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Current Issues Brief no. 18 2002-03
North Korea Nuclear Crisis-Issues and Implications
Jeffrey Robertson
Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Group
18 March 2003
Contents
List of Maps
Map 1: Democratic People's Republic
of Korea
Map 2: Democratic People's Republic
of Korea Nuclear Facilities
Map 3: Democratic People's Republic
of Korea Missile Capabilities
Executive
Summary
Introduction
Background
The Korean Peninsula
The Current Nuclear Crisis
North Korea Today
History of North Korean Nuclear
Ambitions
Economic Situation
'Threat, Coercion and Concession'
Diplomacy
Factors Affecting the Resolution of
the Current Crisis
Reconciliation Between North
and South Korea
US North Korea Policy
Bush Administration Response to
Current Nuclear Crisis
Anti-Americanism
The 'Iraq Effect'
Possible Scenarios
Sanctions, Engagement or 'Carrots and Sticks'?
A Larger Role for China?
Implications for Australia
The AustraliaDPRK Relationship
Economic Relations with
Northeast Asia
Military Involvement
Australia's Role in the Resolution
of the Current Crisis
Endnotes
Appendix 1: Nuclear Crises Compared
Map
1: Democratic People's Republic of Korea

For higher resolution map click here: JPEG
417KB
Source: United Nations Cartographic Section
Map 2: Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Nuclear Facilities

Image courtesy of Center for Non-proliferation Studies, Monterey Institute
of International Studies.
Map 3: Democratic People's Republic
of Korea Missile Capabilities

The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) remains
isolated, economically near collapse and facing yet another potentially
devastating humanitarian crisis. Its decision to withdraw from the nuclear
Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and to restart its graphite moderated reactor
have sparked international concern over nuclear proliferation and regional
concern about an imminent crisis.
The crisis is based on the potential of the DPRK to develop
nuclear weapons within a short time frame after recommencement of the
program. These concerns are heightened by the DPRK ballistic missile program
and the potential proliferation of both nuclear and ballistic missile
knowledge and components. In addition, the historically opaque nature
of the DPRK regime is likely to exacerbate the challenge of finding a
rapid resolution to the crisis.
The resolution of the current nuclear crisis is affected
by factors which distinguish it from previous crises on the Korean peninsula.
Reconciliation between North and South Korea, wider US foreign policy
interests and growing anti-Americanism in South Korea have made it difficult
for the presentation of a united front between South Korea and the US.
Further, the attention of the US and the international community is focused
on the disarming of Iraq, diverting resources from the resolution of the
nuclear crisis on the Korean peninsula.
Scenarios for the resolution of the crisis lie in two
diametrically opposed categories of sanctions and engagement. However,
the US has had limited success in the application of either approach in
dealing with the DPRK. Alternative options include a greater role for
China, given it has vital strategic interests at stake, or the use of
multilateral negotiations, perhaps including Australia, to resolve the
crisis. Both options have been rejected by the DPRK, which seeks a bilateral
resolution of the crisis with the US.
The implications for Australia of the crisis include
potential adverse economic effects as a result of increasing instability
in the Northeast Asian region. Any escalation of the crisis, or the outbreak
of conflict, would compound these effects. Australia suffered more than
1500 casualties in the defence of South Korea during the Korean War (195053)
and was a signatory to the Joint Policy Declaration Concerning the Korean
Armistice signed in Washington on 27 July 1953. An Australian contribution
to any conflict on the Korean peninsula would be expected given its historical
and continuing interest in the security of South Korea as well as its
alliance with the United States.
Introduction
On 16 October 2002 the United States disclosed publicly
that a delegation had received confirmation from North Korean officials
that the DPRK was in possession of a covert nuclear weapons program using
highly enriched uranium. In November, after consultations with regional
allies, the United States recommended suspension of the Korean Peninsula
Energy Development Organization (KEDO) shipment of heavy fuel oil to North
Korea, citing the DPRK admission as a violation of the 1994 Agreed Framework.(1)
In response to the suspension of heavy fuel oil supplies,
in December 2002 the North Korean regime expelled International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors, disabled monitoring equipment and reopened
the Yongbyon nuclear reactor complex. This, and the statement by Pyongyang
of its withdrawal from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) on 10
January 2003, has sparked international concern of nuclear arms proliferation
and regional concerns of an imminent crisis.
On 14 January a five member delegation of senior Australian
diplomats, led by Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) North
East Asia head Murray McLean, arrived in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang.
The delegation presented a letter from the Foreign Minister, Alexander
Downer, to his North Korean counterpart Paek Nam-Sun. The delegation undertook
four days of discussions, expressing Australia's interest in stability
on the Korean peninsula and strong condemnation of North Korea's decision
to withdraw from the NPT.
On February 26 the DPRK restarted the 5 MW research reactor
within the Yongbyon complex. The spent fuel rods of the 5 MW reactor could
yield enough plutonium for the production of five to six nuclear weapons
within a sixmonth period. The restarting of the 5 MW reactor brings the
crisis a step closer to what US officials have described as the 'red line
that should not be crossed'the reactivation of the Yongbyon nuclear fuel
reprocessing plant which would allow for the production of nuclear weapons
grade material within a 23 month period.
It is with this background that this paper traces the
current North Korean nuclear crisis and the factors affecting its resolution.
The paper presents alternative scenarios for the resolution of the current
crisis and the implications for Australia. The paper is confined to the
current North Korean nuclear crisis and does not consider the longterm
resolution of the security situation in North East Asia.
The Korean Peninsula
At the closing stages of the Second World War the Soviet
Union and the US agreed that their respective forces would occupy the
Korean peninsula divided by the 38th parallel just north of the capital,
Seoul. With the rapid emergence of the Cold War, discussions aimed at
unifying the peninsula under a single government failed. A pro-Soviet
regime, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) was installed
in the North under Kim Il-Sung, an anti-Japanese resistance fighter
who had fled to Soviet territory during the Japanese occupation. In the
South, a pro-American regime, the Republic of Korea (ROK), was established,
led by an American exile, Syngman Rhee.
The Korean War (195053), a particularly vicious, fratricidal
war resulted in the permanent division of the peninsula along the DeMilitarised
Zone (DMZ). Failure to successfully negotiate a peace settlement has resulted
in the two states remaining to this day in a de jure state of war, and
in a de facto state of war readiness.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) emerged
rapidly from the devastation of the Korean War (19501953). The DPRK installed
a centralised economic system allowing for rapid industrialisation and
economic growth. Focus was on heavy industry with a lower priority given
to light industry and agriculture. In response to increasingly limited
assistance from its allies, the Soviet Bloc and China, the DPRK initiated
a development strategy based on the concept of Juche, or self reliance.
Juche entered all walks of life, most notably
the military and the economy. Military expenditure in the 1960s rose from
6 per cent of GDP to approximately 30 per cent. Eventually stabilising
at this level in the 1970s, it effectively neglected other sectors of
the economy, creating the basis for future economic failures.
From the 1970s North Korea began to retreat deeper into
isolation. USChina detente and USSoviet detente led to greater international
acceptance of a divided Korean peninsula, leaving only the DPRK to pursue
its aim of unification by military means. The failure to repay international
debt due to poor economic planning isolated the DPRK from investment and
trade. The DPRK was further isolated by its continuing erratic militancy,
losing the brief support it gained from the non-aligned movement. In 1983
the death of seventeen ministers and officials in a failed assassination
attempt by DPRK agents of South Korean president Chun Doo-Hwan in Burma
confirmed the international community's perception of North Korea as a
'pariah state'.
By the 1990s a plethora of academic literature on the
future collapse of North Korea emerged. With the destitute state of the
economy, its failing political institutions and an increasing inability
to feed its population, the end of the regime seemed not only probable,
but imminent. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the subsequent collapse
of its autocratic satellites cast a long shadow over the future of the
DPRK.
Despite expectations to the contrary, the DPRK has continued
to survive. Attempts to emerge from isolation and achieve economic reform
have been overshadowed by international concern over its ballistic missile
and nuclear development programs. Today the DPRK remains isolated, economically
near collapse and facing an emerging and potentially more disastrous humanitarian
crisis.
