Some people need the record put straight.No need to give another warmonger the Nobel peace prize
Trump
Did NOT Convince Kim to Ditch His Nukes. China Did
Mike
Whitney
30
April, 2018
Donald
Trump thinks his “maximum pressure” campaign persuaded North
Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program. But it’s a bunch of
baloney. The reason Kim Jong-un is planning to denuclearize is
because China adamantly opposes nuclear weapons on the peninsula.
That’s the whole deal in a nutshell. China, who is North Korea’s
biggest trading partner, gave Kim an ultimatum: Ditch the nukes or
face long-term economic strangulation. Kim very wisely chose the
former option, which is to say, he backed down.
The
situation in North Korea is really quite bleak. Consider, for
example, this recent piece in a United Nations periodical titled
“The 5 most under-reported humanitarian crises that are happening
right now”. Heading the list is this blurb on North Korea:
“….what
has been drastically underreported in the last year is that
unprecedented number of people who are going hungry. The UN
estimates that 70 percent of the population, or 18 million people,
are food-insecure and reliant on government aid. To make things
worse, last year North Korea experienced its worst drought in 16
years, exacerbating an already dire food shortage. With tight
control of its borders keeping out aid organizations and
journalists, it’s almost impossible to capture how many are
actually receiving the urgent food aid they need.” (U.N. Dispatch)
Unfortunately,
famine and drought are just the tip of the iceberg. The economic
sanctions have added a whole new layer to the North’s misery, in
fact, they have brought the economy to its knees. Pyongyang might
have been able to muddle through had Beijing not joined the
international blockade, but once China agreed to participate, the
North’s fate was sealed. In the last year, the DPRK’s currency
has dropped precipitously, the country’s import-export trade has
been slashed by half, and the battered economy has plunged into a
deep slump. The problem is almost entirely attributable to China’s
tightening sanctions regime which has effectively cut off the flow
of capital and vital resources to the North. In order to grasp how
overly dependent the DPRK is on China, take a look at this:
In
February 2017, China restricted all coal imports from North Korea
until 2018. This is considered to be extremely harmful to the North
Korean economy, as coal was the top export of the nation, and China
was their top trading partner…
On
28 September 2017… China ordered all North Korean companies
operating in China to cease operations within 120 days. By January
2018 customs statistics showed that trade between the two countries
had fallen to the lowest level recorded.
On
7 May 2013, Bank of China, China’s biggest foreign exchange bank
and other Chinese banks closed the account of North Korea’s main
foreign exchange bank.
On
21 February 2016 China quietly ended financial support of North
Korea without any media publicity. It is reported to be due to the
fallout of relations between the two governments….”(Wikipedia)
- China destroyed the North’s import and export trade, including the North’s primary export, coal.
- China shut down all the DPRK’s companies operating in China. (terminating the recycling of revenues back to the North.)
- China cut off access to foreign banking. (and, thus, foreign investment)
- China stopped providing any financial support for the North.
What
other country could withstand this type of economic strangulation by
its biggest trading partner?
None
of this has anything to do with Trump’s “maximum pressure”
campaign which really had no effect onKim’s decision at all.
Denuclearization is all China’s doing. China put a gun to Kim’s
head and simply waited for him to cave in. Which he did. He very
wisely chose the path of least resistance: Capitulation. The
question is: What did Kim get in return?Before we answer that, we
need to understand that China-DPRK relations have been strained for
more than a year, dating back to early 2017 when China joined the US
effort to impose sanctions on the North. The Korean News agency
sharply rebuked China for its disloyalty saying, “(China) is
dancing to the tune of the US while defending its hostile behavior
with excuses that (the sanctions) were not meant to hurt the North
Korean people, but to check its nuclear program.”
While
the North’s anger is understandable, it’s worth pointing out
that Beijing has always opposed Kim’s nuclear weapons programs, in
fact, in 2016, (long before bilateral relations soured) China’s
Foreign Minister openly condemned the DPRK’s behavior saying, “We
strongly urge the DPRK side to remain committed to its
denuclearization commitment, and stop taking any actions that would
make the situation worse.”
The
warning was followed a year later by joint sanctions aimed at
forcing Kim to give up his nukes. To Beijing’s credit, the goal
was never to punish or humiliate the North, but to strengthen
regional security by reducing access to nuclear weapons. Bottom
line: China has acted responsibly throughout.
In
March 2018, Kim made an unannounced visit to General Secretary Xi
Jinping in Beijing. Kim was given the red carpet treatment for four
days while the two leaders huddled and worked out their strategy for
denuclearization in the context of a broader economic revitalization
program aimed at integrating the peninsula with the rest of the
continent.Very little is known about the 4-day confab in Beijing,
but it’s obvious that Kim was encouraged to normalize relations
with his counterpart (Moon Jae-in) in the South based on a firm
commitment to decommission his nuclear weapons. It is no coincidence
that the meeting between the two leaders and Kim’s dramatic
reversal in policy took place just weeks after Kim met with the
Chinese Premier. Clearly, China was the driving force behind Kim’s
decision.
Critics
of process think the North is engaged in an elaborate hoax that will
amount to nothing, but that is probably not the case. Keep in mind,
it is Beijing that is calling the shots not Kim. If China wants Kim
to abandon his nukes, that’s probably what he will do. Of course,
Kim would not go along with Beijing’s demands if he thought he
might be putting his country at risk of a preemptive attack by the
United States. Nor would he give up his nukes if he thought he was
going to wind up like Mummar Gaddafi who was savagely skewered after
he succumbed to US demands to surrender his WMD.
