Current US-China
Relations
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I:
A Lame Duck-Greenhorn Dance
Part II: US
Unilateralism
Part III:
Geopolitical Dynamics of the
Korea Proliferation Crisis
Part IV: More Geopolitical Dynamics of the
Korea Proliferation Crisis
Part V: Kim Il Sung and China
Part VI: Korea Under Park Chung Hee
Part VII: Clinton Policy on North Korea – a Belated Path to Peace
Bill Clinton, a president who began to shed his hawkish
foreign policy of moral imperialism only late in his second term, nearly went
to war against North Korea in the spring of 1994, just one year into his first
term which began on January 20, 1993. It was a time when opportunistic hostility
towards China dictated
by US domestic political sentiments that marked his 1992 presidential campaign had
followed him into a White House soon embroiled in cronyism scandals and liberal
domestic social program fiascos. During the 1992 campaign, Clinton
had accused incumbent Bush Sr. of “cuddling to the Butchers of Beijing” in reference
to the Tiananmen incident of 1989. Cynics have since suspected much of Clinton’s
military adventures of being “wag the dog” moves, based on the eponymous black
comedy film in which a beleaguered president staged a phony war to distract
attention from his sexual indiscretions in the White House. The incoming Clinton
team had mistakenly regarded the US
position in the world as so secure that it openly announced that its
first term
of office would be focused not on geopolitical but mostly on
domestic economic issues. The Clinton team repeatedly told Chinese
diplomats that the new president would have no time to focus on policy
on China until the second term.
Five years earlier, during the first Bush presidency, the
CIA had presented intelligence that North Korea was building a reprocessing
facility near its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon which when finished, would allow
it to convert the fuel rods into weapons-grade plutonium. Now, in the midst of
an inexperienced Clinton White House in disarray, North
Korea was preparing to remove the fuel rods
from their storage site, expel international weapons inspectors, and withdraw
from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) which North
Korea had signed in 1985.
In response, and in the context of a feverish anti-China
climate, Clinton pushed the United
Nations Security Council to consider sanctions against North
Korea, China’s
blood ally. North Korea
warned that sanctions are acts of war that would trigger a renewed shooting war
on the Korean Peninsula.
Clinton’s Defense Department then drew up plans to send 50,000 additional troops
to South Korea, bolstering the 37,000 that had been there since the beginning
of the Korean War armistice agreement reached in 1953, as well as 400 additional
combat jets, 50 ships, and additional battalions of Apache attack helicopters,
Bradley fighting vehicles, multiple-launch rockets, and new Patriot air-defense
missiles, to be managed by a new logistics systems command. These mobilization moves
were designed to send a clear signal to North Korean that Clinton was willing
to go to war to keep the fuel rods in North Korea under International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) control, a signal reinforced by several former US officials
who publicly opined that Clinton was prepared to launch an air strike on the
Yongbyon reactor even at the risk of provoking war. US preemptive strikes against nuclear
proliferation in countries deemed evil and unfriendly have been a foreign
policy consideration all through the nuclear age by all US
presidents, most notably against China,
even at the risk of global war.
Stepping Back from
War with the Agreed Framework
As war clouds gathered over the Korean
Peninsula, Clinton
set up a diplomatic back-channel to try to defuse the crisis to re-establish
non-proliferation peacefully. The vehicle for this channel was former President
Jimmy Carter, who in June 1994 was sent to Pyongyang
to talk with Kim Il Sung, the founding leader of North
Korea. Carter's trip was widely portrayed at
the time as a private citizen venture, without approval from the president.
However, a 2004 book about the 1994 North Korean crisis, Going Critical, by Joel S.