Relations between the DPRK and the Republic of Korea
(ROK) have until recently been marked by hostility and mistrust with both
nations refusing to recognise the legitimacy of the other. The DPRK reaction
to its declining economic situation, compared to the increasingly successful
South Korean economy, has included overt attempts to destabilise, threaten
and marginalise the ROK. The economic disparity between the two nations
stood in stark contrast to the ideological heritage of the DPRK which
emphasised the eventual victory of the North.
In light of the recent nuclear crisis, current relations
between the two states have been tense, but relatively cordial given the
circumstances. The two states have continued economic exchanges and inter-Korean
meetings which began after the June 2000 Leader's Summit. The newly installed
ROK president, Roh Moo-Hyun has stated his intention to continue engagement
with the North.
The current nuclear crisis centres upon the potential
development of nuclear weapons by the DPRK. The program poses a direct
threat to the region through the DPRK ballistic missile program; the potential
proliferation of knowledge and components also poses a threat to the international
community.
According to US intelligence estimates, the DPRK already
has one or two nuclear devices. In August 2001, a statement by Secretary
of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, in Moscow gave a larger estimate, stating
'North Korea possessed enough plutonium to produce two to three, maybe
even four to five nuclear warheads'.(2) With the reprocessing
of fuel rods at the Yongbyon facility the DPRK will have the ability to
produce weapons grade plutonium within four months and the ability to
produce four to six atomic bombs in a further one or two months.
The DPRK ballistic missile development program includes
the Nodong and Taepo Dong series of missiles. The Nodong
series has a range estimated at up to 1500 kms,(3) covering
South Korea and limited areas of central Japan. By 2003 the DPRK will
have deployed approximately 100 Nodong series missiles. In 1998,
the DPRK tested a three stage Taepo Dong 1 over the Sea of Japan
(East Sea). The Taepo Dong series has a confirmed range covering
all of South Korea and Japan. US intelligence estimates state a range
of up to 5600 kms could be achieved without further testing, giving it
the ability to reach Hawaii, Alaska and consequently northern Australia.
US intelligence estimates further state that a hypothetical extension
of the Taepo Dong series program could achieve a range capable
of reaching the continental US, and consequently the entirety of Australia.(4)
These concerns are further heightened by the potential
proliferation of both nuclear and ballistic missile components. The severe
economic crisis faced by the DPRK has created a greater potential for
the regime to seek hard currency through the sale of nuclear and ballistic
missile technology and components. The fear of proliferation is enhanced
by the global war on terrorism and the threat presented by terrorist group
acquisition of DPRK knowledge and/or components.
The current North Korean nuclear crisis cannot be fully
understood without reference to both the historical nuclear ambitions
of North Korea and its current economic plight. These two factors fused
together offer an explanation of the current crisis based firmly on the
desire of the North Korean regime to ensure its survival.
Immediate regime survival depends upon the ability of
the regime to defend itself. As part of its revolutionary ideological
heritage, North Korea perceives its security to be threatened. It perceives
itself as confronted by the increasing superiority of the US military
as evidenced by the Gulf War and the Afghanistan conflict and by the future
overwhelming superiority of US Forces emboldened by a successful Iraq
conflict and rapidly building advanced National Missile Defence (NMD)
technology. In addition, the DPRK doubtlessly appreciates that with its
weakened economy its ability to continue the high levels of military expenditure
is decreasing daily. The DPRK perceives the nuclear deterrent as essential
to its defence.
Immediate regime survival also depends upon the ability
of the regime to maintain a functioning economy.(5) Current
reports indicate that the economy is facing a severe threat of further
breakdown. The state's continuing failure to provide the basics of existence
has caused an increase in the black market economy, the spread of foreign,
particularly US currency, and a surge in refugee flows across the Chinese
border. There are widespread electricity shortages and inadequate infrastructure
undermining modernisation attempts. Most alarmingly, according to the
United Nations World Food Program, the DPRK will face another severe humanitarian
crisis,(6) with famine conditions expected in 2003.
Estimates on the ability of the regime to survive vary
considerably due to the lack of available data. It must be noted that
the DPRK has managed to survive with a moribund economy and widespread
famine since the early 1990s. It has shown an ability to 'muddle through',
surviving on a combination of aid, foreign financed reform projects and
financial concessions extorted from the international community for the
maintenance of stability. As the Korea expert Adrian Buzo notes, North
Korea is a 'regime in decline and decay, although with an almost infinite
capacity to continue this trend'.(7)
North Korea showed an early interest in the potential
of nuclear power. It has been noted by Korea expert Dr Stephen Linton
that Japan's capitulation, as the result of the atomic bomb, had a profound
effect on the young anti-Japanese guerilla fighter and future founder
of the DPRK, Kim Il-Sung. His personal interest in nuclear power remained
embedded in its ability to immediately overcome a powerful foe.(8)
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) notes two
distinct phases in the development of the DPRK's nuclear programan assisted
phase and an indigenous development stage. The first stage commenced with
an agreement between the Soviet Union and the DPRK for cooperation in
nuclear research in 1956. During the 1950s scientists were trained in
nuclear physics in both the Soviet Union and China, as well as at the
newly established nuclear physics departments of both Kim Il-Sung National
University and Kim Ch'aek Industrial College. During the 1960s North Korea
consolidated its entry into the nuclear age with the construction of a
research reactor at the Yongbyon Nuclear Research Complex. This was followed
by the delivery of two research reactors by the Soviet Union.
The second phase started with the construction of an
experimental 5 MW natural uranium reactor at the Yongbyon complex in January
1986. In this period an ore processing plant and a fuel rod fabrication
plant were built. The construction of two larger gas-graphite reactors
also began in the same year and in 1987 this was followed by the construction
of a Radiochemical Laboratory, with a sizeable reprocessing capacity.(9)
According to reports by defectors, the 1970s to 1980s was a period of
rapid expansion of the DPRK nuclear program.(10) Work commenced
on uranium extraction, underground facilities, nuclear fuel enrichment
technology, nuclear device and delivery system design.
From the early stages of its nuclear program the DPRK
has been reluctant to commit to IAEA standards and regulations. Initially,
IAEA compliance was encouraged by the Soviet Union.(11) As
further evidence has emerged on the DPRK nuclear program, pressure has
been increasingly applied by the international community. It was not until
1974 that the DPRK officially joined the IAEA, and 1977 when the first
agreement on the limited monitoring of its nuclear reactors was signed.
The DPRK signed a 'Type 66' Safeguards Agreement under which the IAEA
undertook inspections of declared facilities in 1988 and 1989. In 1985
the DPRK signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Seven years
later, in 1992, the DPRK submitted its initial report to the IAEA under
the Safeguards Agreement. Inconsistencies were immediately apparent. The
IAEA findings suggested the existence of undeclared plutonium in the DPRK.
A request for further information and IAEA access to two sites related
to the storage of nuclear waste was denied.(12) This led directly
to the 1994 nuclear crisis.
The 1994 nuclear crisis consisted of a steady escalation
of events marked by the DPRK decision to withdraw from the NPT, the widening
of non-compliant activities, and the withdrawal from the IAEA. Parallel
to these events was the increasingly bellicose tone of DPRK statements
most notably the 19 March statement by North Korean delegate, Park Yong
Soo, to turn Seoul into a 'sea of fire', and the statement by North Korea
(reiterated again in 2003) that any imposition of further trade sanctions
through the UN Security Council would be regarded as an act of war. At
this stage the US made preparations for a pre-emptive strike on DPRK nuclear
facilities.
With military preparations on the peninsula at a state
of unprecedented high alert and negotiations in tatters, the crisis was
defused abruptly by the June 1994 summit meeting between former US President
Jimmy Carter and North Korean leader Kim Il-Sung. At the summit meeting
an agreement was reached that provided for the temporary freezing of the
DPRK nuclear program while negotiations towards a final solution took
place in Geneva. On 21 October 1994 the Agreed Framework was signed providing
a basis for the long term resolution of the nuclear issue on the Korean
peninsula.
