The Day

Trump calls China’s bluff on North Korea

- By JOSH ROGIN Josh Rogin is a columnist for the Global Opinions section of The Washington Post.

T he Trump administra­tion on Thursday announced secondary sanctions against Chinese entities accused of aiding North Korea’s illicit nuclear and missile programs. The action is a sharp turn in President Donald Trump’s approach to China and the beginning of a new and unpredicta­ble effort to use sticks instead of carrots with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The new sanctions against one Chinese bank, one Chinese business and two Chinese individual­s are not a total surprise. Last week, Trump tweeted that he appreciate­d Xi’s efforts on North Korea but “it has not worked out.”

Trump officials presented the new sanctions as focused on North Korea and not Beijing. “We are in no way targeting China with these efforts,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said at a news conference Thursday. “We appreciate their work and hope they will continue to work with us.” He said administra­tion officials would be meeting with Chinese officials on the sideline of the Group of 20 meeting to discuss further ways to stop North Korea’s illicit activities.

But behind the scenes, officials said that the decision to unveil the new sanctions came after a good faith effort to identify Chinese firms the United States believes are underminin­g internatio­nal sanctions against the Kim Jong Un regime and press Xi’s government to take action.

The United States submitted a list of such firms to China and gave Beijing 30 days to respond, officials said. Beijing did respond, with a report on actions it claimed to be

Behind the scenes, officials said that the decision to unveil the new sanctions came after a good faith effort to identify Chinese firms the United States believes are underminin­g internatio­nal sanctions against the Kim Jong Un’s North Korean regime.

taking, but the Trump administra­tion found the response to be insufficie­nt and acted.

“Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network (FinCEN) announced a finding that Bank of Dandong, a Chinese bank that acts as a conduit for illicit North Korean financial activity, is a foreign bank of primary money laundering concern, and FinCEN has proposed to sever the bank from the U.S. financial system,” the Treasury Department said in a notificati­on.

In addition, Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated two Chinese individual­s and one Chinese company “in response to North Korea’s ongoing WMD developmen­t and continued violations of UN Security Council resolution­s,” the notificati­on stated.

Lawmakers and experts praised the move as a sign that Trump’s previously announced policy of “maximum pressure” on Pyongyang was now materializ­ing.

“It’s a great step forward and this shows that maximum pressure is not just rhetoric,” Senate Foreign Relations East Asia Subcommitt­ee Chairman Cory Gardner, R-Colo., told me. “I hail this first decision, but there are more sanctions that need to be done. This is a dial that now we’ve started turning and we need to amp it up.”

The goal is to convince Xi that working with the United States to increase pressure on North Korea is in China’s interest, experts said. So far, Xi hasn’t shown signs he agrees, and these limited efforts are not likely to change his overall calculus.

“The reality is that China has not taken what is the most important step, which is shutting down North Korean access to Chinese banks and front companies that enable them to launder money and continue their illicit activities,” said Bonnie Glaser, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “The secondary sanctions are not enough, we still need China to act.”

Although the Trump administra­tion may be thinking that confrontin­g China on North Korea can be accomplish­ed without upsetting other parts of the U.S.-China relationsh­ip, that is not likely. That’s because other contentiou­s bilateral issues are also heating up, including the South China Sea and Taiwan.

Asked if Trump’s actions will threaten greater tension in the U.S.-China relationsh­ip, Gardner said: “That’s a risk that China has apparently deemed is OK.”

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