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Northeast Asia Peace and Security Network DAILY REPORT For Monday, March 30, 1998, from Berkeley, California, USA |
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IN TODAY'S REPORT: II. Analysis |
1. "Northern Wind" Scandal in ROK
The Washington Times (Willis Witter, "SOUTH KOREAN ELECTION HIT BY 'NORTHERN WIND',"
Seoul, 3/30/98) reported that leaked ROK intelligence documents suggest that the ROK Agency for
National Security Planning (NSP) had conspired with the DPRK to work against the election of Kim Dae-
jung as president of the ROK. Unconfirmed reports have said that agents from the NSP handed white
envelopes stuffed with cash to DPRK officials and urged them to take some provocative action that would
turn ROK voters against Kim. Reportedly, Park Chae-suh, a Seoul-based businessman who at one time
worked for ROK military intelligence, leaked details of the NSP smear campaign to officials of the NCNP,
who then initiated contacts with DPRK officials, bribing them to keep quiet. By one account, politicians
linked to former President Kim Young-sam handed their DPRK contacts a suitcase stuffed with US$3.5
million. One unnamed source said that secret contacts between the ROK and the DPRK go on all the time,
and nobody meets with DPRK officials without giving them cash. Sources said that US intelligence does
not appear to have played a role in the so-called "Northern Wind" scandal. An unnamed senior official at
the US Embassy stated, "At this point we just don't know. We're going to have to let [the scandal] play out
and at the appropriate point draw our own conclusions."
2. Asia-Europe Summit Meeting
The AP-Dow Jones News Service (Cecilia M. Kang, "S. KOREA PRESIDENT TO SEEK SUPPORT FOR
KOREA AT ASEM," Seoul, 03/30/98) reported that Lee Kyu-hyung, assistant secretary at the ROK
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, said that ROK President Kim Dae-jung will try to encourage
foreign investment in the ROK at a two-day Asia-Europe Summit in London beginning Friday. Lee stated,
"President Kim will explain Korea's current economic status, reiterate his commitment to the International
Monetary Fund, and try to get moral and substantive support from the participants. His other priority is to
express his pursuit of peaceful coexistence with North Korea." An unnamed official at the Presidential
office added, "President Kim will review what he has accomplished since his inauguration and even before
that and will try to establish a strong diplomatic presence." ROK officials said that Minister of Foreign
Affairs Park Jung-soo will accompany Kim to the meeting and will also push the president's message.
1. Four-Party Peace Talks
The following essay ("THE FOUR PARTY TALKS: A PERSPECTIVE BY PETER BROOKES")
originally appeared as the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) Pacific Forum #12 on
March 20, 1998.
Peter Brookes is a Professional Staff Member with the Committee on International Relations in the House
of Representatives. The views expressed here are his own.
"As the current round of the Four Party Talks wraps up, American policy towards the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea (DPRK) should be re-examined. The objectives of our current policy towards
Pyongyang are unclear and the Administration's actions appear to be concentrating more on the process of
negotiations than on issues of substance such as reducing military tensions on the peninsula. This current
approach has proven ineffective and could be potentially dangerous to U.S. interests in Northeast Asia.
A peace treaty ending the Korean War, though a worthy goal, is not an end in itself and does not address
many of the problems which plague the peninsula. The Administration's roadmap for negotiating the
veritable "minefield" of inter-Korean relations is equivocal and the objectives of our policy are vague.
What does the United States want---a soft-landing, a hard-landing, a collapse, an implosion, or the
maintenance of the status quo? Or does the Administration have a 'wait and see' attitude which will react to
events as they evolve? Unfortunately, the policy has not been well articulated and this lack of clarity is of
concern to many who follow these issues closely.
This concern about current U.S. policy is amplified by a number of matters including the fact that North
Korea is currently our largest 'aid' recipient in East Asia ($75 million of PL 480 Title II this fiscal year in
food aid; $62.5 million last year); the several rounds of talks have arguably not produced anything more
substantive than bringing the North Koreans to the table to talk; the Korean Peninsula Energy Development
Organization (KEDO) is in serious financial trouble due to its inability to raise funds for heavy fuel oil
(HFO) and may soon be insolvent due to outstanding debt; missile proliferation talks with North Korea are
stalled and have not curbed the spread of destabilizing weaponry; and most importantly, the Korean
peninsula is not any less tense today than it was before the talks began last year. This record of
'achievement', despite good intent, is troublesome to many. The election of South Korean President Kim
Dae Jung and the installment of a new government in Seoul provides a unique opportunity for the U.S. to
step back and re-examine the ends and the means of the Four Party Talks and adjust policy accordingly.
Pyongyang has, and will, continue to manipulate the negotiating process and any accommodation with the
Stalinist regime in North Korea is disconcerting to many Americans. The Administration must bear this in
mind as this round of the Four Party Talks begin. Remember that it was North Korean aggression which
started the Korean War in 1950 and took the lives of over 50,000 American soldiers. The threat today is no
less than it was then and the threat comes from north of the 38th parallel--not south. The threat does not
come from the United Nations Command in South Korea as the DPRK insisted during its most recent
military 'mobilization' last week.