Under the Agreed Framework the DPRK was to stop and eventually
dismantle its nuclear weapons related programs. It was also to account
for and resolve past discrepancies in its safeguards program. These actions
would be reciprocated by the provision of alternative fuel sourcesinitially
heavy fuel oil for electricity production and later by the construction
of two proliferation resistant light water reactors (LWR). Each step in
the elimination of the DPRK nuclear weapons program was to be matched
by both a verification process and a corresponding incentive.
The Agreed Framework was a limited and ultimately questionable
success. It achieved the freezing of the DPRK graphite moderated reactor
program and an immediate end to DPRK brinkmanship. However even this limited
success has since come into question with the current nuclear crisis.
The strongest criticism of the Agreed Framework focused
on both the cost and the precedent set by using incentives to encourage
good behaviour. From the beginning of negotiations, opponents considered
the use of incentives in negotiating with North Korea as equivalent to
blackmail which set an unwelcome precedent for other problematic states
such as Libya and Iran.
However a much stronger criticism has emerged since the
revelation of the current nuclear crisis. The Agreed Framework did not
achieve the ultimate objective of an 'end' to DPRK ability to produce
nuclear weapons but rather a 'freeze', thus postponing rather than resolving
the crisis. Critics have gone further to accuse the Agreed Framework of
providing both economic benefits to the DPRK and time for the advancement
of a covert nuclear weapons program.(13)
With the current nuclear crisis the Agreed Framework
has met an ignoble end. Both the United States and the DPRK have accused
the other of violating the agreement.
The DPRK accuses the US of non-compliance with the Agreed
Framework by delays in the provision of alternative energy (heavy fuel
oil). The DPRK believes this has exacerbated tension already caused by
the US refusal to normalise relations between the two states until compliance
is proven. The DPRK also accuses the US of continuing its policy to isolate
the DPRK through inclusion on the 'terrorist states' list and repeated
accusations labelling the DPRK a 'rogue state'. The DPRK believes this
has negatively affected its chances at socioeconomic reform due to its
inability to access international development aid from organisations such
as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) because of
its inclusion on the US Terrorism List.(14)
An internal US review concluded in June 2001 that improved
implementation of the Agreed Framework should be sought.(15)
After July 2001 the Bush administration warned that it would suspend the
construction of the LWRs unless the DPRK fully complied with IAEA obligations.
Violation of the framework became clear with the October statement by
the US that the DPRK had admitted to special envoy Assistant Secretary
Kelly of a program to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons. In consultation
with Japan, South Korea and the KEDO board, the US decided to suspend
heavy oil shipments to the DPRK as of December. This decision effectively
ended the Agreed Framework.
Food security has always been a challenge to North Korea.
Cultivable land covers only approximately 20 per cent of total land mass.
The agricultural sector faces notoriously difficult seasonal variations
exacerbated by a misdirected agricultural policy which has further increased
vulnerability to floods, landslides and drought. Floods in 1995 and 1996,
followed by drought in 1997 and 2001, devastated the agricultural sector
already weakened by declining inputs of pesticides, fertiliser and machinery.
The national agricultural base declined dramatically as a result of these
natural disasters with annual production of rice and maize falling from
8 million metric tons in the 1980s to 2.9 million metric tons in 2000.(16)
Widespread malnutrition and famine had already devastated the country
in 1994, resulting in an appeal to the United Nations World Food Program
(UNWFP) in 1995. A 1998 nutrition survey conducted by the UNWFP found
16 per cent of children acutely malnourished and 62 per cent chronically
malnourished.(17) Estimates of deaths from famine related illness
range from 900 000 to more than 3.5 million.
The UNWFP estimates that 2003 will be another particularly
difficult year for North Korea with the nation once again facing a high
risk of severe famine. Despite an increase in agricultural production
in 2002, the North will face a grain shortfall of over one million tons.
International donor fatigue coupled with emerging crises in other parts
of the world have decreased pledges of food aid to the increasingly vulnerable
North. The DPRK continues to maintain an inefficient 'socialist' agricultural
system further contributing to donor fatigue. High level representation
of the threat by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and World Bank President,
James Wolfensohn, have as yet failed to increase donor pledges. A UN Special
Envoy dispatched to North Korea by the Secretary General, Maurice Strong,
stated to the international press on 14 January that failure to increase
international aid will result in a significant crisis in March or April.
North Korea has made awkward and sporadic attempts to
modernise its ailing economy. The most significant reforms to date have
included the establishment of economic zones, an increased interest in
intra-Korean trade and a marginal market experimentation.
In November 2002 the presidium of the Supreme People's
Assembly (SPA) passed laws formally establishing the Mt Geumgang tourist
special economic zone (SEZ) and the Kaesong industrial SEZ. These SEZs
add to the original Rajin-Sonbong region, established in 1992. The Mt
Geumgang SEZ has been operating, albeit unsuccessfully, for the previous
four years. The zone is dominated by the Mt Geumgang resort, operated
by South Korean chaebol (conglomerate) Hyundai. Kaesong, also originally
planned by the Hyundai group is located just north of the De-Militarised
Zone (DMZ) which divides North and South Korea. The Kaesong SEZ sought
to capitalise on wage and rent cost differentials between the two Koreas,
particularly targeting South Korean high tech industry. This plan has
largely failed due to the existence of cheaper and inherently less risky
alternative SEZs in both China and Vietnam.
A Special Administrative Region (SAR) was declared in
September for the Chinese border region of Sinuiju. This SAR aimed to
be the most radical experiment, going beyond the limits of the Chinese
SARs it was modelled on. Sovereignty was to be handed over to a special
administrator, a Chinese entrepreneur holding Dutch citizenship, Yang
Bin. However the suspected failure of the North Korean government to fully
inform China of its plans led to the arrest of Yang Bin on tax evasion
charges and the suspension of further SAR regulatory changes.(18)
The DPRK also made sporadic attempts to experiment with
greater market influence. In 2002, local markets began to flourish despite
attempts to impose stricter controls.(19) The partial abandonment
of the state distribution system and failed price controls resulted in
increased inflation and wider interpretation of new economic regulations,
in turn leading to a greater reliance on private businesses and marketplaces.
DPRK foreign trade remains minimal with exports totalling
US$826 million and imports totalling US$1 847 million. The vast majority
of trade is conducted with China with a significant amount of this estimated
to be de facto aid.(20)
Intra-Korean trade increased substantially in 2002 to
US$600 million, an increase of more than 50 per cent on the previous year.
The majority of DPRK imports are in the form of aid, including food and
farm produce, woven products, steel, machinery and textiles. A maritime
accord signed in December allowing for cabotage on seven designated inter-Korean
routes will further improve prospects for inter-Korean trade.
Despite the attempts at modernisation the DPRK economy
remains extremely fragile. Economic reform has been slow, haphazard and
difficult. The strongest challenge facing the economy remains the dichotomy
that exists between reform and regime control. Economic reform challenges
the legitimacy and rule of the DPRK elite. Reform increases the economic
independence of citizens and challenges the ideological basis of juche.
More significantly, economic reform also brings into question the past
achievements of Kim Il-Sung and the legitimacy of the current great leader
Kim Jong-Il.
Threat, coercion and concession became the trademark
of DPRK diplomacy in the post Cold War period as its strategic aims appear
to have shifted from reunification of the peninsula to regime survival.
Prior to the collapse of the communist bloc in 1989,
the DPRK campaign against South Korea included terrorist attacks such
as the bombing of Gimpo International Airport (1986), the bombing of Korean
Air Flight 858 (1987), and assassination attempts on the South Korean
President (1970, 1974, 1981, 1983). Other measures included violations
of the armistice agreement including construction of infiltration tunnels,
submarine infiltration of armed guerillas and maritime border infiltration.
