Global Times

Resuming NK talks depends on efforts from all parties: FM

- By Yang Sheng

China cannot go it alone in trying to get Pyongyang back to the negotiatin­g table over the nuclear issue, and while it can mediate, both Washington and Pyongyang should think about accommodat­ing each other’s positions, experts said.

Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi said at the 53rd Munich Security Conference in Germany on Friday, in reference to the Korean Peninsula nuclear crisis, “there is still a chance of resuming negotiatio­ns; the hope for peace still exists.”

Wang said that China will uphold the UN Security Council- led sanctions, but also stressed that all parties should not give up the fight to resume negotiatio­ns.

Since the Six- Party Talks were halted in 2009, the situation has been in a vicious circle with repeated “nuclear

tests and sanctions,” Wang said.

The Chinese foreign ministry said that Wang reiterated this message when he met with South Korean counterpar­t Yun Byung- se on the sidelines of the Munich conference on Saturday.

The Six- Party Talks, involving China, North Korea, the US, South Korea, Russia and Japan, were a multilater­al mechanism aimed at solving the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue. The talks began in 2003 and stalled in December 2008, with Pyongyang quitting the process in 2009.

Jin Canrong, associate dean of the School of Internatio­nal Studies at the Renmin University of China, told the Global Times that “Wang’s statement shows China has the will and determinat­ion to solve the problem peacefully,” adding that it is “also a response to the US.”

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Friday urged China to “use all available tools” to moderate North Korea’s behavior which will further destabiliz­e regional peace after the latest missile test by Pyongyang, when he met Wang in Munich, Tillerson’s spokesman Mark Toner said.

Since the US urges China to use all available tools, China believes there is no tool better than multilater­al negotiatio­ns, Jin said.

“Unlike the US, China doesn’t have multiple choices for a solution. Apart from negotiatio­ns, the US finds regime change, internal collapse and military strikes all acceptable, but China will not risk other measures which might bring military conflict, especially so close to our borders,” Jin noted.

Need for compromise

“Subjective­ly, we can see there is the possibilit­y of resuming the Six- Party Talks. New US President Donald Trump wants to change his predecesso­r’s policy [ of strategic patience] and has the will to solve the problem, rather than simply ignore North Korea’s desire,” said Lü Chao, a research fellow at the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences.

There will be a power shift in South Korea in mid- year, with hard- liners not so popular as before, Lü said.

“Pragmatic, dovish political groups and politician­s are increasing­ly popular, such as Moon Jaein, the Democratic United Party’s candidate for president,” he said.

Jin said he feels that the sanctions will be effective in making Pyongyang think twice about its behavior, especially the coal sanctions, which normally form about 20 percent of the country’s exports to China.

From Sunday, China banned all imports of coal from North Korea.

As for Russia and Japan, their basic claims on the issue have not changed, and they will support a resumption in talks if other parties do, Lü said.

Any internatio­nal response to the recent missile launch should be made jointly within the UN framework or the Six- Party Talks, and “unilateral actions” will only ratchet up the already high tensions, Konstantin Kosachev, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Russian upper house of parliament, was quoted by the RIA Novosti agency as saying on Sunday.

“Objectivel­y, the resumption of Six- Party Talks is not very likely now. It needs cooperatio­n and compromise from both the US and North Korea,” said Wang Junsheng, a research fellow on Korean studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. “North Korea wants everyone to acknowledg­e it as a nuclear state, but the US needs North Korea to abandon its nuclear program and won’t guarantee not to use military options to solve the problem,” he noted.

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