The Russia-China Plan For North Korea: Stability & Connectivity
16
September, 2017
Moscow
has been busy building agreements that would extend
Eurasian connectivity eastward.
The question is how
to convince the DPRK to play along...
Chinese
President Xi Jinping (centre) and his wife Peng Liyuan welcome
Russian President Vladimir Putin ahead of a banquet dinner during the
BRICS Summit in Xiamen, Fujian province, on September 4, 2017
The
United Nations Security Council’s 15-0 vote to impose a new set of
sanctions on North Korea somewhat disguises the critical role played
by the Russia-China strategic partnership, the “RC” at the core
of the BRICS group.
The
new sanctions are pretty harsh. They include a 30% reduction on crude
and refined oil exports to the DPRK; a ban on exports of natural gas;
a ban on all North Korean textile exports (which have brought in
US$760 million on average over the past three years); and a worldwide
ban on new work permits for DPRK citizens (there are over 90,000
currently working abroad.)
But
this is far from what US President Donald Trump’s administration
was aiming at, according
to the draft Security Council resolution leaked last week. That
included an asset freeze and travel ban on Kim Jong-un and other
designated DPRK officials, and covered additional “WMD-related
items,” Iraqi sanctions-style. It also authorized UN member states
to interdict and inspect North Korean vessels in international waters
(which amounts to a declaration of war); and, last but not least, a
total oil embargo.
“RC”
made it clear it would veto the resolution under these terms. Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told the US’ diminishing Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson Moscow would only accept language related to
“political and diplomatic tools to seek peaceful ways of
resolution.” On the oil embargo, President Vladimir Putin said,
“cutting off the oil supply to North Korea may harm people in
hospitals or other ordinary citizens.”
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. Photo: Reuters
“RC”
priorities are clear: “stability” in Pyongyang; no regime change;
no drastic alteration of the geopolitical chessboard; no massive
refugee crisis.
That
does not preclude Beijing from applying pressure on Pyongyang. Branch
offices of the Bank of China, China Construction Bank and
Agricultural Bank of China in the northeastern border city of Yanji
have banned DPRK citizens from opening new accounts. Current accounts
are not frozen yet, but deposits and remittances have been suspended.
To
get to the heart of the matter, though, we need to examine what
happened last week at the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok –
which happens to be only a little over 300 km away from the DPRK’s
Punggye-ri missile test site.
It’s all about the Trans-Korean Railway
In
sharp contrast to the Trump administration and the Beltway’s
bellicose rhetoric, what “RC” proposes are essentially 5+1 talks
(North Korea, China, Russia, Japan and South Korea, plus the US) on
neutral territory, as confirmed by Russian diplomats. In
Vladivostok, Putin went out of his way to defuse military hysteria
and warn that stepping beyond sanctions would be an “invitation
to the graveyard.” Instead, he proposed business deals.
Largely
unreported by Western corporate media, what happened in Vladivostok
is really ground-breaking. Moscow and Seoul agreed on a trilateral
trade platform, crucially involving Pyongyang, to ultimately invest
in connectivity between the whole Korean peninsula and the Russian
Far East.
South
Korean Prime Minister Moon Jae-in proposed to Moscow to build no
less than “nine
bridges” of cooperation: “Nine
bridges mean the bridges of gas, railways, the Northern Sea
Route, shipbuilding, the creation of working groups, agriculture
and other types of cooperation.”
Crucially,
Moon added that the trilateral cooperation would aim at joint
projects in the Russian Far East. He knows that
“the development of that area will promote the prosperity of
our two countries and will also help change North Korea and create
the basis for the implementation of the trilateral agreements.”
Russian
President Vladimir Putin and his South Korean counterpart Moon
Jae-in
visit the Far East Street exhibition at Russky Island in
Vladivostok. Photo: Sputnik / Mikhail Klimentyev
Adding
to the entente, Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono and South Korean
Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha both stressed “strategic
cooperation” with “RC”.
Geo-economics
complements geo-politics. Moscow
has also approached Tokyo with the idea of building a bridge
between the nations. That would physically link Japan to Eurasia –
and the vast trade and investment carousel offered by the New Silk
Roads, aka, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the Eurasia
Economic Union (EAEU). It would also complement the daring plan
to link a Trans-Korean
Railway to
the Trans-Siberian one.
Seoul
wants a rail network that will physically connect it with the
vast Eurasian land bridge, which makes perfect business sense for the
fifth largest export economy in the world. Handicapped by North
Korea’s isolation, South Korea is in effect cut off from
Eurasia by land.The
answer is the Trans-Korean Railway.
Moscow is very much for it, with Putin noting how “we could deliver Russian pipeline gas to Korea and integrate the power lines and railway systems of Russia, the Republic of Korea and North Korea. The implementation of these initiatives will be not only economically beneficial, but will also help build up trust and stability on the Korean Peninsula.”
Moscow’s
strategy, like Beijing’s, is connectivity: the
only way to integrate Pyongyang is
to keep it involved in economic cooperation via the
Trans-Korean-Trans-Siberian connection, pipelines and the development
of North Korean ports.
The DPRK’s delegation in Vladivostok seemed to agree. But not yet. According to North Korea’s Minister for External Economic Affairs, Kim Yong Jae: “We are not opposed to the trilateral cooperation [with Russia and South Korea], but this is not an appropriate situation for this to be implemented.” That implies that for the DPRK the priority is the 5+1 negotiation table.
Still,
the crucial point is that both Seoul and Pyongyang went to
Vladivostok, and talked to Moscow. Arguably the key question – the
armistice that did not end the Korean War – has to be broached by
Putin and the Koreans, without the Americans.
While
the sanctions game ebb and flows, the larger strategy of “RC” is
clear – a drive aimed at Eurasian connectivity. The question is how
to convince the DPRK to play along.
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