China Daily (Hong Kong)

Meeting facilitate­s denucleari­zation efforts

- Wang Junsheng The author is an associate professor at the National Institute of Internatio­nal Strategy, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The unofficial visit of Kim Jong-un, top leader of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, to China to meet with President Xi Jinping before his planned meeting with US President Donald Trump in May is, needless to say, of very special significan­ce. The efforts to strengthen China-DPRK traditiona­l friendship have been highly anticipate­d, as the two neighbors share a 1,300-kilometer-long border and have proved to be a “community of shared destiny” through the Sino-Japan War (1894-1895) and the Korean War (1950-53) to the present times.

As two key players in Northeast Asian geopolitic­s, both want peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula.

On March 8, Trump told a Republic of Korea official that he was willing to meet with Kim, which, along with an anticipate­d Pyongyang-Seoul summit at the end of April, has eased the tensions on the Korean Peninsula, and could create more opportunit­ies for the DPRK and the ROK, as well as other regional countries.

Given these developmen­ts, the need for a meeting between the leaders of China and the DPRK was immense, especially to strengthen high-level communicat­ion and work out a plan for the future.

The Xi-Kim meeting has occurred against the backdrop of Pyongyang’s willingnes­s to discuss its nuclear issue. ChinaDPRK ties have encountere­d some difficulti­es in the past few years, mainly due to their difference­s over the denucleari­zation issue.

But both China and the DPRK want peace and stability on the peninsula, and China has always maintained that the DPRK’s reasonable security concerns should be properly addressed. Bilateral difference­s are related to only the methods for ensuring the security of the DPRK. Compared with the DPRK’s stance that its nuclear program is to safeguard its national security, China takes into considerat­ion other factors such as nuclear non-proliferat­ion and peace and stability on the peninsula, and therefore it is opposed to Pyongyang continuing to develop nuclear weapons.

However, the fact is that nuclear weapons cannot guarantee the security of the DPRK. Instead, it will ensue more internatio­nal pressure and a possible military strike by the US. Thus the DPRK has realized that denucleari­zation will improve its ties with China.

Considerin­g their importance in regional affairs, stronger China-DPRK ties are not only in the interests of both countries, but also of great significan­ce to the settlement of relevant issues.

China has long advocated direct talks between the leaders of the DPRK and the United States, and it will possibly make efforts to ensure such a meeting takes place.

The planned US-DPRK summit meeting will further ease tensions on the peninsula. Considerin­g the lack of trust between Washington and Pyongyang and its importance to regional peace, how the two sides will reach an agreement and implement it needs China’s participat­ion.

The successful China-DPRK summit meeting and subsequent smooth communicat­ion between the two countries will increase the possibilit­y of a successful US-DPRK meeting.

The denucleari­zation of the peninsula serves the common interests of regional stakeholde­rs, including China and the US, and to realize denucleari­zation, all parties concerned have to hold consultati­ons on an equal basis. The meeting between Xi and Kim will help the parties to handle the thorny issue in a more balanced manner, and thus facilitate joint efforts to promote the denucleari­zation process.

The Xi-Kim meeting also shows that China is still a key player in maintainin­g peace and stability on the peninsula.

The Xi-Kim meeting and the active efforts of China to resolve the peninsula nuclear issue will facilitate the planned US-DPRK summit meeting, not jeopardize it. In fact, the stance Kim has taken during his meeting with Xi — that the DPRK can realize denucleari­zation — will clear the path for his meeting with Trump.

Given that a nuclear-free DPRK is in the fundamenta­l interests of all countries in the region, there is no need to fear China is sacrificin­g the peninsula’s denucleari­zation goal for the sake of a stable China-DPRK relationsh­ip. The fundamenta­l way for the DPRK to peacefully abandon its nuclear weapons program lies in relevant countries giving Pyongyang credible security guarantees. The Xi-Kim summit will help realize such a goal.

China has long advocated direct talks between the leaders of the DPRK and the United States, and it will possibly make efforts to ensure such a meeting takes place.

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