With the end of the Cold War, DPRK regime survival methods
included the use of provocative measures such as naval incursions to attain
concessions in negotiations. With greater frequency these negotiations
have been aimed at securing financial and material benefits, such as during
the 1994 nuclear crisis, in which the DPRK attained significant financial
concessions in exchange for agreement to suspend and eventually dismantle
its nuclear program. Nuclear development and the ballistic missile program
have since become the two pillars characterising DPRK threat, coercion
and concession diplomacy. (21)
In the 1990s DPRK nuclear and ballistic missile development
became international issues triggering DPRK direct negotiations with the
US and securing financial concessions in return for a 'suspension' of
activities. The similarity of the current crisis to the previous nuclear
and ballistic missile development crises are striking. The current crisis
reflects the previous crises in the insistence on one-to-one negotiations
with the US, a manufactured deadline (the reprocessing of fuel rods) to
increase negotiating power, and escalation accompanied by hyperbolic threat
to increase allied (South Korean and Japanese) pressure on US negotiators.
There are four related factors that distinguish the current
nuclear crisis from its historical counterparts. Firstly, South Korea's
commitment to reconciliation with the North has exposed differences of
opinion between US and South Korean policy on relations with North Korea.
This has also been reflected in the reaction to the current crisis. Secondly,
the rise in anti-Americanism currently prevalent in South Korea relating
to other matters (including the revision of the Status of Forces Agreement
for the stationing of US Forces in South Korea) has further exacerbated
tension between Seoul and Washington. Thirdly, United States wider foreign
policy and the Bush administration Korea policy have severely limited
the options available to negotiators seeking resolution of the crisis.
Finally, America's preoccupation with the situation in Iraq has reduced
options and resources available to deal with North Korea. These factors
have increased the difficulty of finding an immediate acceptable resolution
to the crisis.
The June 2000 Leader's Summit marked the culmination
of President Kim Dae Jung's 'Sunshine Policy' of engagement with North
Korea. The meeting was greeted with elation in South Korea, allowing for
the first time the realisation that peaceful unification may be possible.
This was followed by subsequent events such as the joint march around
the stadium under the 'unification flag' by athletes at the opening ceremony
of the Sydney 2000 Olympics to a standing ovation and the increased working
contacts on issues such as displaced families reunions, trade and investment.
A revolution in thinking occurred in the South with the
advent of the 'Sunshine Policy'. Despite the success of the Leader's Summit,
subsequent progress was sporadic. Kim Jong-Il failed to make a return
visit to Seoul, and no progress was made on military confidence building
measures. Recent controversy has also erupted over accusations that Kim
Dae-Jung made illegal financial payments to the DPRK to arrange the historic
Leader's Summit.
These events have precipitated a revolutionary change
of thought in South Korea. The idea that the DPRK is the enemy has dissipated
to be replaced by a feeling of 'friendship' and even 'brotherhood'. In
November 2000, a poll in a leading South Korean daily newspaper, the Dong
A-Ilbo, showed 59 per cent believed 'the possibility of war had almost
disappeared following the NorthSouth Summit'.(22) The revolution
in thinking also lead to the cancellation of the Defence Ministry's 2002
White Paper due to an unwillingness to designate North Korea as the 'primary
enemy'.(23)
The current increased affinity expressed by South Koreans
for the DPRK is in stark contrast to the situation that prevailed in the
1994 nuclear crisis. A major stumbling block to the resolution of the
1994 nuclear crisis was the insistence by Seoul that the Agreed Framework
include provisions referring to resumption of inter-Korean dialogue. Indeed,
during the 1994 nuclear crisis Seoul threatened to push for international
economic sanctions and generally played a harder line than the current
Bush administration. This stands in glaring contrast to the current situation.
With the decreased perception of North Korea as the enemy,
greater differences have become apparent in the South Korean US relationship.
This has been exacerbated since the inauguration of the Bush presidency
and its failure to continue the policy of engagement started during the
Clinton presidency. Under President Clinton, Secretary of State Madelaine
Albright made an historic visit to Pyongyang on 23 October 2000. The difference
between the two administrations was noted in the South Korean press in
an article aptly subtitled 'the workload has increased'. Interviews conducted
with academics from major universities concluded 'the emergence of the
Bush administration will considerably influence NorthUS, SouthNorth
and SouthUS ties'.(24)
The difference of opinion was furthered by the decision
of the Bush administration to initiate the National Missile Defence (NMD)
plan. NMD targeted North Korea specifically as a 'raison d'etre', frustrating
Seoul's attempts to end North Korea's isolation. Polls revealed a widening
gap in the outlook between the longtime allies. In South Korea 73 per
cent of people polled considered the unification of the two Koreas likely
in the near future, compared to only 28 per cent in the USA.(25)
In February 2002, a poll in the leading South Korean political journal,
Sisa, revealed over 56 per cent considered their opinion of America had
recently changed for the worse and, more alarmingly, 41 per cent considered
China a closer ally of South Korea than the United States compared to
30 per cent who considered the United States as the prime ally.(26)
The State of the Union address by George W. Bush on 29
January 2002 that labelled North Korea with Iraq and Iran as part of an
axis of evil received about as much support in South Korea as in North
Korea. The speech caused vitriolic anti-American statements in internet
chat-rooms, street protests in Seoul and Pusan and even a scuffle in parliament.
South Korean popular sentiment could be summed up by the statement of
parliamentarian Song Sok-Chan 'Mr Bush is an evil incarnate who wants
to make the division of Korea permanent by branding North Korea part of
the axis of evil'.(27)
The emergence of the American pre-emptive strike policy
has threatened to drive an even wider wedge between Washington and Seoul.
The National Security Strategy 2002, submitted to the United States Congress
in September, stated:
The United States has long maintained the option of pre-emptive
actions to counter a sufficient threat to our national security. The
greater the threat, the greater is the risk of inactionand the more
compelling the case for taking anticipatory action to defend ourselves
(28)
Fears that an American 'hardline' approach to North Korea
may eventually transform into pre-emptive action which would destabilise
the region has already caused concern in Asian politics.(29)
Both President Kim Dae-Jung and Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi have felt the need to urge the United States to open
dialogue with North Korea.(30) After the revelation of North
Korea's nuclear program, President Kim again called on the United States
to take a softer stance on North Korea.(31) The divergent views
on North Korea policy between the United States and South Korea has been
intensified by the fear that the pre-emptive strike policy may extend
to North Korea, particularly in the wake of the nuclear revelation. Inevitably
the South Korean public views recent United States policy in North Asia
from the decision to adopt a National Missile Defence to 'hardline' approaches
with North Korea as divergent from their interests.
The Bush administration response to the current nuclear
crisis reflects both its characteristic 'hardline' North Korea policy,
and an attempt to postpone the crisis until after the disarming of Iraq.
The Bush administration has insisted that the current
situation is not a bilateral issue but rather an international issue.
As such, the issue can only be resolved through the agreement of the international
community. The administration has been increasing diplomatic efforts to
place pressure on the DPRK through South Korea, Japan, Russia, and particularly
China. The administration has placed a particular emphasis on the role
China can play in the crisis given its historical and strategic interests
on the peninsula.(32) It has also stated that it will not enter
into bilateral negotiations with the DPRK until existing obligations are
met.
Prior to any negotiations taking place administration
officials insist that the DPRK must first come into full compliance with
its past nuclear agreements. The administration has further stated that
any dialogue will not be aimed at the negotiation of a new agreement,
but rather aimed at assisting the DPRK to comply with its existing obligations
to the international community. The administration has vowed not to be
'blackmailed' by offering inducements to the DPRK to end violations of
existing obligations.(33)
Finally, in an effort to forestall resolution of the
crisis until after the disarming of Iraq, the Bush administration has
reiterated that it does not consider the current nuclear situation in
the DPRK as a 'crisis',(34) but rather considers it a 'situation'.