Wit, Daniel B. Poneman, and Robert L. Gallucci, three former officials
who played key roles in the events, reveals that Clinton
recruited Carter to go. Carter himself
wrote in the New York Times on October 11, 2006 in a piece entitled Solving
the Korean Stalemate, One Step at a Time: “Responding to an
invitation from President Kim Il-sung of North Korea, and with the approval of
President Bill Clinton, I went to Pyongyang and negotiated an agreement under
which North Korea would cease its nuclear program at Yongbyon and permit
inspectors from the atomic agency to return to the site to assure that the
spent fuel was not reprocessed. It was also agreed that direct talks would be
held between the two Koreas.”
Carter was an ideal choice for defusing the Korean crisis.
As president, he had once announced that he planned to withdraw all US troops
from South Korea but was forced to retract the idea after it met fierce and
vocal domestic opposition, ironically even from liberals and the anti-communist
Left in the Democratic Party. The still-born proposal nevertheless made Carter
a man of peace in the eyes of Kim Il Sung, who, after Carter left office,
issued the former president a standing invitation to visit North
Korea. When Iranian students holding
hostages in a long siege inside the US embassy in Tehran, manipulated by the
Reagan campaign team in ways that bordered on treason, vindictively deprived
Carter of a second term by refusing to end the hostage crisis before the 1978
presidential election to deny Carter any advantage of an “October Surprise”, they
unwittingly acted against their own country’s best long-range national interest
by letting loose a lasting wave of conservative extremism in US domestic politics
that eventually led to the current quandary in several hot spots around the
world. A second term for Carter would have left a less belligerent US and a world
less dangerously threatened by terrorism.
The Clinton team
was divided over whether it would be wise to let Carter go to North
Korea. Ironically, those who had served
under Carter, such as Warren Christopher, Clinton’s
secretary of state, and Anthony Lake,
national security adviser, opposed the trip, warning that their former leader could
behave like a loose cannon that would ignore the confines of specific orders and free-lance a
deal that would create problems for the administration both domestically and
geopolitically. Vice President Al Gore favored the trip, seeing no other way
out of the crisis. Clinton sided with Gore. As Clinton
saw it, Kim Il Sung had painted himself into a diplomatic and domestic politics
corner and needed an escape hatch to back away from the brink without appearing
to buckle under pressure from the US.
Carter might offer that hatch. While
unspoken, Clinton felt that Carter
might also open an escape hatch for his administration which, should the Carter
deal be opposed by intransigent domestic politics, could be shut down by the
White House without political cost.
Both sides in this internal debate in the White House turned
out to be right. Kim, who was to die unexpectedly on July 8, less than a month
after meeting with Carter, from what officially described as “a heart shock
following myocardial infarction owing to heavy mental strains,” agreed to back
down in his meeting with Carter. And Carter went way beyond his official instructions,
negotiating the outlines of a treaty and notifying Clinton
after the fact only minutes in advance of announcing the terms live on CNN on
June 15.
Four months later, on Oct. 21, 1994, the United States and the
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK, commonly known as North Korea) under
the new leadership of Kim Jong Il signed a formal accord based on outlines
Cater negotiated, known as the Agreed Framework.
The accord specified that North
Korea would renew its commitment to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), lock up the fuel rods, and again let IAEA
inspectors monitor the facility. In exchange, the US,
with financial backing mostly from South Korea
and Japan,
would provide two light-water nuclear reactors for electricity explicitly
allowed by NPT rules. Upon delivery of
the first light-water reactor targeted for 2003, intrusive IAEA inspections of
North Korean nuclear sites would begin. After the second reactor arrived, North
Korea would ship its fuel rods to a third
country approved by the US.
North Korea
would essentially give up nuclear weapons capability step by step. In the interim, the US
would provide 500 metric tons of fuel oil per year to North
Korea to compensate for the loss of energy
from shutting down the nuclear reactor at Yongbyon..
Other sections of the accord, less publicized in the US
press, pledged both sides to “move toward full normalization of political and
economic relations.” Within three months of its signing, the two countries were
to lower trade barriers and exchange ambassadors. Most critically, the US
was also to “provide full assurances” that it would never use, or threaten to
use, nuclear weapons against North Korea.
