China Daily Global Edition (USA)
THAAD only hinders efforts to denuclearize peninsula
The militaries of the United States and the Republic of Korea are accelerating installation of the controversial TerminalHigh Altitude Area Defense anti-missile system south of Seoul. If, as US Pacific Command chiefHarryHarris claimed, THAAD is expected to be operational “in the coming days”, there is little chance of it being suspended because of protests from Beijing andMoscow, even though it comes at a time whenWashington and its allies want them to commit more comprehensively and deeply to coordinated moves.
Although the official excuse has been Pyongyang’s wayward stuntsmanship and the threat it poses, making THAAD a fait accompli and pre-empting any change of mind from the next administration in Seoul may be a more powerful driver behind the rush to get THAAD up and running in the ROK.
Of course, Beijing andMoscow have valid reasons to protest, because the advanced system upsets the regional strategic balance and its radar undermines Chinese and Russian security interests, even though both the US and the ROK claim otherwise.
And since the deployment ofTHAADin theROKis now seemingly done and dusted, China andRussia have no choice but to respond.
Yet, whatever form that takes, it will not be the end of the story, since the nascent coalition against Pyongyang’s nuclear/missile program is likely to be collateral damage from the intransigence ofWashington and Seoul.
Beijing andMoscow are in the same boat withWashington and its regional allies on denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula thanks to a shared security interest. And in the WhiteHouse’s latest rhetoric on Korean Peninsula denuclearization, China and Russia are referred to as “partners in the region”, indicating unprecedented eagerness for a united front.
Beijing, however, has been identified as crucial to dissuading the DPRK from continuing along the path it has chosen. So much so thatWashington seems to believe that Beijing alone can make a dramatic difference.
Beijing, on its part, has been consistent in adherence to diplomacy and pursuing a nuclear-free peninsula with the united efforts of all stakeholders.
The push to makeTHAADoperational in theROK, however, creates a serious distraction for Beijing, because it represents a new security threat to it, one it must now address as a matter of urgency.
Washington and Seoul claim Beijing is misreading the situation and overreacting, but that is because they are not willing to take Beijing’s concerns seriously and have not looked at the matter from Beijing’s perspective.
Seoul does not seem to care what this means in the long run. But THAAD threatens to permanently change the regional landscape and only adds newdynamics to a situation that was already complex and requiring of careful handling.