The administration has repeatedly stated its intention not to invade the
North but to resolve the 'situation' through diplomatic means. The US
has simultaneously increased pressure on the regime by the movement of
a carrier battle group to the Sea of Japan (East Sea), the movement of
strategic long range bombers to Guam(35) and the holding of
extensive joint US-ROK annual training exercises scheduled for March 2003.(36)
In a statement to the Press Pool outside the Treasury
Building on 7 February 2003, President Bush reiterated the administration's
position combining both its hardline North Korea policy and its desire
to forestall the crisis, stating:
All options on the table, of course. But as I said many times, and
I still believe thisthis will be solved diplomatically, and we will
continue to work diplomatically.(37)
Anti-Americanism has become a major concern for Washington
since the events of September 11. In August 2002, the US State Department
announced an inquiry 'to explore various manifestations and roots of anti-Americanism
around the world, what it means for the United States and how the United
States may address it'.(38) Anti-Americanism in South Korea
has been particularly virulent. Its effect on policy options to resolve
the nuclear crisis will be substantial. Daily protests in the lead up
to the December presidential elections outside the American embassy in
Seoul have extended beyond traditional devotees of student and labour
unions to include religious leaders, housewives, mothers and schoolchildren.
Anti-American sentiment became such a strong factor in the December 2002
presidential elections that even conservative opponent Lee Hoi-Chang declared
his intentions to revise the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) if elected.
It has been widely suggested that the election victory of Roh Moo-Hyun
was assisted by the strong anti-American sentiment prevalent across South
Korea, especially among younger voters whose support for Roh was crucial.
The issues most influencing anti-Americanism in South
Korea include the perceived unilateralism of the Bush administration,
the deaths of two schoolgirls in a United States Forces Korea (USFK) training
accident,(39) calls for revision of the Status of Forces Agreement
to allow for the trial of USFK servicemen in all cases in Korea, and the
relocation of the USFK Yongsan military complex, located in downtown Seoul.
The increased anti-American sentiment has inevitably
affected policy options available to both Seoul and Washington. Public
sentiment is strongly anti-American to the extent that the fiftyyear
old alliance has even been questioned on both sides of the Pacific. A
Korean Research Center poll found that 51 per cent of South Koreans believe
the cause of the nuclear crisis was American hardline policy while only
24.6 per cent blamed North Korean 'adventurism'. A poll conducted by the
Gallup organisation in conjunction with a leading South Korean daily,
the Chosun-Ilbo, found 54.4 per cent of South Koreans believed that 'other
countries' would be the likely target of a North Korean nuclear program,
while only 27.7 per cent believed South Korea would be the target.(40)
The greatest difference lies in the change of current
South Korean perceptions of the North compared to those during the 1994
nuclear crisis. A poll conducted by Chosun IlboGallup showed more than
53 percent of South Koreans surveyed said they disliked the United States,
up from 15 percent in 1994. Over the same period, the percentage of those
who said they liked the United States fell from nearly 64 percent to 37
percent.(41)
This widespread antiAmericanism has led to elements
within the US calling for the abrogation of the USROK alliance have gaining
greater credibility. The influential think tank, the Cato Institute, a
long time critic of the US military presence in the ROK, reflects the
growing sentiment in its statement:
If it were not for the 37 000 US troops stationed in South Korea and
the nearly 50 000 stationed in Japan, the United States could afford
to view the prospect of a nuclear North Korea with relative detachment.(42)
Bush administration officials have reacted to the growing
resentment. The US ambassador to Seoul, Thomas Hubbard, confirmed the
realignment of the USFK's role on the Korean peninsula. A reduction in
ground forces would be replaced by a stronger air force and naval presence,
allowing an easing of anti-American tension through the reduction of USFK
numbers in Seoul.(43)
The current situation in Iraq affects the resolution
of the Korean nuclear crisis in two distinct ways. The Iraq crisis serves
to draw attention and resources from the international community effectively
decreasing international pressure on the DPRK. Conversely, the successful
resolution of the Iraqi situation could signal both the effectiveness
of a US hardline approach to non-compliance and the overwhelming superiority
of US led forces.
Iraq has drawn international attention and resources
away from the Korean nuclear crisis. Despite its potentially graver consequences,
the Korean nuclear crisis has repeatedly been treated as a secondary concern
by both the international media and politicians. As the British prime
minister, Tony Blair, stated in parliament:
After we deal with Iraq we do, yes, through the UN, have to confront
North Korea about its weapons program.(44)
While the statement might serve as a warning to North
Korea of future stronger action, it also signals that dealing with North
Korea will be after Iraq. Also supporting this is the fact that
the Bush administration initially signalled a possible end to the historic
'two war strategy'. The 'two war' strategy which enables US capability
to successfully carry out two concurrent major wars in different regions
came under question in the preSeptember 11, postCold War peace.
The desire of the US to deal with the nuclear crisis
after the disarming of Iraq places greater pressure on the US to acquiesce
to DPRK requests for bilateral negotiations to avoid escalation. Limited
conflict on the peninsula during an Iraq conflict would increase public
pressure on a negotiated solution with North Korea.
Recent press statements however have reiterated the ability
of US forces to engage in two major wars. As stated by Defence Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld:
I have no reason to believe that North Korea feels emboldened because
of the world's interest in Iraq, if they do, it would be a mistake.
We are perfectly capable of doing that which is necessary.(45)
A successful resolution of the Iraq situation will strengthen
calls for a harder line in dealing with the DPRK. It will encourage the
already vocal opposition to dealing with North Korean 'blackmail'.
A US Senate bipartisan group led by Senators Jon Kyl
(RepArizona), John McCain (RepArizona) and Evan Bayh (DemIndiana) introduced
legislation on 13 January for the formal end of all US aid to North Korea
under the Agreed Framework and the reimposition of sanctions lifted in
1999. The bill further urges the imposition of further sanctions to interdict
DPRK sales and the enhancement of US military capability in the region.
The successful resolution of the Iraqi situation will strengthen such
positions. As stated in a press release by Senator Kyl:
This is exactly the kind of approach the international community has
taken with respect to Iraq; we should do nothing less in dealing with
North Korea.(46)
Given these factors the DPRK's ability to secure bilateral
negotiations with the US, and to achieve favourable terms in negotiations,
would be strengthened by the resolution of the crisis before the
successful conclusion of the Iraq situation. This suggests that the DPRK
is likely to seek to impose both stricter deadlines and engage in more
severe escalation tactics to speed up negotiations.
The options for dealing with the immediate North Korean
nuclear crisis lie in two diametrically opposed categoriessanctions and
engagement. Historical precedents exist for the use of each approach in
relations with North Korea, however no one strategy has proven wholly
successful.
The use of sanctions (limited or extensive) to change
DPRK behaviour do not have a strong record of success. Since the early
1970s the juche ideology of self reliance, coupled with its economic
mismanagement, has effectively placed self-imposed sanctions on the DPRK.
The US first imposed sanctions on North Korea in 1950 under the Trading
with the Enemy Act. They have been modified on several occasions, most
recently on 19 June 2000 in support of the Agreed Framework and to encourage
the cessation of DPRK missile tests.
Since the easing of sanctions in 2000 the export and
import of goods to and from the DPRK have been allowed, providing licensing
and prior notification to appropriate US agencies. Travel restrictions
have also been lifted. However, significant increases in trade have not
occurred. This is largely due to both the fact that the DPRK remains suspicious
of the potential for increased trade to weaken regime security and the
inherent wariness of business regarding export finance in such unstable
circumstances. Economic sanctions were reinforced in August 2002 after
evidence of missile sales to Yemen emerged.(47)
While the effectiveness of limited sanctions to influence
DPRK behaviour remains questionable, the threat of stricter sanctions
has gained significant responses from Pyongyang. Extensive sanctions will
threaten North Korea's extensive arms exports which are a key source of
hard currency for the regimein particular the powerful military elite.
There are no verifiable figures of the value of arms exports with estimates
varying from US$100 million to US$1 billion. The main customers in the
past have been Iran, Pakistan, Egypt, Libya and Yemen. Most recently,
Pyongyang issued a strong protest on 12 December after the unflagged vessel
So-San, carrying North Korean Hwasong Scud missiles bound
for Yemen, was intercepted by Spanish forces in the Indian Ocean. The
protest emphasised the importance Pyongyang places on arms exports as
a valuable source of foreign currency.