This
question has not yet been fully answered, but we have to assume that
China (and perhaps Russia) provided assurances to Kim that his
country would be defended if attacked by the United States. Such
guarantees would not be unprecedented, in fact, in 2017 Beijing
stated clearly that no unprovoked attack by the US on the DPRK would
go unanswered. Here’s part of the statement which appeared in
Chinese state media:
“China
should make it clear that if North Korea launches missiles that
threaten U.S. soil first and the U.S. retaliates, China will stay
neutral,” (but) “If the U.S. and South Korea carry out strikes
and try to overthrow the North Korean regime and change the
political pattern of the Korean Peninsula, China will prevent them
from doing so.”
“China
opposes both nuclear proliferation and war in the Korean Peninsula.
It will not encourage any side to stir up military conflict, and
will firmly resist any side which wants to change the status quo of
the areas where China’s interests are concerned.”
Beijing
must have allayed Kim’s fears or he never would have agreed to
denuclearize. But now that he feels protected, Kim appears to be
eager to reconcile with his new friends in the South. Here’s what
he said on Friday:
“I
look forward to making the most of this opportunity so that we have
the chance to heal the wounds between the North and the South…. I
came here to put an end to the history of confrontation as well as
to work shoulder to shoulder with you to tackle the obstacles
between us. I came with the confidence that a brighter future awaits
us.”
Kim
is serious. He wants to restart the peace process and restore
economic ties with the South. He formalized his commitment by
signing a document that called for “the prohibition of the use of
force in any form against each other”, “an end to the war”
and”complete denuclearization.” Also, both leaders are committed
to the gradual economic integration of the North and South via vital
infrastructure projects that will strengthen popular support for the
(eventual) reunification of the country. The importance of this
joint commitment cannot be overstated. Kim is not simply giving up
his nukes to placate China or ease sanctions, he is taking the first
step on a path towards “balanced economic growth and shared
prosperity”. Item 6 in the Panmunjeom Declaration”, which Kim
Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in signed on Friday,
lays it out in black and white:
“South
and North Korea agreed to actively implement the projects previously
agreed in the 2007 October 4 Declaration, in order to promote
balanced economic growth and co-prosperity of the nation. As a first
step, the two sides agreed to adopt practical steps towards the
connection and modernization of the railways and roads on the
eastern transportation corridor as well as
between Seoul and Sinuiju for
their utilization.”
The
clause articulates the same vision for the future as an earlier
integration plan that was drafted at the the Eastern Economic Forum
(EEF) in Vladivostok on September 6-7, 2017. The meetings– which
included North and South Korea, Japan, Russia and China– focused
on drawing neighboring states into a common economic space with
lowered trade barriers to promote development and prosperity. The
strategy has been dubbed the Putin Plan and it is designed in a way
that it can be easily linked to the Eurasian Union project and
China’s strategic “Silk Road Economic Belt” project. The
ultimate objective is to create a free-trade zone (“Greater
Europe”)that extends from Lisbon to Vladivostok.
The
plan is explained in greater detail in Gavan McCormick’s excellent
article at The Asia-Pacific Journal titled “North Korea and a
Rules-Based Order for the Indo-Pacific, East Asia, and the World”.
The Putin Plan anticipates multiple Siberian oil and gas pipelines
criss-crossing the two Koreas to railways and ports that are linked
to Japan, China, the Middle East, South Asia, and Europe. Here’s
an excerpt from the article:
“South
Korea’s President Moon projected his understanding of this within
the frame of what he called “Northeast Asia-plus,” which
involved construction of “nine bridges of cooperation” (gas,
railroads, ports, electricity, a northern sea route, shipbuilding,
jobs, agriculture, and fisheries), embedding the Korean peninsula in
the frame of the Russian and Chinese-led BRICS, the Belt and Road
Initiative (BRI) and Shanghai Cooperation Organiziation (SCO)
organizations, extending and consolidating those vast, China- and
Russia-centred geo-political and economic groupings. Though
billed as “economic,” and having no explicit “security”
element, the Vladivostok conference was nevertheless one that would
go a long way towards meeting North Korea’s security concerns and
making redundant its nuclear and missile programs. …Unstated,
but plainly crucial, North Korea would accept the security guarantee
of the five (Japan included), refrain from any further nuclear or
missile testing, shelve (“freeze”) its existing programs and
gain its longed for “normalization” in the form of incorporation
in regional groupings, the lifting of sanctions and normalized
relations with its neighbor states, without surrender….
….Vladivostok
might mark a first step towards a comprehensive, long overdue,
post-Cold War re-think of regional relationships….” (“North
Korea and a Rules-Based Order for the Indo-Pacific, East Asia, and
the World”, Gavan McCormick, The Asia-Pacific Journal)
In
my opinion, Kim Jong-un is prepared to liquidate his nuclear weapons
stockpile in order to join this massive regional development project
that will draw the continents closer together, create new centers of
power and prosperity, undermine Washington’s self-aggrandizing
“pivot to Asia” strategy, and strengthen a rules-based
multi-polar world order that protects the sovereignty and rights of
all its members. Thus, “denuclearization” conceals a tectonic
shift in the global power structure.
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