The Daily Telegraph

We’re all sleepwalki­ng towards conflict unless we eliminate the threat

- By John Hemmings John Hemmings is Director of the Asia Studies Centre at the Henry Jackson Society

This is not just another North Korean missile launch. The “successful” testing of a supposed inter-continenta­l ballistic missile takes the Korean Peninsula one step closer to a conflict that could drag in the world’s great powers and cost millions of lives.

This time is different because it threatens a reaction from the US. The US closely monitors North Korea’s ability to strike cities on the West Coast, and significan­t progress towards that goal is unlikely to go unanswered. Worryingly, the test also has the potential to bring Beijing and Washington to crisis point.

China’s position is to press for denucleari­sation on the peninsula by getting the US and South Korea to stop their annual defensive military drills, which, Pyongyang claims, are a threat. The North would then suspend missile launches and testing. Given the North invaded the South in a surprise attack in 1950, this is a non-starter for US and South Korean leaders.

The reaction of South Korea’s new leader, Moon Jae-in, was telling. Fresh from a successful summit with Donald Trump, he must know the president’s thoughts better than most and his warning was stark: “I hope North Korea will not cross the point of no return.” Mr Trump put the ball in China’s court, asking if Beijing would “end this nonsense once and for all”.

How can the situation be resolved? We do have options, but few have been truly tried. Contrast with South Africa, which as an apartheid regime also tried to establish a nuclear weapons programme. Unlike North Korea, sanctions were rigorous, and the state was more isolated internatio­nally. Largely down to its anti-western rhetoric and claim to be a socialist state, which has made it a useful geopolitic­al tool, Pyongyang has escaped this level of pressure.

Russia and China are the two main enablers, helping North Korea outwit sanctions with front companies and quiet cross-border trade. Pyongyang’s largest trading partner by far, Beijing made a great show of turning back coal ships in February. However, its outrage over Washington’s sanctionin­g of a Chinese bank complicit in North Korean money-laundering showed where its interests really lie.

Russia, while pressing for a peaceful resolution, is increasing business links and regularly “rents” North Korean labourers to work its timber camps.

Again, South Africa provides a template. Under US leadership, the internatio­nal community resolved the issue without the use of force. Countries in the Middle East and Asia could stop accepting North Korean labourers. We could sanction any financial institutio­n that enables more than the bare minimum of North Korean trade. Certainly, the small arms market that has sprung up between North Korea and China could be stopped and internatio­nal tourism could be halted.

The answers are there, but they demand political will. It is not merely North Korea sleepwalki­ng toward conflict. By not taking steps to stop it, we are all doing the same – and it will be a conflict in which Koreans will suffer the most.

‘The small arms market that has sprung up between North Korea and China could be stopped’

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