Clinton Unable to Deliver US Commitment to North Korea
In theory, the 1994 Agreed Framework called upon North Korea
to freeze operation and construction of nuclear reactors suspected of being
part of a covert nuclear weapons program in exchange for two
proliferation-resistant nuclear power reactors to be financed and construction by
an international consortium that includes South Korea, Japan and the European Union,
to be known as the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization (KEDO). The
agreement also called upon the US to supply North Korea with fuel oil pending
construction of the reactors. On that
basis, the Agreed Framework ended an 18-month crisis during which North
Korea announced its intention to withdraw
from the NPT and attendant commitment not to develop nuclear weapons.
The key item in the Agreed Framework states: “Both sides
commit not to nuclearize the Korean Peninsula.
The United States must ‘provide formal assurances’ not to threaten or use
nuclear weapons against North Korea. Pyongyang is required to ‘consistently
take steps’ to implement the 1992 North-South Joint Declaration on the
Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.”
In practice, the construction of the promised light-water
reactors immediately fell far behind schedule. The first reactor, initially
slated for completion in 2003, in reality could not become operational until
2008 at the earliest. Numerous other events, as part of North Korean protests
on the delays, strained relations between Washington and Pyongyang, resulting
vicious cycles of mutual recrimination to justify further construction delays.
In 1996, a North Korean submarine landed on South Korean shores, causing Seoul
to suspend its share of energy assistance stipulated in the Agreed Framework. The
North retaliated with ballistic rhetoric and secretly started to export missile
technology to Pakistan
in exchange for Pakistani centrifuges. In 1998, North
Korea defiantly test-fired a Taepo Dong-1
missile to show it was not bluffing.
On September 17,
1999, to savage the deteriorating situation, Clinton
began easing some economic sanctions against North
Korea. In December 1999, a US-led consortium
finally signed a $4.6 billion contract for two Western-developed light-water
nuclear reactors in North Korea.
After that, North Korea
kept to its side of the bargain, but the US,
led by a politically weakened Clinton who had narrowly escaped impeachment,
could not deliver its commitments. Since the accord was not a formal treaty,
Congressional ratification was not needed, but Congress held up the sizable
financial appropriation called for by the Agreed Framework on the ground that
the agreement amounted to “appeasement” and rewarding North
Korea for bad behavior. The argument was
irrational since North Korea
considered it a sovereign right to develop defensive weapons against US threats
and sanctions, and it was the US
who demanded North Korea
to give up its nuclear program in exchange for non-weapon grade light water
reactors. South Korea
was not supportive of the agreement which had been negotiated bilaterally
between the US
and North Korea
without South Korean participation. The light-water reactors were never funded
nor were steps toward normalization between the US
and North Korea
taken.
Not until June 2000 did the US
actually ease substantially longstanding sanctions against North
Korea under the Trading with the Enemy Act,
the Defense Production Act, and the Export Administration Act, clearing the way
for increased trade, financial transactions, and investment. Pyongyang
was still prohibited, however, from receiving US exports of military and sensitive
dual-use items and most related assistance available to South
Korea. Thus non-proliferation in the Korean
Peninsula remained a selective
regime as it had been and still is around the world.
In June, 2000, South Korean leader Kim Dae Jung traveled to Pyongyang
for a summit with Kim Jong Il. The meeting raised hope for a further warming of
relations between the two fraternal governments. In August, emotional family
reunions were held in Seoul and Pyongyang
for families divided since the end of the Korean War nearly five decades ago.
The following month, athletes from both North and South
Korea march together in the opening ceremony
of the Olympic in Sydney, Australia.
Korean reunification was looking encouraging.
By July 2000, North Korea
began to threaten restarting its nuclear program if a lame-duck Clinton
administration did not compensate it financially for the loss of electricity
caused by delays in building light water nuclear power plants. It was a demand
that Clinton was in no position to
meet. By then, with time running out for Clinton who desperately wanted to
resolve the North Korean and Middle East crises before leaving office, relations
were allowed to warm between the US and North Korea.
