The Manila Times

INTER-KOREAN TALKS: IS A CORNER BEING TURNED?

- FRANK CHING

HIGH- LEVEL talks between North and South Korea this week offer a potential for diplomacy— not threats of war— to reduce the increasing­ly tense standoff between Washington and Pyongyang, amid the latter’s impressive success in developing its missiles and nuclear weaponry.

The United States has shown support for the North- South talks, whose immediate aim is to enable North Korea to participat­e in the winter Olympic Games to be hosted by South Korea in Pyeongchan­g next month.

To allow this to happen, the US has agreed to the postponeme­nt of scheduled joint military exercises with South Korea until after the Games. North Korea, without saying so, will evidently not be testing any bombs or missiles during this period.

China is pleased that, in effect, its call for a suspension of USSouth Korea military exercises in return for a suspension of North Korean tests is being put into effect, at least for the time being. Now, the question is whether such a suspension-for-suspension deal can be extended beyond the Olympics and whether wider talks can then be held with North Korea involving other parties, particular­ly the United States.

The focus in the initial North- South talks will be the winter games. However, a look at the compositio­n of the two delegation­s makes it clear that both sides intend the talks to extend from sports into political realms.

The South Korean delegation his title implies, although the vice president of the winter Olympics is also a member.

Similarly, the North Korean delegation is led by Ri Son-gwon, chairman of the Committee for Fatherland. Its members include the National Olympic Committee of North Korea.

So. while the talks will focus initially on the Olympics, both sides are interested in steps toward greater reconcilia­tion.

on sporadical­ly for decades but it has been an elusive goal because of political difference­s. South Korea, for its own security, is allied with the United States, and North Korea, at least on paper, is China’s ally, reflecting the alignments in the 1950s when North Korea - ing the South. American troops defended the South and Chinese troops supported the North.

Pyongyang is now seen as an internatio­nal outlaw for its pursuit of nuclear weapons and its cruelty. Even Beijing has voted for Security Council sanctions on North Korea.

is clearly impossible in the near term, the North is using this idea as a wedge to widen a rift between Seoul and Washington.

In a New Year’s Day address, North Korean leader Kim Jongun excoriated South Korea for “siding with the United States in its hostile policy” towards North Korea and for having “further aggravated the mistrust and confrontat­ion between the north and the south, and brought the hardly be resolved.”

Kim asserted that, given such an abnormal situation, “we can never escape the holocaust of a nuclear war forced by the outside forces, let alone achieve national reunificat­ion.”

In effect, he said that there would be a nuclear war unless South Korea ended its alliance with the United States.

The idea of unificatio­n was during the campaign before he became South Korea’s president. series of North Korean nuclear and missile tests caused him to tighten relations with Washington.

Despite Kim’s bellicose words, his New Year address did create the circumstan­ces necessary for the talks on the Olympics.

that North Korea wants to play. It can simply join as a participan­t, but Pyongyang is likely to demand a bigger role, possibly asking to co- host the games alongside South Korea and per- haps even ask that some of the events be held in North Korea.

South Korea, eager for an improvemen­t in relations, is likely to go along with any demand within reason, although with the games scheduled to begin February 9, time is getting awfully short.

But if North Korea overreache­s, for example, by asking for political symbols that in effect proclaim it as a nuclear power, then the South may have no choice but to say no.

The eyes of the world are on the Olympic talks. If agreement is reached, it could conceivabl­y create opportunit­ies for multilater­al talks on the dispositio­n of North Korea’s nuclear weapons. That is the nub of the issue and no number of appeals for inter- Korean unity will help North Korea.

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