The final consideration against stronger sanctions is
the DPRK declaration that the imposition of sanctions will be regarded
as an act of war. This tactic was also employed effectively by North Korea
in the 1994 nuclear crisis. The high level of brinkmanship raises the
cost of imposing sanctions to the level of a military strike. Both China
and South Korea remain opposed to sanctionsthe latter heeding the traditional
Korean saying 'a cornered rat will attack the cat'.
Engagement with the DPRK has historically proven difficult
due to both domestic opposition and North Korea's often erratic handling
of international relations. The most successful policy of engagement has
been followed by South Korea, with similar policies in the US and Japan
facing strong domestic opposition.
Since the election of Kim Dae-Jung in 1998, engagement
has been the central feature of South Korea's relation with the North.
The success of the approach has been limited, but significant. Culminating
with the historic leader's summit in 2000, the policy of engagement has
enabled a closer working arrangement on issues of humanitarian assistance,
inter-Korean trade and economic assistance. The success of the policy
is perhaps best viewed as one of its greatest challenges. The July 2002
naval clash in which five South Korean naval personnel lost their lives
resulted not in an escalation of tension as would have occurred prior
to the policy of engagement but rather in a statement of 'regret' from
the DPRK.
The United States has attempted engagement with the DPRK
to varying degrees. Under the Clinton administration trade restrictions
were eased and closer cooperation sought, highlighted by the visit of
Secretary of State, Madelaine Albright, in October 2000.
However, domestic consensus for closer engagement with
the DPRK has proven difficult. Opposition in the US centres upon the use
of incentives in negotiating with Pyongyang. Incentives are considered
by opponents as equivalent to paying blackmail. Opponents claim the use
of incentives in a 'carrot and stick' approach have not yielded results
due to the over emphasis on the 'carrot'. A strong opponent of the Clinton
policy of engagement Senator McCain (REPArizona) emphasised in June 1995:
Our diplomacy employs only carrots; theirs only sticks. Whenever our
carrots have failed to prevent North Korean transgressions, the administration
has limited its choice of sticks to the withdrawal of the carrot.(48)
In Japan, engagement is limited by strong public opinion
opposed to the DPRK regime. Despite the September 2002 KoizumiKim Summit
meeting in Pyongyang, public opposition to increased financial assistance
remains strong due to dissatisfaction with the DPRK's handling of cases
involving kidnapped Japanese nationals. Opposition to engagement is also
based on the very real threat of DPRK ballistic missile and nuclear development.
China continues to maintain a low profile in the current
nuclear crisis despite having vital strategic interests at stake and potentially
holding the greatest influence over the DPRK, being its main source of
energy, food and diplomatic support.
Its position on the nuclear issue remains based on (1)
peace and stability on the peninsula should be preserved; (2) the peninsula
should remain nuclear free; and (3) the dispute should be resolved through
diplomatic and political methods.(49) China has urged both
the US and DPRK governments to return to the 1994 Agreed Framework and
to resolve the dispute through dialogue.
Given China's wider strategic interests on the peninsula,
a larger role for China in the resolution of the current crisis may eventuate.
A nuclear build up in Northeast Asia, the more rapid deployment of US
NMD, and possible immediate deployment of Theatre Missile Defence (TMD),
would not serve China's interests. Further, the possible collapse of the
North Korean regime as a result of sanctions, military action or North
Korean adventurism would inevitably lead to adverse humanitarian, economic
and military situations on China's border with North Korea, also central
to China's strategic interests.
China's role will be central to any resolution of the
current crisis. The US has given signals that it expects China to play
a larger role in applying pressure on North Korea. In a television interview
Secretary of State, Colin Powell, urged China to take a greater role in
the crisis, stating on 9 February, 2003:
Half their foreign aid goes to North Korea. Eighty percent of North
Koreas wherewithal, with respect to energy and economic activity, comes
from China. China has a role to play, and I hope China will play that
role.(50)
On 11 February 2003 Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Zhang Qiyue stepped out from China's previous low key position on the
crisis to insist that the two sides should talk directly, reiterating
the DPRK position. In response to a question on the US Secretary of State's
request for China to play a greater role, the spokesperson agreed that
the North Korean nuclear issue was a concern to all of North Korea's neighbours,
but insisted that the two sides should negotiate bilaterally a return
to the 1994 Agreed Framework.(51)
Given that China's vital interests are best served by
the maintenance of the status quo on the peninsula, it is unlikely to
support any hardline sanctions approach that may precipitate the downfall
of the DPRK. Its role will more likely prove decisive in a behind-the-scenes
support for a diplomatic initiative to ensure the survival of the DPRK
based on its principles of peace and stability, a nuclear free peninsula
and diplomatic/political resolution of the crisis.
Australia has traditionally maintained greater independence
in interaction with Asia given its evident self interest in the region.
This has been reflected in Australia's early re-establishment of diplomatic
relations with the DPRK and its ongoing search for a pragmatic and rapid
resolution of the current crisis. The implications of the crisis for Australia
centre upon its important economic relations with the Northeast Asian
region. Australia also remains committed to an alliance structure that
provides a strong argument for Australian involvement in conflict on the
peninsula. In addition, there exists the possibility of Australian participation
in the resolution of the current crisis through multilateral dialogue.
Australia was the second western nation to re-establish
diplomatic relations with the DPRK as it emerged hesitatingly from its
isolation in the late 1990s. Stating his purpose as 'ensuring that Australia
continues to play its part in bringing North Korea in from the cold',
on 14 December 2000 the Australian Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer,
arrived in North Korea to initiate negotiations on the establishment of
diplomatic relations.(52) On 5 March 2002 DPRK officials were
granted diplomatic accreditation in Canberra. The resumption of diplomatic
relations resumed direct contact which had ceased with the abrupt, and
as yet unexplained, departure of the first DPRK delegation in 1975. The
Australian embassy to be opened in the DPRK capital, Pyongyang, has been
postponed due to the current crisis.
The resumption of diplomatic relations opened a channel
of communication, allowing for the direct presentation of Australian viewpoints
to the DPRK on regional security issues. Australia's ability to influence
developments in the DPRK remain commensurate with its low level of trade
and development assistance, and its limited influential capacity in global
affairs.
In 2001 Australian trade with the DPRK totalled A$5 million,
comprising primarily of imports from the DPRK. While there exists significant
potential in a long term stabilised North Korea, the current low level
of trade can be attributed to the uncertainty and risk faced by business
in such an unstable environment.
Australian aid to the DPRK remains at a low level reflecting
both international donor fatigue and concerns with the distribution of
food aid within the DPRK. The DPRK has not allowed international aid agency
access to the food distribution system, raising suspicions of aid diversion
to the military and black marketeers. Further, the DPRK restricts access
to certain areas of the country, making a complete nutritional survey
impossible. On 21 February 2003 Australia committed A$3 million to the
alleviation of hunger in the DPRK through a contribution to the World
Food Program. The total Australian commitment to DPRK humanitarian requirements
since 1996 is approximately A$39 million.
Australia also maintains an active interest in the stability
of the region through its significant contribution to the Korean Peninsula
Energy Development Organization (KEDO). Australia is the largest non-executive
board member contributor to KEDO. KEDO was developed as part of the 1994
Agreed Framework to fund the delivery of alternative energy (initially
heavy fuel oil) to the DPRK in return for the suspension of its nuclear
development program. In its 2002 annual report KEDO notes that from March
1995 until December 2001, Australia contributed US$13.3 million.
Northeast Asia remains Australia's most important export
market despite recently declining growth trends. In 200102 it accounted
for 40.7 per cent of Australia's merchandise exports. Any disruption to
the region, affecting Australian trade, or intra-regional trade will inevitably
affect Australia's economic interests.
The current crisis has already affected consumer and
investor confidence in South Korea, Australia thirdlargest export market.
An authoritative measure of business confidence, the Federation of Korean
Industries (FKI) business survey index (BSI) fell to a 14 month low in
January, with analysts citing geo-political uncertainty as a possible
reason. The international credit rating agency, Moody's, conducted a review
of South Korea's credit rating in January downgrading the nation's long
term credit rating from positive to negative. Moody's attributed the change
to the current nuclear crisis.
