Conundrum? U.S. Policy Debates over North
Korea¡¯s Nuclear Issues
Abstract
This
paper takes a look at the recent developments of North Korea¡¯s nuclear issues
and analyzes the U.S. policies toward those issues. It sees the American policies
as chaotic and without coherence. Even though the Obama administration declares
that it would maintain its policy of diplomatic solutions, it is fallen into
the ¡°horns of a dilemma¡±: that the U.S. government cannot want to have an official
meeting with North Korea for fear of giving formal recognition of North Korea
as a nuclear state, and that it cannot just disengage and leave North Korea
free to develop their nuclear and missile capabilities. As the effectiveness of
the denuclearization policy has proved to be controversial, this paper intends
to pay more attention to a ¡°comprehensive approach¡± in dealing with the North
Korea problem with emphasis on the essential cooperative relations between the
U.S. and China, which give the impression that China is backing off from
supporting North Korea, and going beyond international sanctions against
Pyongyang. Starting from the peace process among four countries including both
Koreas, the U.S. and China the comprehensive approach would help overcome the
constant threats of North Korea¡¯s nuclear weapons. The dilemma situation of
American policy toward North Korea demands the serious consideration of the
historical elements which have shaped the North Korean way of thinking and
living over the last century.
Key
Words: North Korea¡¯s nuclear problems, Comprehensive approach, peace process
Conundrum? U.S. Policy
Debates over North Korea¡¯s Nuclear Issues
Prologue
In 1967, President Nixon noted that ¡°there
is no place on this small planet for a billion of its potentially most able
people to live in angry isolation.¡±[1] While attempting to put an
end to the war in Vietnam, he was signaling the desire to discuss a warming of
relations with China. At the time, China was depicted as, a ¡°frustrated,
boiling resentment, resurgent, reemerging Major State¡± in American documents.
However, after the historic visit of President Nixon and Kissinger, within a
decade there was ushered in an era of Chinese modernization. This led to a
thriving U.S. China relationship on a number of levels and in many fields.
On the other end of the spectrum today, North
Korea has no diplomatic relations with the United States. Meanwhile, in
Pyongyang, over 100 countries have established embassies and representative
offices. These countries include the United Kingdom, Germany, and Brazil. Even
so, sanctions imposed by UN resolutions and the isolationist policy of the U.S.
have contained North Korea. Far from being worthy of the concern given China by
Nixon, especially when compared to the population of China, North Korea is not
impressive with a population of less
than 25 million people and lacks any real measure of international political
leverage. Therefore, compared with China, there is not nearly the incentive for
the U.S. to engage North Korea.
However,
recent developments in North Korea¡¯s nuclear weapons and delivery systems technology
have caused a reaction in the U. S. Furthermore, the geopolitical position of
North Korea could be a potential asset for U.S.¡¯s engagement strategy toward
China. However, given the official American position on the denuclearization of
the Korean Peninsula, it might be convenient to say in sociological terms, that
the Obama government has fallen into the ¡°horns of a dilemma¡±. Any American
official approach to North Korea could be seen as the recognition of the
nuclear status of North Korea, but to leave the situation as it is could be
translated as an abandonment of the ¡°denuclearization¡± policy. On April 10
2012, after unveiling the new Nuclear Posture Review, U.S. Defense Secretary
Gates remarked that ¡°All options are on the table¡± to deal with the North Korean
nuclear issue.[2]It is arguable, however, to say that those options are fully taking into
account the realities of North Korea and its people¡¯s core beliefs which were formed
during totalitarian rule of 60 years and the Japanese military rule of 40
years.
American Options toward
North Korea
From surgical strikes against nuclear
facilities in North Korea[3], to regime change or
collapse in North Korea, the U.S. had examined all the possible alternatives
long before the successful launch of the 3-stage rocket Eunha-3. In addition,
since North Korea lacks other means of leverage, it is generally accepted among
American and Korean experts on North Korea that brinkmanship is the most
effective North Korean diplomatic tool. Given the negotiation history of North
Korea since 1950, it is hardly a new lesson. It is evident from prior
negotiations with Pyongyang that they always employed twin strategies of ¡°dialogue
and strike¡± for achieving the same political purpose.
