China Daily (Hong Kong)

Provocatio­ns push tensions to the brink

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Hours after a United Nations Security Council meeting on the Korean Peninsula’s nuclear issue, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea reportedly test-fired a ballistic missile on Saturday, which exploded after liftoff. Pyongyang’s repeated testing of the internatio­nal community’s patience will lead to severe consequenc­es that will increasing­ly be hard for it to swallow.

Its blatant violation of Security Council resolution­s constitute­s an act of open defiance to the internatio­nal community’s resolve to denucleari­ze the peninsula and points to the urgency of tackling both the symptoms and the root cause of the issue.

A vicious circle of provocatio­n and retaliatio­n has reigned in recent months, with Pyongyang pushing its nuclear and missile programs while the United States and the Republic of Korea resorting to massive military exercises and the deployment of an advanced US missile defense system in the ROK.

As a result, the degree of distrust and enmity has reached the highest it’s been in years between the contested parties on the peninsula. One miscalcula­tion and one misstep would easily push the two sides, separated by the Demilitari­zed Zone, to the brink of war.

At this stage, both sides should exercise utmost restraint because a head-on clash, even if a limited one, would lead to a costly price that neither side could afford to pay. Before diplomatic means are exhausted, those who have a penchant of trumpeting war rhetoric are being neither responsibl­e to themselves nor others.

Pyongyang should awaken from the fantasy that its pursuit of nuclear capabiliti­es and a missile program will bring it peace and security, as it has left the world community little choices but to tighten nonmilitar­y measures to rein in its dangerous ambition.

The country should know it is playing a dangerous and counterpro­ductive game of provocatio­n, which can backfire and reduce the chance for diplomatic mediation. In fact, its constant and escalating provocatio­ns have eroded the patience of stakeholde­rs on the peninsula to defuse tensions through peaceful means.

Meanwhile, the US and ROK also need to do their part, and stop military threats and deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, which is the practical way to mitigate distrust and defuse tensions so as to create the conditions for communicat­ion and dialogue.

Yet, as Foreign Minister Wang Yi pointed out in the UN Security Council meeting, no matter what happens, we should never waiver in our commitment to the goal of denucleari­zation.

A nuclear-free Korean Peninsula is the basic preconditi­on for its long-term peace and stability, which caters to the interests of all parties as it is the only way to dispel reasonable concerns of all stakeholde­rs, including DPRK and ROK, and this should be the right direction for all parties to strive for.

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