In October, South Korea
president Kim Dae Jung receives the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to open a
dialogue with North Korea
while Secretary of State Madeleine Albright made the advance trip to North
Korea.
Clinton’s last minute
Attempt
Previously, North Korea had made being removed from the
State Department’s list of states accused of sponsoring terrorism a
precondition for sending a high-level envoy to the United States. However,
according to Wendy Sherman, Albright’s North Korean policy coordinator, North
Korean delegates at a September 27-October
2, 2000 bilateral meeting in New York
proposed that North Korean Special Envoy Jo Myong Rok visit the United
States, in an apparent concession.
Clinton
had announced on September 1 that he would not authorize deployment of a
national missile defense (NMD) system, citing technical doubts and concerns
about negative international reaction. Russia
and China, the
only two states with ICBMs capable of striking the continental United
States, staunchly opposed the system and
traditional NATO allies, led by France
and Germany, expressed
worries that the system would strain the transatlantic alliance and halt or
reverse progress toward enhancing general stability in arms control.
Samuel Berger, Clinton’s national security adviser, explained Clinton’s statement as indicating that development contracts for
NMD would not be awarded to defense contractors. Defense Secretary Cohen, a Republican, the leading NMD advocate in the Clinton administration, had reportedly pressed Clinton to award the contracts just days before Clinton’s speech. Cohen released a statement after the
announcement, saying he supported the president’s approach of having the “next
President fully involved in decisions regarding the future of the
program.” Unfortunately for arms
control, the next president turned out not to be Al Gore but George W. Bush who
reversed Clinton’s decision to delay deployment of NMD.
Throughout periodic negotiations since 1996, the United
States had tried to persuade North
Korea to end its ballistic missile exports and
terminate its indigenous missile development program. The last round of missile
talks ended in stalemate in July 2000 in Kuala Lumpur, when North Korea demanded
monetary compensation in the amount of $1 billion per year to make up for lost
revenue from arms exports and reiterated its position that missile development is
a sovereign right. The US,
North Korea
pointed out, has been the world’s largest exporter of missile technology and
systems to approved states all over the world.
Kim Jong Il who has become leader since his father’s death
in 1994, reissued a public invitation to Clinton
to come to Pyongyang, promising to
sign a treaty banning the production of long-range missiles and the export of
all missiles.
Kim Jong Il Impressed
Clinton Aides as Serious and Rational
Caricatured by a hostile Western press as an unstable
psychotic leader, Kim Jong Il was described privately by those US
officials who saw him negotiate with Albright as a very rational and pragmatic
statesman. North Korea has been portrayed by the Western press as an inhumane government
which allowed its population to starve while pursuing costly nuclear armament,
not withstanding the obvious fact that the starvation has been largely caused
by US sanctions and embargo, and the need for nuclear defense has been made
necessary by repeated US threats of use of force against it.
Robert Einhorn, who was Clinton’s chief North Korea
negotiator, now an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, a bi-partisan think tank in Washington chaired by former Democrat
Senator Sam Nunn, with a membership rooster that reads like a who’s who of
former high US officials, took part in the twelve hours of talks with Kim. “He [Kim
Jong Il] struck me as a very serious, rational guy who knew his issues pretty
well,” Einhorn recalls. Ambassador Wendy Sherman came away with a similar
impression.
One month before the presidential
election, the Clinton administration formally declared US obligation to not
threaten North Korea militarily in the October 12, 2000 Joint Communiqué
between Washington and Pyongyang which states: “The two sides stated that
neither government would have hostile intent toward the other and confirmed the
commitment of both governments to make every effort in the future to build a
new relationship free from past enmity.”
The DPRK-US Joint
Communiqué of 2000
The full text reads:
As the special envoy of Chairman Kim Jong Il of the DPRK
National Defense Commission, the First Vice Chairman, Vice Marshal Jo Myong
Rok, visited the United States of America
from October 9-12, 2000.
