GLOCOM Platform
Debates Media Reviews Tech Reviews Special Topics Books & Journals
Newsletters
(Japanese)
Summary Page
(Japanese)
Search with Google
Home > Debates Last Updated: 14:32 03/09/2007
Debate: Commentary (August 7, 2003)

Too Early to Toast Kim's Cooperation

Ralph Cossa (President of the Pacific Forum CSIS, Hawaii)


Let's not open up the champagne too quickly! The announcement that North Korea finally has agreed to attend multilateral talks "to resolve the nuclear issue" is good news indeed... if they actually show up at the yet to be scheduled meeting. But sitting down at the table, as important as this is, puts us no closer to a resolution than we were yesterday and could make matters worse, depending on how North Korea, and the other five parties (the United States, South Korea, Japan, China and Russia), approach the negotiations.

Has North Korea finally seen the light? Has Pyongyang become convinced that cooperating -- or at least appearing to cooperate -- will be more advantageous than threatening World War III?

More importantly, is it prepared, as it claims, to give up its (real or imagined) nuclear weapons in return for the Bush administration's promised (but not fully articulated) "bold approach"? Or will the negotiating table merely provide Pyongyang with one more venue for making its unreasonable demands and one more opportunity to drive a wedge among and between the other participants?

Are the North Koreans selling peace or just trying to buy more time? It's too soon to say, but Pyongyang's past behavior certainly gives us reason to pause and to temper our optimism.

Remember also that North Korea had originally resisted multilateral talks, fearing that the others would all gang up on Pyongyang over its nuclear programs. This may or may not yet prove to be true, but the important thing to remember is that this was more than just Pyongyang's fear; it was also Washington's expectation.

The Bush administration has consistently argued that North Korea's nuclear programs are an international problem and that the international community must speak with one voice in demanding that Pyongyang give up its nuclear ambitions in advance of any real progress on the diplomatic front.

This is where the coalition runs the risk of breaking down. While the other five participants all agree that North Korea must abandon its nuclear weapons program, few fully endorse Washington's timetable and most are more sympathetic than Washington to Pyongyang's demand that it receive economic incentives and some measure of security assurance in return for abandoning its nuclear ambitions.

The Bush administration continues to argue that rewarding North Korea for "agreeing to do what it had already promised in 1994 (under the Agreed Framework) and other multiple occasions to do" means yielding to "blackmail," something it has no intention of doing. Some compromise seems essential on this point if progress is ever to be made.

Washington's successful attempt at building an international consensus calling for an "immediate, verifiable, irreversible" end to Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program has been largely unappreciated. A great deal of diplomacy went into getting us to where we are today, on the verge of multilateral negotiations, with Pyongyang clearly on the defensive. But are we now prepared to follow through? Are the other members of this ad hoc coalition prepared to back Washington's demands? And what, if anything, is Washington prepared to give in return?

If the multilateral negotiations are to succeed, Washington, Seoul, Tokyo, Beijing and Moscow must be prepared to insist, with one voice and at a minimum, that North Korea immediately and verifiable freeze its various nuclear-weapons programs as a precondition to further negotiations.

This requires a return of International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors and the placing of spent fuel canisters (and any extracted plutonium) back under observation. In return, the other members must be prepared to guarantee to Pyongyang that no military strikes will be made against North Korean facilities or its leadership (North Korean leader Kim Jong Il's paranoia seems to be running high these days) as long as negotiations continue in good faith.

Washington should also be prepared, in close consultation with Seoul and Tokyo, and with Moscow and Beijing's concurrence, to lay out a clear road map of what it is prepared to offer, and when, in return for North Korea's verifiable cooperative actions.

In all probability, the Agreed Framework -- under which the U.S. promised to provide light water reactors to the North in return for an earlier (violated) freeze in its nuclear programs -- is dead. But the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization, created to implement that agreement, remains in place and could serve as a useful vehicle for overseeing a much broader-based program of economic development in the North, once Pyongyang's nuclear programs are ended and verification mechanisms are in place.

All this presumes, of course, that North Korea is sincere about wanting finally to cooperate with the rest of the international community. Given its past track record, the burden of proof must rest on Pyongyang. Hold off on the champagne for now; the hard part's just about to begin.


(This article originally appeared in the August 6, 2003 issue of The Japan Times, posted here with the permission of the author and the publisher))

 Top
TOP BACK HOME
Copyright © Japanese Institute of Global Communications