In reading
recent published articles, one may see the strong possibility that the U.S. has
been preparing for a confrontation or even a direct military conflict with
China over North Korea. Using the term ¡°meltdown¡±, instead of ¡°collapse¡± for
North Korea, Brookings staff called for President Obama to address the mounting
risks arising from the instability of North Korea by seeking a serious dialogue
with Beijing about the possibility of a major crisis on the Peninsula and to find
out about Chinese plans and intentions vis-à-vis the Peninsula.[4] Additionally, the staff wanted
to warn Pyongyang of the potential consequences of any threat of nuclear use or of the testing of
nuclear weapons in this potential crisis situation. Other comments related to upholding
the safety and security of North Korea¡¯s WMD (Weapons of Mass Destruction)
assets, which are the utmost concerns of the U.S., and indicating that the
command and control arrangements in North Korea are under increasing stress.
Brookings Staff recommended that the President should undertake urgent
consultation with Beijing to ensure that neither the U.S. nor China
misconstrues the others¡¯ actions and plans. It is worthy to consider OPLAN 5026-Air
Strikes, which is known as the comprehensive detailed plan for air strikes
against nuclear facilities near Yong- byon[5].
From ¡°strategic patience¡± to ¡°negative
security assurance[6],
the Obama administration has tried to persuade North Korea to change its
behavior before engaging with it in negotiations regarding North Korea¡¯s
nuclear program. According to Selig Harrison, North Korea, for its part, had
kept faithfully to the agreed framework until before Kelly¡¯s visit in 2002.
However, President Bush¡¯s disparaging remarks regarding Kim Jong-Il and North
Korea, and the Bush Administration¡¯s Iraq policy caused Pyongyang to embark on
the enrichment of uranium contrary to the agreed framework.[7] Consequently, North Korean
strategy, which is based on brinkmanship in its pursuit of nuclearization,
resulted in restricting the options of the U.S. toward North Korea, putting the
U.S. in a corner with few options and caused the U.S. to take a hard-line
stance toward Pyongyang.
On
the other hand, the goal of U.S. policy toward North Korea¡¯s denuclearization
was, in effect, to manage the problem of North Korea, instead of eliminating it[8]. This could be construed
as policy of laissez faire, allowing
for the nuclearization of North Korea and consequently resulting in a hard-line
policy within the American government. This is also the kind of the hard line
policy which was demanded by the staff at Brookings. The policy of strategic
patience has also been criticized as giving North Korea time for
nuclearization.[9] Recent development of missiles and
nuclear weapons might be presumed to give a green light to the construction of a
missile defense system which was proposed by the U.S. for South Korea and Japan.
In spite of all these criticisms of US North
Korea Policy, President Obama, in his second inaugural address, reaffirmed his
policy of a peaceful solution of international problems. However, at the time
of adopting the resolution of the Security Council condemning and sanctioning North Korea¡¯s
illegal acts in 2013 the North Koreans detonated a nuclear bomb.