The downgrade in South Korea's credit rating will affect
short term Australian business confidence in South Korea, possibly harming
the diversification of the trade relationship, which remains largely based
on the export of Australian raw materials and the import of South Korean
finished consumer products. However, given an early resolution of the
crisis, current levels of trade will not be affected and consumer confidence
will rapidly be replaced given South Korea's positive economic outlook.(53)
Escalation of the crisis has the potential to affect
intra-regional trade. The crisis could possibly exacerbate tension between
the major actors of the region, South Korea, Japan and China, adversely
affecting recent moves towards closer integration. Tension already exists
as China and Japan vie for the economic leadership of the East Asian region.
Any upset of the status quo in the region that could affect the rebound
of the stagnant Japanese economy, or slow Chinese economic growth will
adversely Australia's key export markets in the medium term.
Escalation of the current crisis could be also be the
trigger for destabilisation of this key region. Tension could be dramatically
increased if any number of reactionary scenarios eventuate such as a decision
by Japan to alter its pacifist constitution in response to North Korean
threats, a US pullout from South Korea, more rapid Japanese and US deployment
of Theatre Missile Defence or National Missile Defence, or collapse of
the DPRK.
A high level of conflict on the peninsula and its probable
spread to Japan would severely affect Australian trade interests. The
cessation of trade with South Korea and the severe disruption to trade
with Japan would threaten more the more than A$52 billion trade relationship
which accounts for approximately 22 per cent of Australia's merchandise
trade.(54)
The US currently maintains 37 000 troops in South
Korea as well as 45 000 troops in Japan. Analysts consider the troops
a 'tripwire' of the much greater involvement required should hostilities
break out on the Korean peninsula. Given Australia's close alliance with
the US, its interest in the security of South Korea, and its historical
commitment to Northeast Asian security, strong pressure for an Australian
contribution would be expected.
Australia committed forces to the defence of South Korea
during the Korean War (19501953) suffering more than 1500 casualties,
of whom 339 were killed. Australia's immediate commitment included forces
stationed in Japan as part of the Commonwealth Occupation Force, the 77
Squadron RAAF and 3 Royal Australian Regiment (3 RAR) and later
extended to include rotation of the 1 RAR and 2 RAR.
Australia was one of the sixteen signatories to the Joint
Policy Declaration Concerning the Korean Armistice signed in Washington
on 27 July 1953. This agreement confirmed the resolve of signatories to
resist any new armed attack, in the interest of world peace, and in accordance
with the principles of the United Nations. Given the fact that an armistice
remains in place on the peninsula, not a peace treaty, the declaration
provides further strength to the case for immediate Australian involvement
in any future Korean conflict.
Australian participation in the resolution of the current
crisis has been limited to the dispatch of a five member diplomatic delegation
to Pyongyang. The delegation expressed Australia's concerns and point
of view on the issue, and presented a letter from Foreign Minister Downer
to his North Korean counterpart.
Future possible Australian participation in Permanent
Five Plus Five (P5 +5) negotiations on the issue has been expressed by
the US. The US maintains the position that it does not want to engage
in bilateral negotiations with the DPRK, preferring to include members
of the international community. The P5 +5 would include the permanent
members of the UN Security Council, the US, UK, France, Russia and China
along with Japan, the two Koreas, the EU and Australia. While participation
in such a forum would increase Australia's role in the resolution of the
crisis, statements by the DPRK Ambassador to Australia, Chon Jae Hong,
have emphasised the DPRK's absolute rejection of multi-party talks in
favour of 'direct equal negotiations' with the US based on the principles
of respect for sovereignty, non-aggression and economic development.(55)
Australian Government policy remains aimed at increasing
diplomatic pressure on the DPRK to return to its safeguards obligations
and comply with the NPT. The Australian position emphasises dialogue both
through regional multilateral bilateral USDPRK channels. In response
to a Parliamentary question on 13 February 2003, the Foreign Minister,
Alexander Downer stated:
It is not unreasonable for the United States to talk with the North
Koreans and see what can be achieved. So we hope that in the fullness
of time, in an appropriate circumstance and under appropriate conditions,
such bilateral discussions may take place.(56)
On 26 February, after a meeting with US Secretary of
State, Colin Powell, the Foreign Minister echoed the US position that
bilateral talks between the US and the DPRK may take place, but only in
the context of a multilateral framework:
It is crucially important that countries like China, which has so
much leverage over North Korea, play a key part in trying to ensure
not just that the framework for meetings can take place, but also that
North Korea can be persuaded to de-nuclearise.(57)
- The 1994 Agreed Framework allowed for International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) inspections of North Korean nuclear facilities, the decommissioning
of the graphite moderated reactor in exchange for heavy fuel oil, the
resumption of normal diplomatic relations and the construction of two
light water reactor (LWR) nuclear power plants, judged to be safer given
their dependence upon an external fuel cycle. With the suspension of
heavy fuel oil shipments it is estimated North Korea would face a 15
per cent reduction in electricity supply, triggering the closure of
factories and transport facilities, thus further weakening the disabled
economy.
- Larry Niksch, North Korea's Nuclear Weapons Program, Congressional
Research Service, January 2003.
-
Federation of American Scientists, Missile Overview, available at:
http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/dprk/missile
.
- 'The Rumsfeld Report', The Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile
Threat to the United States, 104th US Congress.
-
For further detailed information on the prospects of DPRK economic
survival see Marcus Noland, Between collapse and revival: a reinterpretation
of the North Korean economy, IIE 2001, available at:
http://www.iie.com/papers/noland0201-2.htm.
- The DPRK faced recurring famine conditions in the 1990s. Estimates
of the death toll vary greatly from 900 000 to 3.5 million.
- Adrian Buzo, The Making of Modern Korea, Routledge Press, 2002.
p. 193.
-
Scott Snyder, North Korea's Nuclear Program: The Role of Incentives
in Preventing Deadly Conflict, available at:
http://wwics.si.edu/subsites/ccpdc/pubs/price/chap03.pdf
.
- IAEA, Fact Sheet on DPRK Nuclear Safeguards, 8 January 2003.
- Alexandre Y. Mansourov, The Origins, Evolution, and Current Politics
of the North Korean Nuclear Program, The Nonproliferation Review,
SpringSummer 1995
- For a detailed account of Soviet influence on DPRK nuclear program
see Alexandre Y. Mansourov, ibid.
- IAEA, loc. cit.
- Peter Brookes, Agreed Framework in Danger of Collapse, Nautilus Institute,
1998.
- Larry Niksch, Korea: USKorean RelationsIssues for Congress,
Issue Brief for Congress, Congressional Research Service, Library of
Congress, 23 January 2003.
- IAEA, Fact Sheet on DPRK Nuclear Safeguards, 8 January 2003.
- UN World Food Program, North Korea Country Brief.
-
UN World Food Program, Nutrition Survey of the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea, November 1998, available at:
http://www.wfp.org/country_brief/indexcountry.asp?country=408#
.
- Economist Intelligence Unit, DPRK Country Profile 2002, p. 17.
- ibid, p. 17
- ibid, p. 18
- Yongho Kim, North Korea's use of terror and coercive diplomacy: looking
for the circumstantial variants, The Korean Journal of Defense Analysis,
vol XIV, no 1, Spring 2002, p. 61.
- Referenced in Nicholas Eberstadt, Our Other Korean Problem,
The National Interest, Fall 2002, p. 110.
- Yonhap News Agency, 4 March, 2001.
- Boo Hyung-Kwan, Bush's policy towards North Korea, Donga Ilbo,
8 November, 2000.
- The Harris Poll, 3 January 2001.
- Survey: Anti-US sentiment in South Korea, Joongang Ilbo, 27
February 2002.
- 'Protests, tight security await Bush in S. Korea', Manila Times,
20 February 2002.
-
National Security Strategy of the United States of America, September
2002, available at:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss.html
.
- Oh Young Jin Kim, Koizumi urge US to resume talks with NK, Korea
Times, 22 September 2002.
- ibid.
- Shim Jae Yun, 'Seoul to call on US to take softer stance on nuke issue',
Korea Times, 23 October 2002.