During his visit, Special Envoy Jo Myong Rok delivered a
letter from National Defense Commission Chairman Kim Jong Il, as well as his
views on US-DPRK relations, directly to US
President William Clinton. Special Envoy Jo Myong Rok and his party also met
with senior officials of the Clinton Administration, including his host
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Secretary of Defense William Cohen,
for an extensive exchange of views on issues of common concern. They reviewed
in depth the new opportunities that have opened up for improving the full range
of relations between the United States of America and the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea. The meetings proceeded in a serious, constructive, and businesslike
atmosphere, allowing each side to gain a better understanding of the other's
concerns.
Recognizing the changed circumstances on the Korean
Peninsula created by the historic
[June 2000] inter-Korean summit, the United
States and the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea have decided to take steps
to fundamentally improve their bilateral relations in the interests of
enhancing peace and security in the Asia-Pacific region. In this regard, the
two sides agreed there are a variety of available means, including Four Party
talks, to reduce tension on the Korean
Peninsula and formally end the
Korean War by replacing the 1953 Armistice Agreement with permanent peace
arrangements.
Recognizing that improving ties is a natural goal in
relations among states and that better relations would benefit both nations in
the 21st century while helping ensure peace and security on the Korean
Peninsula and in the Asia-Pacific
region, the US
and the DPRK sides stated that they are prepared to undertake a new direction
in their relations. As a crucial first step, the two sides stated that neither
government would have hostile intent toward the other and confirmed the
commitment of both governments to make every effort in the future to build a
new relationship free from past enmity.
Building on the principles laid out in the June 11, 1993
US-DPRK Joint Statement and reaffirmed in the October 21, 1994 Agreed
Framework, the two sides agreed to work to remove mistrust, build mutual
confidence, and maintain an atmosphere in which they can deal constructively
with issues of central concern. In this regard, the two sides reaffirmed that
their relations should be based on the principles of respect for each other's
sovereignty and non-interference in each other's internal affairs, and noted
the value of regular diplomatic contacts, bilaterally and in broader fora.
The two sides agreed to work together to develop mutually
beneficial economic cooperation and exchanges. To explore the possibilities for
trade and commerce that will benefit the peoples of both countries and
contribute to an environment conducive to greater economic cooperation
throughout Northeast Asia, the two sides discussed an
exchange of visits by economic and trade experts at an early date.
The two sides agreed that resolution of the missile issue
would make an essential contribution to a fundamentally improved relationship
between them and to peace and security in the Asia-Pacific region. To further
the efforts to build new relations, the DPRK informed the US
that it will not launch long-range missiles of any kind while talks on the
missile issue continue.
Pledging to redouble their commitment and their efforts to
fulfill their respective obligations in their entirety under the Agreed
Framework, the US
and the DPRK strongly affirmed its importance to achieving peace and security
on a nuclear weapons free Korean Peninsula.
To this end, the two sides agreed on the desirability of greater transparency
in carrying out their respective obligations under the Agreed Framework. In
this regard, they noted the value of the access which removed US concerns about
the underground site at Kumchang-ri.
The two sides noted that in recent years they have begun to
work cooperatively in areas of common humanitarian concern. The DPRK side
expressed appreciation for significant US
contributions to its humanitarian needs in areas of food and medical
assistance. The US
side expressed appreciation for DPRK cooperation in recovering the remains of US
servicemen still missing from the Korean War, and both sides agreed to work for
rapid progress for the fullest possible accounting. The two sides will continue
to meet to discuss these and other humanitarian issues.
As set forth in their Joint Statement of October 6, 2000, the two sides agreed
to support and encourage international efforts against terrorism.
Special Envoy Jo Myong Rok explained to the US
side developments in the inter-Korean dialogue in recent months, including the
results of the historic North-South summit. The US
side expressed its firm commitment to assist in all appropriate ways the
continued progress and success of ongoing North-South dialogue and initiatives
for reconciliation and greater cooperation, including increased security
dialogue.