U.S. Policy toward the
Korean Peninsula
Since
the beginning of the Six Party talks in 2003, experts on North Korea (American
primarily) and a few new internet sites (38North, Sino-NK) have been working on
information gathering and diffusing information, particularly on the subject of
Sino-North Korean relations. The day after the North Korean launching of a satellite
on December 12 2012, an article appeared in the National Review online from American
Enterprise Institute¡¯s, Michael Auslin,
titled ¡°Let¡¯s be honest about North Korea: We¡¯re Clueless.¡±
It
is worth repeating what he pointed out: ¡°Save yourself a few precious minutes
and ignore everything the U.S. government says about North Korea, ---ignore
everything Asian experts say about North Korea. The truth is, we don¡¯t have a
clue what to do. It¡¯s time for the commonsense rule. --- the beginning of
wisdom is accepting what you can¡¯t control. In North Korea¡¯s case, that can be
extended to admitting that we don¡¯t even understand what¡¯s going on, except
that it¡¯s a regime obsessed solely with survival. They, on the other hand,
understand us perfectly.¡±[10] If we accept what Auslin
says, or perhaps even if we do not we must ask ourselves; ¡°Has the U.S.¡¯s
policy toward the Korean Peninsula been a coherent one?¡±
It¡¯s
a basic question that needs to be answered when dealing with the Korean
problem. According to Selig Harrison, there was no coherent long-term policy
toward the Korean Peninsula; or rather the U.S. did not develop that kind of
policy. The main reason is that the U.S. prefers to depend on short-term
adaptation or a wait and see policy, originally arising from the belief that
North Korea would collapse because of food shortages after the death of Kim
Il-Sung.[11]
Harrison characterizes the U.S. policy toward
Korean Peninsula as incoherent and ad hoc in character. Though the primary
policy objective of the U.S. in the Korean Peninsula after 1994 when the Agreed
framework was signed between the U.S. and North Korea was expressly stated as
¡°denuclearization¡±, Harrison also notes that even during the Clinton-Bush
Administrations this policy goal was not pursued coherently.
After
signing the ROK-U.S. mutual defense agreement in Oct. 1953, the U.S. declared
the strategy of ¡°massive retaliation¡± with its threat of a nuclear response to
any renewed North Korean aggression. Furthermore, in 1958, U.S. forces in Korea
were equipped with tactical nuclear weapons, including Honest John and
Nike-Hercules missiles to deter a North Korean conventional attack. One can
say, at the very least, that the U.S. policy at that time was based on the
deterrence of a full scale attack by North Korean conventional forces.
Most
American research centers and experts suggest that the beginning of the North
Korean nuclear problem was in the 1980¡¯s when North Korea suspended their
participation in Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT), demanding the withdrawal of US nuclear weapons from Korea. Selig
Harrison noted in his book that North Korean scientists attempted to prepare
for a military nuclear program on their own after the Soviets refused a North
Korean request for help in this regard.[12] They completed their
first reactor in 1967, and produced plutonium in 1986.[13] More recently, the North
Korean regime declared formally in February 2005, that they had manufactured nuclear
weapons for self-defense. Secretary of State Collin Powell recognized in December
2002 that North Korea had ¡®a couple of weapons¡¯.[14]
In
September 1991, after the collapse of the Berlin Wall, President George W. H. Bush
announced the unilateral withdrawal of all tactical nuclear weapons deployed
abroad, and in November 1991, President Roh Tae-woo of South Korea, in response
to the U.S. maneuver announced the Declaration on the Denuclearization of the
Korean Peninsula. Then, in December of the same year, the two Koreas signed the
South-North Joint Declaration on the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. Though
the approximately 100 nuclear weapons deployed in South Korea were removed in
1991, America kept its part of the nuclear umbrella role under the name ¡°Team
Spirit¡± exercises, in which B1-B bombers and other nuclear capable deployment
options took part.[15]
Concerning
the first Korean nuclear crisis in 1994, the Clinton administration responded
by signing the Agreed Framework, with a comprehensive outlook for the
normalization of relations with the DPRK. Formally, this meant that the U.S.
government clarified in 1994 the policy of denuclearization in Korean
Peninsula, which was demanded by North Korea. In the 3rd article of
nuclear freeze agreement, the U.S. stated that it would provide formal
assurances against the threat or use of nuclear weapons by the U.S.A.[16] Then, during the second
crisis in 2002, the Bush administration reacted with the 6-party talks,
negating the validity of the Agreed Framework.
Actual State of Korean Peninsula
and U.S.¡¯s Chaotic Policy
The
attempt by the Clinton administration to freeze the nuclear program in North
Korea was criticized as a failure by Clinton administration officials, Ashton
Carter and William Perry, after the satellite launch tests began in 1998 and
continued in 2006.[17] This attempt was also
negated by the George W. Bush administration and the Six Party Talks, a
strategy sometimes cited merely as an attempt by the regional players to stall
and frustrate North Korea.
