China Daily Global Edition (USA)

DPRK seeks security the wrong way

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The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea vowed on Wednesday to accelerate its weapons’ program in a tit-for-tat reaction to the “evil” sanctions imposed by the UN Security Council on Monday. The DPRK’s response is a step in the wrong direction and will further isolate it from the internatio­nal community.

The Security Council sanctions against the DPRK in response to its sixth and strongest nuclear test on Sept 3 include a ban on the country’s textile exports and restrictio­ns on its crude oil imports.

The Security Council’s ninth package of measures against the DPRK since 2006 came amid escalating tensions on the Korean Peninsula and high vigilance by all parties concerned. Reports say the United States, whose Pacific territory Guam is under the perceived threat of Pyongyang’s interconti­nental ballistic missiles, “considerab­ly” watered down its draft sanctions resolution demanding a complete oil embargo and a partial naval blockade to win the support of China and Russia.

The motives of Washington, however, go beyond “avoiding a Chinese or Russian abstention” from a UN resolution. The US’ oil embargo proposal is an attempt to make the Washington-Pyongyang dispute, a focal point of the DPRK nuclear program, Beijing’s exclusive problem, as China is the DPRK’s biggest oil supplier.

And even if China does not veto such a full ban, Russia, another major oil supplier to the DPRK and also a permanent member of the UN Security Council, is not likely to support it.

The ban on the DPRK’s textile exports, reportedly the secondmost important source of income for the country, might make a difference. The latest sanctions ban the export of oil condensate­s to the country and cap refined petroleum exports at 2 million barrels a year, cutting by half the existing export levels.

The nuclear ambitions of Pyongyang are posing a serious security threat to the internatio­nal community, including China. Its insistence on continuing its nuclear program and developing interconti­nental ballistic missiles is scaling down the room for strategic maneuverin­g and consuming China’s diplomatic resources to no avail.

As a responsibl­e power, China always fulfilled its responsibi­lity of making the best efforts to ease tensions on the peninsula. On the occasions that China has agreed to the sanctions against the DPRK, it has done so to help Pyongyang return to the right track and has always taken into account the livelihood­s of the ordinary people in that country.

Pyongyang may not be a stranger to economic sanctions, but this time it faces a moment of truth. Not only do the fresh sanctions touch upon its oil imports and textile exports, they could also entail increasing diplomatic pressures. Mexico and Peru, for instance, have expelled the DPRK ambassador­s to the two countries over its nuclear test. And the UN economic sanctions could well be the last of their kind should the DPRK snub them.

Moreimport­ant,neitherthe DPRK’sbettingon­itsnuclear­prowessnor­thecontrov­ersialanti-missile batteryoft­heUSandthe­Republicof Koreawillb­egoodoptio­nsto achieve“absolutese­curity”onthe peninsula. It is high time the related partieshee­dedChina’ssuggestio­ns on“dualsuspen­sion”—Pyongyang suspendsit­snuclearan­dmissile testsinexc­hangeforth­eUSandthe ROKsuspend­ingtheirjo­intmilitar­y drills—andresumed­talksassoo­nas possible.

It’s high time the related parties heeded China’s suggestion­s on “dual suspension” ... and resumed talks as soon as possible.

Sun Xingjie is the deputy dean of the School of Internatio­nal and Public Affairs, Jilin University. The article is an excerpt from his interview with China Daily’s Cui Shoufeng.

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