemented the resolution, nor was
there any interruption in economic assistance from China. For China,
stability on its northeastern border is far more important than
denuclearization. Even in the face of a global economic crisis, Beijing
appears willing to spend several billion dollars a year to prop up the
North.

These seven propositions leave us in an undeniably
difficult, but not impossible place. In my remaining time, I would like
to suggest a “smart power” strategy for negotiating with North Korea.
It may very well be that in the end, the North will try to play it both
ways: continue to negotiate for goodies while never giving up its
nuclear trump card. After all, that is essentially what it has done for
the past 16 years. We may have to live with the fact that the nuclear
talks may be little more than a “crisis management mechanism.” But
managing a crisis is far better than ignoring it, and remarriages
happen all the time.

At the core of “smart power” is
leveraging our alliances. The one country I have left out of my
discussion so far is the one government we can closely coordinate a
potentially more effective policy with: Seoul. Ironically, even though
South Koreans have opted for a more conservative president and
legislature and Americans the opposite, the prospects for effective
coordination have never been better. That is because based on the
worldviews Presidents Obama and Lee Myung-bak have espoused so far and
the foreign policy teams they are currently putting together, both are
pragmatic moderates. President Lee is a businessman, not an ideologue.
I have met with him and his foreign policy team countless times.
Liberals in Seoul blame them for the North’s increasingly bellicose
policy toward the South, but really all Lee and his team have done is
recalibrate an unconditional engagement policy that had yielded Seoul
little in return. A strong majority of the Korean public (to the extent
they even care about North Korea) continue to favor a more balanced
policy toward Pyongyang. In fact, Seoul’s approach is no different than
the Obama Administration’s is likely to be.

Given the lack of
a major shift in South Korean policy, why has Pyongyang become so
bellicose? For the simple reason that the North potentially has much to
gain and little to lose. Despite all the rhetoric, the joint industrial
complex in Kaeseong expanded its output by more than 20% last year and
South Korean NGOs maintained their cooperation projects. Like Obama,
Lee refuses to let his antagonists get him worked up and has repeatedly
stated that he will wait for the North to come around. What does the
North have to gain? Besides trying to drive a wedge between Washington
and Seoul, the North seeks a return to the era of no-strings-attached
largesse. The North only sees Seoul as a cash register, not a nuclear
negotiating partner. Moreover, they also know that if they can cut a
deal with Washington, Seoul will have little choice but to pay for it.
Kim Jong-il may also have concluded that he needs at least one major
enemy to justify his failed rule.

A second component of “smart
power” is trying to engage our adversaries in negotiations, both
multilaterally and bilaterally. Bilateral negotiations will likely
prove to be the key to a breakthrough, but maintaining the six-party
talks and reinvigorating trilateral coordination between Washington,
Seoul and Tokyo will also be vital. Even if we are essentially on the
same page with the South, there are still fears that the Obama team
could get too far out in front.

Before bilateral talks resume,
it is imperative that Secretary of State Clinton selects a capable
negotiator that has experience with North Korea. We simply do not have
time for a new envoy to get to know his counterparts and learn the hard
way how to negotiate with the North. I can think of at least six former
government officials that would fill the bill. However, given the
daunting nature of the job, it may not be easy to find a taker. The
North has no peers when it comes to insults and brinksmanship.
Moreover, the heavy diplomatic lifting has only just begun. Based on
the eight-stage negotiating model I helped develop for the
International Crisis Group several years ago (available at www.icg.org), we’re at the start of Phase Three.

I
would like to close by sharing with you my favorite Korean proverb,
which can serve us well not only in dealing with North Korea, but also
the broader economic challenges that we currently face, “Even when the
sky comes crashing down, there is a hole through which we can pass.”
Please help the Obama team find that hole. Thank you for your time.

Peter M. Beck teaches at American University in Washington, D.C. and Ewha University in Seoul. He writes a monthly column for Weekly Chosun and The Korea Herald.
Previously, he was the executive director of the U.S. Committee for
Human Rights in North Korea and directed the International Crisis
Group’s Northeast Asia Project in Seoul.

 

Downloaded from www.jpri.org

Filed Under: Japan and Asia/日本とアジア Tagged With: North Korea

Join the Discussion

Comment on this article or respond to others' comments.

You can post below or send to the mailing list at discuss@list.tokyoprogressive.org.

a) Please sign you name at the bottom of your comment, so that we know who wrote it.

b) To prevent spam, comments need to be manually approved.

c) Comments which are insulting, racist, homophobic or submitted in bad faith will not be published.

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Primary Sidebar

Search the site

Archives

Main Categories (old and most recent)

Alternative News Contributors/投稿者 creative Democracy Now Environment/環境 Featured Gender/ジェンダー Globalisation/グローバリゼーション Jacobin Japan/日本 Japan and Asia/日本とアジア Japanese/日本語 Japan Focus Japan News Korea/韓国 latest latest-j links Media/メディア Mp3 National Security Archive neoliberalism new News/ニュース Other Stories/他の記事 Social Justice/社会正義 Topics Uncategorized Video War and Empire/戦争&支配権力

Search deeper

Abe activities, protests, films, events Afghanistan alternative news Bush class issues and homelessness Environmental research fukushima gaza health care Henoko human rights Iraq Iraq, Afganistan and the War on Terror Iraq and Afghanistan, opposing the wars Israel Japan Korea labor issues Latin America Middle East military North Korea nuclear nuclear waste Obama Okinawa Okinawa Palestine peace protest protest and resistance racism/human rights radiation state crimes Syria Takae Tepco Trump U.S. War world news English ニュース/社会問題 人権 平和、憲法9条

Design and Hosting for Progressives

Donate/寄付

Please support our work. This includes costs involved in producing this news site as well as our free hosting service for activists, teachers and students. Donations/寄付 can be sent to us via PayPal or Donately. You can also click on the buttons below to make a one-time donation.




Work with us

TokyoProgressive
supports and participates in projects of like-minded people and groups directly (technical, editing, design) and not-so directly (financial or moral support). Likewise, we also welcome contributions by readers that are consistent with promoting social justice. If you have a project you would like help with, or if you would like to submit an article, link, or report on a protest activity, please contact us here.

Footer

All opinions are those of the original authors and may not reflect the views of TokyoProgressive. This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for by copyright law in several countries. The material on this site is distributed without profit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyleft 1997-present: tokyoprogressive dot org

TokyoProgressive supports and participates in projects of like-minded people and groups directly (technical, editing, design) and not-so directly (financial or moral support). Likewise, we also welcome contributions by readers that are consistent with promoting social justice. If you have a project you would like help with, or if you would like to submit an article, link, or report on a protest activity, please contact us here.

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in