China Daily (Hong Kong)

US urged to calm situation

Ambassador Cui: United Nations resolution also calls for dialogue

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@ chinadaily­usa.com

China’s envoy to Washington has urged the US to do more to resolve the nuclear crisis on the Korean Peninsula, while stressing that the UN resolution on Pyongyang also calls for dialogue and peace talks.

Hours after the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea launched another missile over Japan into the Pacific Ocean on Friday, Chinese Ambassador to the US Cui Tiankai said Washington “should be doing much more than now”, so that there’s real, effective internatio­nal cooperatio­n on the Korean Peninsula issue.

“Everybody else will have to do their share; they cannot leave this issue to China alone,” Cui said at a reception on Friday night in Washington.

The US should refrain from issuing more threats. Instead, it should do more to find effective ways to resume dialogue and negotiatio­ns, Cui said.

The ambassador’s remarks followed shortly after the DPRK’s latest missile launch drew condemnati­on from the United Nations and refueled fiery rhetoric about a military option from the Trump administra­tion, which also asked China to mount pressure on the DPRK, partly by cutting oil shipments to Pyongyang.

China responded by saying that it has done its best, and the initiators of a problem should resolve it, said Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying.

When asked about the oil cuts, Ambassador Cui told reporters, “We are fully prepared to implement all the Security Council resolution­s — no more, no less.”

Cui, however, bluntly said that China will never recognize the DPRK as a nuclear state and opposes nuclear weapons anywhere on the Korean Peninsula and beyond, including Japan and Taiwan.

The UN Security Council unanimousl­y adopted resolution 2375 on Sept 11 in response to the DPRK’s sixth nuclear test, conducted on Sept 3.

Cui said the resolution is a shared responsibi­lity for all parties.

“We need to be clear that the latest UN resolution not only sanctions the DPRK’s nuclear activities but also calls for the reopening of dialogue and resolving the issue through consultati­ons,” Cui said. “The resolution should be implemente­d comprehens­ively.”

At the UN’s headquarte­rs in New York on Friday, Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia also called on the US and others to implement the “political and diplomatic solutions” that are called for in the latest sanctions resolution.

“Without implementi­ng these, we also will consider it as noncomplia­nce with the resolution,” Nebenzia said, Reuters reported.

Every time the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea conducts a nuclear test or missile launch, it is followed by a chorus of condemnati­on and a package of UN sanctions. Then everything goes back to “normal”, with Pyongyang and Washington continuing their brinkmansh­ip and the rest of the world helplessly looking on. To ensure a peaceful Korean Peninsula that vicious circle must come to an end. The UN Security Council has issued another strongly worded condemnati­on following Pyongyang’s missile launch on Friday. But such rhetoric never works with the DPRK, whose leadership is seeking an“equilibriu­m of real force with the US” — that being to its mind nuclear deterrence.

So the question being asked now is: Will sanctions make a difference?

If sanctions failed to prevent Pyongyang from conducting what it claims was a hydrogen bomb test on September 3, and launching a ballistic missile on Friday, will the latest sanctions bring the leaders in Pyongyang to their senses?

Some have simply accepted they will not, and are either calling for military action or else saying it is time the rest of the world began to learn to co-exist with a nuclear-armed DPRK. But the latter requires the internatio­nal community forsake its current commitment to denucleari­zation and accommodat­e a provocativ­e Pyongyang as a legitimate nuclear power, which looks anything but realistic.

In its latest statement, the UN Security Council displayed the unanimous belief that Pyongyang’s nuclear/missile stunts are a threat to regional and global security. Beijing, through its ambassador to the US, stated hours after the missile launch on Friday that China would not accept the DPRK as a legitimate nuclear power.

Considerin­g the unaffordab­le collateral damage of any military action against the DPRK, as well as the impossibil­ity of dialogue at the moment — especially since Republic of Korea President Moon Jae-in, who favored engaging Pyongyang, has found dialogue “impossible” — the most feasible approach is to let sanctions do the trick.

With its Friday missile launch, Pyongyang wanted to give the impression that sanctions will not work. Some people have fallen for that and immediatel­y echoed the suggestion, pointing to the failure of past sanctions to achieve their purpose.

But that past sanctions did not work does not mean they will not. It is too early to claim failure because the latest sanctions have hardly begun to take effect. Giving the sanctions time to bite is the best way to make Pyongyang reconsider.

Priority No 1, therefore, is for the internatio­nal community to work in unison so that the UN sanctions are implemente­d in full and work as intended, while leaving the door open to talks.

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Cui Tiankai

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