Singapore - Amid the optimism and buzz around North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s
impending meetings with
his South Korean counterpart Moon Jae-in and U.S. President Donald Trump, it is
easy to think that the international community is getting closer to achieving
denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula.
After all, according to South Korea and China, Kim has explicitly
expressed his commitment to denuclearization and to suspending nuclear or
missile tests – most recently reported by
Chinese state media following Kim’s unprecedented trip to Beijing and meeting
with President Xi Jinping.
But the reality is that we are nowhere close to resolving the North
Korean issue.
It is highly unlikely that North Korea will ever fully give
up its nuclear programme to attain “complete, verifiable and irreversible
denuclearization”, or CVID.
There are three compelling justifications for this
assertion.
First, it is not in North Korea’s national interests to agree to CVID,
because it will lose its only bargaining chip for future
negotiations, should it want to extract further economic or political
concessions from the international community.
This includes lifting sanctions,
the provision of monetary aid, and the transfer of food and oil.
Without nuclear weapons, the United States would lose interest in
sitting at the same table as North Korea.
This is ironically proven by the
readiness at which Trump agreed to meet Kim, following the escalating tensions
over Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests in late 2017.
Denuclearization would also mean losing strategic security leverage
over the U.S. in the event.
Washington decides to launch an offensive across the
38th Parallel. Today, Pyongyang can threaten a retaliatory nuclear attack
on the U.S., even though its capabilities to do so remains unclear.
But
implementing CVID would strip Kim of the ability to deter a U.S.
strike on North Korea. For national security reasons, denuclearization is a bad
move that opens Pyongyang to potential U.S. military coercion.
Second, while there is no democracy in North Korea, Kim remains
accountable to his people for the “Byungjin” or ‘parallel development’ policy
of progressing on the dual thrusts of economic development and nuclear weapon
proliferation – a policy Kim adopted in 2013.
At the plenary session
announcing this policy, Kim had branded it as “essential given the current
world order” and a “lawful prerequisite for revolutionary development”. Having
committed to “Byungjin” as Pyongyang’s strategic policy guideline, it would be
difficult for Kim to walk back on his decision now. The optics of Kim giving up
nuclear weapons after negotiations with ‘the enemy’ – the U.S. – would decimate
his domestic legitimacy among his people and the North Korea ruling elite – a
huge no-no in a country where leaders are revered for their deity-like
decision-making.
Third, the history of Pyongyang’s nuclear programme casts serious
doubts on the realistic chances of Kim following through on any promises to
achieve CVID.
Throughout the decades, agreements and institutions proposed to
discuss, implement and monitor denuclearization have all failed. This includes
the U.S.-North Korea Agreed Framework of 1994 and the subsequent Six-Party
Talks brokered by China.
In these previous negotiations, North Korea had sought concessions in
exchange for denuclearization, only to continue with its nuclear weapons
programme after receiving the benefits. Pyongyang’s consistent pattern of
reneging on agreements and a flagrant disregard for the sanctity of
international negotiations suggests that there is no reason to expect a
different outcome for the upcoming Trump-Kim meeting.
There is, however, no reason for the U.S. and its allies to shy away
from negotiations, even though it is unlikely that North Korea will see through
any agreed CVID. While positioned as talks meant to persuade Kim to
denuclearize, the discussions serve the broader U.S. objectives of lowering
tensions on the Korean Peninsula to avert a military solution and reassuring
its South Korean and Japanese allies that the U.S. remains committed to achieve
denuclearization.
From Kim’s perspective, the ability to secure a meeting with the leader
of the free world is a feat in and of itself – something that his grandfather
and father failed to do. The domestic political gains he would accrue by just
attending the meeting would be astronomical.
In other words, for both the U.S. and North Korea, the outcome of the
meeting matters less than the fact that the meeting happened. The diplomatic
and domestic posturing below the façade of the meeting is more important than
what will be discussed. It is therefore prudent for Washington to be clear-eyed
and not indulge in wishful thinking about orchestrating a breakthrough where Pyongyang
implements CVID in exchange for any incentives Washington can cobble up. North
Korea has simply no interest to do so.
Jansen Tham is a 2nd year Masters in Public Policy (MPP) student at the
Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore.(source: global-is-asian)
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