The National - News

Reasons to be sceptical about Korean opportunit­y

▶ This is not the first Olympic rapprochem­ent – and the others proved to be false dawns

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On November 29, 1987, Korean Air Flight 858 exploded in mid-air, scattering human remains and plane debris into the Andaman Sea below. Two North Korean operatives had planted a bomb on the passenger jet – from Baghdad to Seoul – before disembarki­ng at a stop-over some hours earlier. All 115 passengers and crew died in the blast. One bomber who survived a suicide attempt later testified as to the motive: to destabilis­e the South Korean government and scare athletes away from the 1988 Seoul Summer Olympics.

This month, the Games have become the backdrop for renewed North-South diplomacy. Following fresh sanctions imposed in the wake of Kim Jong-un’s latest missile test last November, the recent talks have yielded rare tangible results. Next month, a North Korean delegation will attend the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, some 50 miles south of the Demilitari­sed Zone. With athletes joined by 230 cheerleade­rs and 140 orchestral musicians, this is among the largest exodus from North to South in years. Notably, the countries will march under one flag and field a joint ice hockey team. The cross border road will open for the first time in two years.

As ever, the reasons for what Japanese foreign minister Taro Kono has dubbed a North Korean “charm offensive” can only be divined. Some see an attempt to divert attention from Kim’s nuclear programme. Others, including US secretary of state Rex Tillerson, have chalked it up to recent biting sanctions. Although his mercurial president is likely to take credit, many suspect a North Korean strategy to phase out the US, with whom South Korea usually holds military exercises in February. Seen by Pyongyang as a rehearsal for war, the exercises have been postponed until March – after the Olympics.

Historical precedent is not wholly encouragin­g. Having marched under one flag at Games in 2000, 2004 and 2006, both sides subsequent­ly reverted back to their posturing. But for now we should celebrate, with cautious scepticism, this sporting gesture. Meanwhile, the spectre of US-South Korea military exercises looms large, likely to set the trend for the post-Olympics proceeding­s, when any whisper of rapprochem­ent will really be tested.

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