Special Envoy Jo Myong Rok expressed his appreciation to
President Clinton and the American people for their warm hospitality during the
visit.
It was agreed that Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
will visit the DPRK in the near future to convey the views of U.S. President
William Clinton directly to Chairman Kim Jong Il of the DPRK National Defense
Commission and to prepare for a possible visit by the President of the United
States. [End]
When asked at an October 12 press briefing if Jo Myong Rok had
discussed Kim’s reported offer to Russian president Vladimir Russian to stop
missile launches in exchange for foreign satellite-launch assistance,
Ambassador Wendy Sherman, policy coordinator for North Korea, said, “We
believe, based on the discussions that we had, that there is validity to this
idea.”
At the end of an unprecedented visit to Pyongyang
on October 24, 2000,
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, with less than two weeks from the
presidential election, announced that North Korean leader Kim Jong Il had
apparently signaled a willingness to end testing of the Taepo Dong-1 ballistic
missile. Albright and Kim Jong Il met for two days of discussions covering the North
Korea missile program, nuclear transparency,
normalization of relations, and a possible trip to Pyongyang
by President Clinton. Albright was the highest-level US
official ever to travel to North Korea
and the first US
government representative to meet with Kim, now in his 6th year as
leader of North Korea.
Albright announced to a news conference that she and Kim “discussed
the full range of concerns on missiles,” including North Korea’s indigenous
program, its exports to states like Pakistan and Iran, and Kim’s reported
proposal to Putin to cease missile testing in exchange for foreign launch of
North Korean satellites. Since September 1999, North Korea had voluntarily
foregone missile testing during talks with the US, a moratorium that Pyongyang
reaffirmed after the US eased economic sanctions in July 2000. North
Korea had conducted its only test of the
Taepo Dong-1 medium-range ballistic missile in August 1998 in an attempt to put
a satellite into orbit. US government officials maintain that the satellite
launch was a failure and that the launch was intended to test missile guidance
and booster capability. The US had cited North Korea’s advances in missile
technology as the primary rationale for a national missile defense and
Pyongyang as the principal exporter of missiles to so-called states of concern.
According to Albright, while attending a celebration of the
55th anniversary of North Korea's
communist party, Kim told her there would be no more tests of the Taepo Dong-1
missile. Albright added: “I take what he said on these issues as serious in
terms of his desire and ours to move forward to resolve the various questions
that continue to exist on the whole range of missile issues.”
No Clinton-Kim Summit
President Clinton did not visit North Korea when he made his final presidential visit to Asia in November 2000 but did
not ruled out making a trip to the country before he left office on January 20, 2001. The decision not to include North Korea on the president’s itinerary came after talks between the two sides
on Pyongyang’s missile program wrapped up in Kuala Lumpur with apparent
inconclusive ending, despite US
delegation leader Robert Einhorn’s characterization of the talks as “detailed
constructive and very substantive.” A summit between Clinton and Kim would have
crowned North Korea’s diplomatic emergence after decades as a Cold War pariah adversary
of Washington. But Clinton had come under increasing pressure in the last weeks of his term in
office not to go to North
Korea from domestic
critics who warned that any visit would be portrayed in Pyongyang as a
stamp of approval for Kim Jong-Il, whom US
propaganda had portrayed as an eccentric tyrant.
As the presidential election approached, Albright urged the
next president to follow the path set by the current administration. “The next president will have to choose whether to continue down the
path we have begun. Respectfully, I hope
he will and believe he should, because I am convinced it is the right path for America,
our allies and the people of Korea,”
she said in an address to the National Press Club.
Of course, Albright’s hope was misplaced. Bush and his
neo-conservative team rejected the conciliatory path of the Clinton
administration towards North Korea.