In
October 9, 2006, North Korea conducted its first nuclear test, opening a
political battle of adopting resolutions in the UN and driving further nuclear
testing. The Obama administration has showed a rather flexible attitude in its
relations with North Korea, seeking diplomatic resolution. Though criticized as
appeasement or passiveness, President Obama has pursued a diplomatic solution
with the policy of strategic patience, and even considered giving a ¡°negative
security assurance¡± to the Pyongyang regime to satisfy the North¡¯s demand to
stop the US policy of hostility.[18]
Though
Obama declared that he would maintain his policy of diplomatic solutions in his
second term, it is difficult for him to approach North Korea without problems.
If America has formal meetings with North Korea, then the U.S. government has
to face the problem of recognizing the regime as a nuclear state. In its
pursuit of the development of nuclear weapons and missiles, North Korea has
demanded that the U.S. government should conclude a peace treaty and establish
diplomatic relations between the two countries. After the negation of the Agreed
Framework, the Bush administration began war preparation and the execution of
the ¡°Operation Desert Storm¡±. Meanwhile, the North Korean nuclear problem was
passed off to be taken care of by the Six Party Talks hosted by China.
The
¡°chaotic¡± character of the U.S.¡¯s policy toward North Korea was apparent in the
policy shift from military options. Starting at the suggestion of Philip
Saunders¡¯ military options in January 2003[19], to Robert Kaplan¡¯s
indication of the possible collapse of North Korea in 2006[20], all options were, as
Gates had expressed, debated and recommended in and out of the administrations.
Even after the nuclear test in 2009, there article appeared an titled ¡°Let the
Kim Regime Collapse¡± in the Wall Street Journal.[21]
In
addition, the realist attitude of the Americans in a New York Times article was
not surprising, which indicated that some American officials expected their
first real view of North Korea-made nuclear weapons in the 2012 test, and that
they had underestimated North Korea.[22] It is of interest to note
that one American military commander noted that the intercontinental ballistic
missile launch last December was successful.[23] This is one of North Korea¡¯s goals and former Defense
Secretary Robert Gates had already warned at the end of his term that this goal
could be fulfilled by 2016.[24] Currently, American
experts are divided into two groups; those who support sanctions and the others
who put emphasis on new negotiations with North Korea.
Bruce
Klingner is a member of the former group, who insists that America should push
for more comprehensive international sanctions against Pyongyang, extending to
the banks, businesses and countries that facilitate North Korean nuclear and
missile proliferation.[25] The Resolution (2087-2013)
adopted in United Nation Security Council on 22, Jan., 2013, reconfirming the
former sanctions against North Korea, pledged ¡°significant actions¡± against North
Korea¡¯s third nuclear test, and added a bank, and a number of trading companies
and individuals to the existing sanction lists.[26]
Stephen
Bosworth belongs to the latter group of experts and his comments include a
comprehensive approach to the North Korean nuclear program instead of a narrow
focus on denuclearization. According to Bosworth, a comprehensive approach may
include establishing a peace treaty on the Korean Peninsula to replace the
armistice agreement.[27] After the third nuclear
test in February, 2012 another resolution of the Security Council was adopted.[28]
In this connection, it is notable that an
interim agreement signed by P5+1 in Geneva on November 23, 2013, a deal on
Teheran¡¯s nuclear program, which was pursued tenuously by President Obama, will
come into effect on January 20, 2014. It can be a good precedent for North
Korean nuclear problem to which President Obama applied to his ¡°Negative
Security Assurance¡± persuading the North Korean regime to denuclearize.[29]
Amid
the U.S.- South Korea annual military exercise 2013, North Korean forces
conducted their unusual military drills on land, at sea and aerially.[30] In this aggravated
situation in the Yellow Sea, it is worthwhile to reconsider Morton Halperin¡¯s
article as a new approach to promote the peace and the security in North East
Asia. He suggested a comprehensive approach, which includes a denuclearization
process based on the sanctions and alliance relations, and also the termination
of a state of war, creation of a permanent council on security, mutual
declaration of no hostile intent and the establishment of a regional nuclear
free zone.[31]Notably, this approach is comprehensive in its inclusion of North Korean demands, which are a ¡°peace
treaty¡± replacing the armistice agreement, mutual declaration of no hostile
intent, and of the U.S.¡¯s denuclearization process.