Today, the DPRK maintains one of the largest armies in the world (5th largest) with over 1.1 million men
under arms and spends almost one-quarter of its gross national product (GNP) on its huge military machine
while, shockingly, its own people rely on the generosity of the international community to survive a wide-
spread famine which plagues the countryside. As many as 3 million North Koreans may have starved to
death due to the nefarious self-centeredness of the regime and its 'juche' philosophy; its seriously-flawed
economic and agricultural policies; and unfortunate natural disasters wrought by Mother Nature. The fact
that Pyongyang is feeding its huge army while its people starve is a crime against humanity of the greatest
magnitude.
Further, and most importantly for Americans, the North Korean People's Army (KPA) directly threatens
37,000 American servicemen and women stationed far from home in the Republic of Korea (ROK) at the
cost of over $3 billion per year to the American taxpayer. Recent reports indicate that the North may be
soon able to deploy the medium range 'No-Dong' ballistic missile capable of striking targets in Japan,
further endangering American troops stationed there. North Korea also maintains an active chemical and
biological weapons program.
Additionally, the Stalinist regime in Pyongyang is one of the world's most brutal and over 300,000 of its 23
million citizens languish in political prison camps for specious reasons. The government forcefully
restricts freedom of speech, religion, assembly, citizen's movements, and workers rights. The regime has
also been implicated in the kidnaping abroad of South Koreans, Japanese and other foreign nationals for
use in its intelligence apparatus. The DPRK remains on the U.S. government's list of sponsors of state
terrorism and has been implicated in the trafficking of drugs. The U.S. should negotiate with these facts in
mind.
As the U.S. prepares for future rounds of the Four Party Talks, it would be wise to advise and admonish
our negotiators that the continued support of many Americans is contingent upon a few key points. First,
the security of American and ROK forces is paramount and must remain at the forefront of the negotiations
with the DPRK. Reducing tensions, building confidence and increasing transparency must predominate
any deliberations to a change in the status quo on the peninsula and in any future U.S.-DPRK bilateral
relations. There is significant concern that Confidence and Security Building Measures (CSBM) have not
been given the priority they should be afforded in our dealings with North Korea. The 38th parallel is still
one of the most volatile lines of demarcation in the world today. It is reasonable to expect that progress on
security issues will be slow, but they must be addressed up front and become the foundation for further
negotiations and any normalization of relations involving the U.S., ROK and the DPRK.
Secondly, reciprocity on the part of North Korea is the key for continued participation by the U.S. in the
talks. There must be gestures of political goodwill by the North as a sign that they are willing to move
these negotiations forward. The lack of progress in the Talks, is perhaps indicative of the North's
unwillingness to compromise. It must be made clear that the North's manipulation of the process is
unacceptable. For instance, it is reasonable to expect that if the international community is feeding starving
North Koreans, Pyongyang will take reciprocal steps to address the crisis, perhaps in the form of slowing
down the tempo of military exercises, instituting agricultural reform or purchasing grain itself from abroad.
This has not happened and must be a sine qua non of the talks.
It is shameful that there has been no attempts at reform of the agricultural sector and North Korean military
exercises continue at normal levels despite the famine. The international community is generous but its
skepticism about the regime is evidenced in the inability of the United Nation's World Food Program
(WFP) to meet its most recent 1,000,000 ton food appeal. Reform on the part of Pyongyang is necessary
and required. The Administration is wrong to think North Korea does not link food donations with its
willingness to participate in the Four Party Talks. Denying this linkage, on the part of the Administration,
does not make it untrue. The adage, 'perception is reality' applies.
Third, the American negotiators must insist on the DPRK's participation in North-South dialogue as a basic
aspect of the Four Party Talks. The problem on the peninsula is ultimately a Korean question and the two
Koreas must do the 'heavy lifting' in reducing tensions and finding a lasting peace. This, of course, may be
the most problematic of all, because Pyongyang prefers to align its future with Washington-- not Seoul.
Interestingly, the DPRK often hypocritically complains about adherence to the Agreed Framework by the
U.S. and the ROK, but the North-South dialogue is an integral aspect of the basic agreement that
Pyongyang has not adhered to itself. The U.S. must press for a genuine North-South dialogue.
The Four Party Talks and the desire to find a lasting peace on the Korean peninsula are a worthwhile effort,
but the Administration should re-examine its policy towards the Korean peninsula. It should take another
look at its approach and assemble a comprehensive plan which starts with the end in mind; protects and
advances American interests; integrates, in a measured fashion, North Korea into the international system;
does not get out in front of American public opinion or the Congress; and most importantly, reduces
tensions and the military threat on the Korean peninsula."
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