Time Ran Out for Clinton
But time had run out for the Clinton
team. After the Albright-Kim talks, Einhorn and his staff, worked at a frantic
pace with North Korean diplomats but could not close a deal. Clinton was
distracted in the final weeks of his second term by a futile last attempt to
forge a peace treaty in the Middle East. The disputed outcome of the 2000
presidential election which took weeks to be finally settled by the Supreme
Court suspended all diplomatic activity, as the US
drifted diplomatically in mid-ocean. Yet as Clinton
left the White House, the fuel rods remained under lock and key in North
Korea. The 1994 Agreed Framework signed by
the Clinton administration was not
without problems, but it did prevent North Korea
from moving in the direction of nuclearization for a good part of a decade.
Bush Reversed Clinton Approach on North Korea
After the 2000 presidential election, by June 2001, North
Korea warned a newly installed Bush
administration dominated by neo-conservatives that it would reconsider its
moratorium on missile tests if the Bush administration did not resume contacts
aimed at normalizing relations, a warning ignored by Bush. In July, US State Department reported North
Korea as going ahead with development of its long-range missile. A Bush
administration official said North Korea conducts an engine test of the
Taepodong-1 missile. In December, three
months after the 9-11-2001 terrorist attacks, President Bush warned Iraq, Iran and
North Korea that they would be “held accountable” if they developed weapons of
mass destruction “that will be used to terrorize nations.”
In his State of the Union message in January 2002, the first
after the 9-11 attacks, President George W. Bush labeled North
Korea as part of an “axis of evil” along
with Iraq and Iran.
North Korea accused Washington of targeting it for “preemptive nuclear attack.”
In September 2002, the Bush administration released a report which emphasizes
the right of “pre-emptive defense” in attacking hostile countries developing
weapons of mass destruction, explicitly mentioning North Korea. In addition, a
leaked version of the Bush administration’s January 2002 classified Nuclear
Posture Review lists North Korea
as a country against which the United States
should be prepared to use nuclear weapons, although it does not mention
pre-emptive nuclear strikes. The impact
of these developments was fundamental on North
Korea’s renewed nuclear strategy which was
then condemned by the US
as provocative.
With the Second Iraq War turning into an endless occupation quagmire,
Bush administration began to reverse itself and its officials began to say
several times on different occasions that the US
now has no intention of attacking North Korea.
A January 7, 2003 joint statement from the US, Japan, and South Korea
reaffirmed this commitment in writing, stating that the US “has no intention of
invading” North Korea. Still, voices advocating pre-emptive attacks on North
Korea have not been totally silenced in US
policy circles.
From North Korea’s
perspective, the US
pledge to provide formal assurances not to threaten or use nuclear weapons
against North Korea
was the sine qua non of the entire
Agreed Framework. The Bush administration has failed to keep this critical
pledge by the US
with its new “transformation policy” of regime change for an “axis of evil” of Iraq,
Iran and North
Korea. Thus the “provocation” behind the
alleged “provocative actions” taken recently by North Korea in the form of
missile and nuclear weapon tests originated from the Bush White House.
The Bush administration alleged that Pyongyang
admitted during an October 4, 2002
bilateral meeting on possessing a uranium-enrichment program, which could be
used to build nuclear weapons and would violate North
Korea’s commitment to forgo the acquisition
of such weapons. North Korea has denied the allegation. In response the State
Department allegation, KEDO suspended oil shipments to North Korea the following
month as winter began. North Korea reacted on December 12, 2002 by announcing
that it would restart the nuclear facilities mothballed by the Agreed
Framework. Pyongyang expelled IAEA
inspectors on December 31, 2002
and announced on January 10, 2003
that it was withdrawing from the NPT, effective the next day. Pyongyang’s
official status with the treaty remains ambiguous.
Fuel oil shipment was suspended in November 2002, for which
the US had
provided the largest financial contribution. On November 21, 2003, KEDO announced that it would suspend
construction of the two light-water nuclear reactors in North
Korea for one year beginning December 1, 2003. The Bush Department
of State declared that there was “no future for the project.” With that, the future of non-proliferation in
the Korea
peninsula was foreclosed.
October 20. 2006
Next: GW Bush Policy
on North
Korea – a Direct Path to War
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