According
to Halperin, this agreement would differ from the Agreed Framework, which is
not a treaty. In this treaty, ten countries will take part in the negotiations,
adding four more countries to the Six Party Talks, France, Great Britain,
Canada and Mongolia. As an expert on Japan, using the concept of track 1.5 in
which Japan should engage in the negotiation with North Korea, he mentioned
Japan¡¯s concerns in its process ahead of China and North Korea.
A
comprehensive approach would be a means to start the discussion of the North
Korean nuclear problem, as suggested by Leon V. Segal, as a peace process,
among four countries, namely South and North Korea, the U.S., and China.[32]
Eavesdropping
A
report for the National Intelligence Council, ¡°Global Trends 2030¡± pointed out
that the potential for a united Korea might cause strategic alignment to move away
from the U.S.[33]Regardless of its gloomy or optimistic perspective of the American position in
Asia in 2030, the significance of that kind of prediction must be accepted with
seriousness. Additionally, it would be a big setback for the American
diplomatic position in the region and could have a severe effect on the decline
of American power. Traditionally, the Korean Peninsula has wanted an American
commitment to control the international rivalry of neighboring powers.
Roosevelt¡¯s policy of promoting the independence of Korea based on the balance
of power principle, gave weight to the reappearance of China as a world power
after WWII.[34]
Although
the sudden death of President Roosevelt brought change to world politics, South
Korea survived the cold war as a symbol of liberal democracy with the American
commitment. Roosevelt¡¯s idea of the independence of Korea shows that he took
into account Korea as a balancer in the complicated relations of the three
powers in the region. The U.S. should engage with the region instead of, as ¡°Global
Trends 2030¡± indicated, staying away from the Korean peninsula because of
rising Chinese power.
In
accordance with the incremental approach, policy instruments could be decided
beforehand, but in the case of policy-making, policy objectives should be
adopted before choosing the policy instrument. Saying that all options are
decided means that the objective of the policy depends upon the policy
instrument. When Bosworth said a comprehensive approach was needed, it means
that the policy objective should be decided before suggesting options. As
indicated above, all the options on the table could be applied to certain
circumstances depending on their
objective. Furthermore, those options could not be a break-through, or a
creative policy to solve problems. This means the interactions of
option-circumstance could give rise to certain unexpected effects, which may
drift away from the intended result.
It
should be remembered that North Korean problems are not impossible to solve, but
rather a certain amount of time is needed, to understand the 20thcentury history of East Asia, particularly Korea. For example, in the case of
collapse, or dissolution, or break-up of North Korea, it is taken for granted
that the North Korean people would choose to live a in free society. However,
unlike the East Europeans who remembered the European free atmosphere before
1945, and who treasured a nostalgic dream of freedom, North Korean people have
had no nostalgic dream of a free and liberal atmosphere to remember. They
suffered from the tyranny of Japanese military rule for 40 years before the
liberation that came at the conclusion of WWII. Even after the establishment of
the North Korean communist regime, the organization of a new society based on ¡°Songbun¡±, a kind of ascribed status, and
their thorough indoctrination which did not permit any disloyalty to that
regime, are difficult trends to break and would likely persist at least three generations
beyond Kim Jung-un.