- Secretary Colin Powell, Press Conference St Regis Hotel, Beijing,
China, 24 February 2003.
- Phillip Reeker, US State Department Briefing, State Department, 23
December 2002.
- Richard Boucher, 'North Korea Situation Not a Crisis', US State Department
Daily Briefing, 10 January 2003.
- United States Navy Seventh Fleet News, 'Carl Vinson Battlegroup Visits
Guam', 25 February 2003.
- United States Force Korea News Release No. 030207, RSOI and Foal Exercises
Combined, 17 February 2003.
- President George W. Bush, Remarks by the President to the Press Pool
Office of International Information Programs, US Department of State,
7 February 2003.
- Richard Boucher, Spokesman Department of State Daily Press Briefing
, Washington, DC 28 August 2002.
- On June 16 2002 two teenage girls were killed in a road accident in
Yangju, north of Seoul involving a USFK tank on the way to training
exercises in the area. The tragic accident grew into a major issue centring
upon the presence of American forces in South Korea. The extremely emotional
nature of the accident galvanised growing anti-American sentiment to
such an extent that fears were expressed by both governments of the
rise in anti-American sentiment. At the centre of the issue was the
refusal of USFK to release the two soldiers to be tried under South
Korean jurisdiction, after a request by the South Korean Justice Ministry.
Under the SOFA the USFK is not required to hand over jurisdiction for
incidents which occur during training.
- Michael Lev, 'Many S. Koreans fault US for Crisis', Chicago Tribune,
6 January 2003.
- Peter S. Goodman, 'Anti-US Sentiment Deepens in South Korea', Washington
Post, 9 January 2003.
- Ted Galen Carpenter, 'Needless Exposure to Risk', Washington
Times, 19 November 2002.
- Shin Young-Bae, 'Hubbard Confirms Plans to Realign Forces in Korea',
Korea Herald, 18 February 2003.
- Sydney Morning Herald, 'Blair Points to North Korea as Next
Target', 31 January 2003.
- Washington Times, 'Rumsfeld Says US Can Win War on Two Fronts',
24 December, 2002.
- Jon Kyl, Senate Press Release, Senate Bipartisan Group Urges New
Strategy Toward North Korea, 13 January 2003.
- For further information on US economic sanctions see Dianne Rennack,
North Korea: Economic Sanctions, Congressional Research Service,
Report for Congress, 24 January 2003.
- As cited in Scott Snyder, op. cit.
- Zhang Qiyue, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, China, Spokeperson's Press
Conference, 13 February 2003.
- Interview with Colin Powell, Fox Sunday News, 9 February 2003.
- Jim Randle, 'China Urges Direct N. Korea US Talks', Voice of America,
11 February 2003.
- As cited in David Goldsworthy, Issues in Australian Foreign Policy,
The Australian Journal of Politics and History, June 2001, vol.
47, no. 2, p. 225.
- The OECD Country Report released February 2003 estimates growth rates
of 56 per cent for the ROK in 2004.
- DFAT Composition of Trade 200102.
- Speech by DPRK Ambassador Chon Jae Hong at the Australian Institute
for International Affairs, Canberra, 11 February 2003.
- Parliament of Australia, House of Representatives, Debate,
Thursday 13 February 2003, p. 837.
- AAP, 'Australia Calls on Other Nations to Help Deal with North Korea',
26 February 2003.
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1994 Nuclear Crisis
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2003 Nuclear Crisis
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February 1993.
IAEA request for special inspection refused by DPRK.
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November 2001.
Technical meetings between the DPRK and IAEA fail to agree on program
of work for activities required to verify the correctness and completeness
of the initial report.
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12 March 1993.
DPRK announces withdrawal from NPT.
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16 October 2002.
DPRK acknowledges the existence of a program to enrich uranium for
nuclear weapons in talks with US Assistant Secretary Kelly.
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1 April 1993.
IAEA Board of Governors deems DPRK in noncompliance with Safeguards
Agreement, referred to Security Council.
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OctoberNovember 2002.
Statements by the US, by the US together with Japan and South Korea,
and by KEDO conclude the DPRK program to be in violation of the
Agreed Framework, the NPT, the DPRKIAEA Nuclear Safeguards Agreement
and the NorthSouth Joint Declaration on the Denuclearisation of
the Korean Peninsula.
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11 May 1993. Security
Council calls on DPRK to comply.
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November 2002.
KEDO suspends heavy oil shipments to the DPRK.
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June 1993.
DPRK announces suspension of withdrawal from NPT.
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November 2002.
IAEA Board of Governors adopts resolution calling for immediate
DPRK reply and cooperation.
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1993 and 1994.
DPRK allows conduct of Safeguards activities with limited scope.
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December 2002.
DPRK Foreign Minister Paek Nam Sun expresses disappointment at IAEA
unfair and unilateral approach. DPRK refuses to accept resolution.
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December 1993.
IAEA Director General's report states limited safeguards activities
permitted by the DPRK no longer provides meaningful assurance of
peaceful use of DPRK declared nuclear installations.
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13 December 2002.
DPRK announces decision to lift the freeze on its nuclear facilities
in light of KEDO suspension of heavy fuel oil.
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19 March 1994. DPRK
officials threaten to turn ROK capital into a 'sea of fire', dramatically
increasing growing tension on the peninsula.
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22 December 2002.
DPRK begins cutting seals and removing surveillance cameras.
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31 March 1994.
Security Council calls on DPRK to allow IAEA inspectors to carry
out required activities.
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27 December 2002.
DPRK orders IAEA inspectors to leave the country.
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28 April 1994.
DPRK Foreign Ministry issues statement, describing the Armistice
Agreement as 'blank sheets of paper', threatening withdrawal from
the agreement.
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6 January 2003.
IAEA adopts new resolution calling for urgent cooperation with the
agency.
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May 1994.
DPRK hastily discharges fuel from 5 MW reactor, making clarification
of core history impossible.
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10 January 2003.
DPRK announces withdrawal from NPT effective immediately. The required
three months notice is stated as unnecessary due to the effective
withdrawal being only 'suspended' in 1993.
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30 May 1994.
Security Council calls for immediate consultation between DPRK and
IAEA.
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5 February 2003.
US satellite images show movement of spent fuel rods at Yongbyong
nuclear complex.
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10 June 1994.
IAEA Board of Governors adopt a resolution stating the DPRK's continued
and increased non-compliance with safeguards.
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12 February 2003.
IAEA refers DPRK violations of the Safeguards Agreement to the UN
Security Council.
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13 June 1994.
DPRK withdraws its membership from the IAEA.
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17 February 2003.
DPRK threatens withdrawal from Armistice Agreement that ended hostilities
on the Korean peninsula in 1953.
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June 1994. Former
US President Jimmy Carter visits DPRK as US Special Envoy.
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20 February 2003.
DPRK MiG-19 flies over the Northern Limit Line (NLL) initiating
immediate alert in the ROK.
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21 October 1994.
US and DPRK commit to the Agreed Framework. DPRK 'freeze' and ultimate
dismantlement of graphite-moderated reactor projects in exchange
for supply of heavy fuel oil, Light Water Reactor (LWR) generating
capacity of 2000 MW, a formal assurance against the use of nuclear
weapons against the DPRK, and the easing of trade restrictions.
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24 February 2003. The
DPRK launches a surface to sea missile in the Sea of Japan (East
Sea), on same day as inauguration of new ROK president Roh Moo-Hyun.
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25 February 2003. DPRK
protests at US spyplane flights along its eastern coast. Warns citizens
to prepare for US preemptive attack.
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26 February 2003.
DPRK restarts Yongbyong nuclear reactor.
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4 March 2003. Four DPRK
fighter jets intercept a US 'spyplane' in international waters of
the DPRK coast.
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5 March 2003. US
military official confirms additional forces to be deployed to Western
Pacific as a defensive measure.
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10 March 2003.
DPRK launches second surface to sea missile after declaring a maritime
exclusion zone in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) for the period 811
March.
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11 March 2003. US
deploys six F111 Stealth Fighters and 20 F-15 fighters, as well
as the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson to participate in USROK
military exercises.
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