Gulf News

Taking a big stride back from the brink

There now seems to be the very real prospect that face-to-face talks might ease tensions in Korea

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hree months ago, amidst a flurry of interconti­nental ballistic tests and the detonation of a nuclear device by North Korea, and a fiery rhetorical response by United States President Donald Trump to shower “fire and fury” on the regime of Pyongyang, it looked as if diplomatic options were well and truly off the table. Military conflict – and the very real prospect that it would escalate out of control with horrific and untold consequenc­es for all living in the vicinity of the Korean peninsula – seemed inevitable.

But saner heads seem to have prevailed, and there is a hope – and hope is a commodity that one can never have enough of – that common sense might yet win through, and that all sides seem prepared now to face one another, not at the end of a gunsight or a weapons targeting system, but across a table.

This extraordin­ary prospect seems to have come about by the very fact that the Winter Olympics are now underway in the Taebaek Mountain town of Pyeongchan­g in South Korea, with the North sending a team across the De-Militarise­d Zone to compete as a unified Korea in some discipline­s. Kim Jong-un’s sister as well as the nominal head of state, have both gone south as well, with Kim offering a return visit to South Korean President Moon Jae-in. While US Vice-President Mike Pence was at the Games, he also held talks with President Moon, and it now emerges that both Washington and Seoul agreed on terms for further engagement with the regime in Pyongyang. The strategy is two-fold: To embrace these newfound opportunit­ies for diplomatic engagement in face-toface meetings; and to exert extreme pressure on Pyongyang by squeezing it economical­ly through United Nations sanctions, targeting its foreign currency reserves and opportunit­ies, its energy supplies and its exports.

Let’s be clear: North Korea has wilfully and deliberate­ly escalated tensions on the peninsula by thumbing its nose at previous agreements, developing its nuclear arsenal, engaging in rough nuclear tests, and firing a series of increasing­ly more powerful ballistic missiles, provoking its neighbours and warranting the rounds of increasing­ly tougher sanctions from the internatio­nal community. But let us also acknowledg­e that the paranoid and unpredicta­ble regime faced a US president who used the UN to threaten the obliterati­on of a nation through his big red nuclear button. Neither side have helped themselves — but maybe now we are about to take a big stride back from the brink. And no one ever died from talking.

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