Recent
developments in the relations between the U.S. and China have indicated that
the cooperation of the two countries could go beyond sanctions on North Korea,
which give the impression that China has finally backed off from supporting
North Korea.[35]Cooperation was firstly mentioned in regards to the collapse of the North Korean
regime, which may be caused by a U.S. surgical strike on North Korean nuclear
facilities or the ¡°melting-down¡± of the regime in Pyongyang. In the plan, the U.S.
and China might cooperate in the takeover of North Korean nuclear facilities,
by establishing a dividing line – presumably the Wonsan- Pyongyang line- to
prevent the collision of the two forces. According to Reuters, Foreign
Ministers of China and Russia agreed in February 2013 that it was very important
not to allow the situation to be used as a pretext for military intervention.[36]
Differently
from the attitude of hawkish confrontation and even destruction, according to
Pritchard,[37]of
Bush Administration toward North Korea, President Obama has used the policy
inducement,[38]based on the negotiations with selective tactics of sanctions.[39] It may be of interest to
note that the recent Obama Administration¡¯s achievement obtained in the
relations with Iran has revived the hope of denuclearizing North Korea. The ¡°strategic
patience¡±, based on the negative security assurance which was considered as
failure after the nuclear test and the missile launch of North Korea in 2009
and by the frustrating violation of ¡°leap day agreement¡± by North Korea in 2012[40], has scored a small
success in concluding the nuclear interim agreement with Iran on November 20,
2013. In that agreement, U.S, and allies have secured the obligations from
Iran, which go beyond the IAEA member state obligations, and Iran has obtained
the 15 billion dollar worth of benefits by signing the agreement.[41]
Though
criticized by Republican Chairman of Foreign Affairs in the House of Representatives, Ros-Lehtinen,
as a policy of appeasement vis-à-vis the provocations of North Korea in
2010,[42] President Obama adhered
to his policy of diplomacy and secured the decision of Iranian President
Rouhani to abandon the nuclear program.[43] This deal was designed to
stop each side from getting much worse off while negotiation of a broader deal
continued, and send a signal that meaningful agreements are possible, despite
the enormous mistrust and hostility on both sides.[44] In this sense, such type
of negotiation and process of the agreement, may be a good lesson for the
re-negotiation with North Korea. The agreement is a small first step that tests
the ground for the possibility of a comprehensive deal. This agreement may be
important, insofar as it forms part of the route to what can constitute as a
consequential final accord.
Conclusion and the
Implications
Who
is afraid of peace in Korea? 60 years have passed since the signing of the
cease-fire agreement in 1953 and sporadic clashes have continued ever since.
After the missile and nuclear tests in 2012 and 2013, the military situation in
the Korean Peninsula has become drastically aggravated along the DMZ. The Cheonanham incident in 2010 has spawned
the massive annual U.S.-ROK joint military exercises in the West Sea with the
participation of B-2 bombers and nuclear
submarines equipped with Tomahawks and B-2 Bombers, and the reactive military
drills of North Korean forces mobilizing missiles have had a heightening effect
on the potential for armed confrontation between two the Koreas.
Newly
elected South Korea President Park Geun-hye has said that the vicious cycle of
military confrontations should be stopped, but for the time being she did not want
to take any initiatives in the peace process. Neither side is proposing that a
relaxation of tensions, or denuclearization and a peace treaty, have been put
on hold since North Korea held nuclear and missile tests.[45]
Chinese
Defense Dept. spokesman Yang expressed worries about the recently signed, ¡°Combined
Counter Provocation Plan¡± between U.S. and ROK on March 22, 2013.[46] This assumes that a
crisis of extreme confrontation might have a good chance of forging a channel
of a dialogue. Following the suggestion of Leon V. Segal, four party talks
could be held under the auspices of China as a precursor of peace and stability
in this region, for the comprehensive agenda of peace and stability in Korean
Peninsula.
As
ardent disciples of balance of power politics, in their enthusiasm, Americans
are apt to forge a Cold War configuration pursuing alliance and containment. Truman¡¯s
misunderstanding of Roosevelt¡¯s ideas on China¡¯s position should not be blamed,
as the international situation of that time changed with the changed internal
power relations of China. The bipolar system established after WWII, which was
evident from 1942, and was established with ease by the dominant power of the U.S.
vis-a-vis Soviet Russia operated smoothly for many decades. The familiarity and
seeming stability or control in such a system leads many to call for the pursuit of such realist policy. In the case of the Korean Peninsula this may mean a US policy of sa