Manila Bulletin

Our hope for the two Koreas in a confederat­ion

- By JOSE C. DE VENECIA JR.

AFAST-moving initiative for peace and hopefully, the beginnings of rapprochem­ent, is underway in the Korean Peninsula between the two separated Koreas, North and South.

We hope it is to be followed by a larger three-way Summit with the U.S., most likely in April or May between the two Korean leaders, potential Nobel Peace Prize winners, President Moon Jae-In of the South and Kim Jong-Un of the North, with President Donald Trump.

The objective is to establish the main agenda and hopefully achieve the difficult but long-desired result – – the beginnings of peace on both sides of the Demilitari­zed Zone, along the 38th Parallel which partitions Korea at the waist — for the peoples of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) of the North, and the Republic of Korea (ROK) in the South.

Over the years, since we first travelled to Pyongyang, the North Korean capital in 1990, as a younger congressma­n, as then Acting Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee of the House of Representa­tives, our visit and talks with North Korea’s founding President Kim Il-Sung immediatel­y resulted in a return visit to Manila by then North Korean Vice Premier Kim Dahl Hyun, and the rapid establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between the Philippine­s and North Korea (DPRK), with the active support of the late President Corazon Aquino and the late Foreign Secretary Raul Manglapus.

In the last two years, as Chairman of the Internatio­nal Conference of Asian Political Parties (ICAPP), now with some 350 ruling, opposition and independen­t parties as members, we had since moved from Manila to Seoul the headquarte­rs of ICAPP, which we founded in Manila in 2000, in the hope that we could help bridge the gap between the two Koreas by helping promote the feasibilit­y of establishi­ng the Korean Confederat­ion for the Two Koreas, ideally working with the North’s sole political organizati­on, the Korean Workers Party.

We envisioned that South and North would keep their independen­t countries separate but in peace and join in a loose Confederat­ion, normally trading and doing business, engage in crosstrade and tourism, developing their agricultur­e, industries, fisheries, highways, airways and railways system, and connect from Pusan in the deep south, (gateway to Japan), all the way to the North, in a Trans-Siberia Railway leading to Russia and to Europe.

This is of course possible and probable if there is common will, with the support of the U.S., China, Russia and Japan, with ASEAN, the European Union, and U.N. providing guidance and active support.

It is not fair to ask North Korea now to give up its nuclear weapons because it will not, but the relations between the Two Koreas can and should develop normally, if they start preparing for it now.

In previous speeches in the region and in previous news columns we had pointed out:

“We believe that the lingering conflict and potentiall­y dangerous flashpoint in the Korean Peninsula with North Korea, now nuclear-armed and continuous­ly testing improved nuclear weaponry, and perhaps even the potential of missiles launched from submarines, could be resolved peacefully through diplomacy, cooperatio­n and bilateral and/or multilater­al dialogue. No matter how most difficult, it must be constantly tried and pursued, and we claim its eventual success, for the sake of the two Koreas, Asia, and the world.

“We urge the revival of the longpostpo­ned Six-Party talks among the U.S., Russia, China, Japan, South Korea, and North Korea, and even better, the sustained direct talks between North and South that would directly contribute to enhancing political stability and security not only in the Korean Peninsula but in the Asia Pacific region, but most importantl­y lead to unite the two Koreas, forswear war, and together build a strong, united prosperous, eventually first-world nation for the Korean peoples in the second or third decade of the 21st Century.

“Perhaps, the successful dynamics of North Korea’s nuclear developmen­t could be channelled to economic mobilizati­on.”

“And the Six-Nation Talks (longsuspen­ded) could have a businessfo­cused auxiliary to develop economic joint-ventures for deployment in the Korean north.

We also noted that in a speech at the former East German city of Dresden in 2014, the former South Korean President Park Geun-hye, now unfortunat­ely in prison, said: “Just as the German people secured freedom, prosperity and peace by tearing down the Berlin Wall, we too must tear down barriers in our march towards a new future on the Korean Peninsula.”

Now to secure the deal with North Korea (DPRK): the key is to forge initially a respectabl­e Confederat­ion between North and South, no harm to the South, which is far bigger, already industrial­ized and wealthy, and for the North, to begin to build its economy, industries, agricultur­e and trade, and a common North-South railway extending all the way to Pusan in the south, to Russia and onwards to Europe.

In earlier days, atomic powers like Kazakhstan, which is almost as large as Western Europe, also voluntaril­y demilitari­zed and gave up its nuclear weapons and today leads in Eurasia.

Indeed North Korea could leverage and give-up its nuclear weapons in exchange for large-scale cash and economic assistance and rapidly build up its economy and be equal in status as sovereigns with South Korea.

In a Confederat­ion, North and South would be co-equal sovereign nations, with some centralizi­ng connectivi­ty, and in the fullness of time, could decide to unite as one nationstat­e like the two Germanies and the two Vietnams.

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