China Daily (Hong Kong)

US helping none in DPRK issue

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US President Donald Trump’s reaction to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s sixth nuclear test on Sunday stood out — not for its condemnati­on but for its twisted approach. Trump took to Twitter to say the DPRK “is a rogue nation which has become a great threat and embarrassm­ent to China, which is trying to help but with little success”. In his second tweet, he said the Republic of Korea “is finding, as I have told them, that their talk of appeasemen­t with” the DPRK “will not work, they only understand one thing”.

He then called an emergency meeting of his national security advisers and had his second telephone conversati­on with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. But he did not talk to ROK President Moon Jaein, accusing the ROK of “appeasemen­t”.

Condemning the DPRK for its nuclear and missile adventure is justified, but Trump is not helping the situation by criticizin­g the ROK and China. And China has not succeeded in its efforts, because the US has never heeded its advice on how to resolve the DPRK issue.

After the DPRK fired a missile over Japan and into the Pacific Ocean, Trump said, “all options are on the table”, a euphemism for military action. But his former chief strategist Steve Bannon had told The American Prospect earlier that “there’s no military solution, forget it”. Even US Secretary of Defense James Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson have talked about the likely catastroph­ic outcome of military action.

And Moon, reacting to Trump’s threat to the DPRK, said: “No one should be allowed to decide on a military action on the Korean Peninsula without the ROK’s agreement.”

Although Pyongyang’s latest nuclear test poses a serious challenge to Moon’s strategy of inter-Korea dialogue, reconcilia­tion and cooperatio­n, Trump should have realized before criticizin­g Moon for his “appeasemen­t” that sanctions have a worse record than talks.

Asserting that sanctions don’t work, Robert Gallucci, chief US negotiator with Pyongyang during the Bill Clinton administra­tion, said that during his contacts with DPRK officials, he realized they were fully aware of the cases of Iraq and Libya, where the US pursued regime change even after those countries had abandoned their attempts to acquire nuclear weapons.

That is something the US should focus on to ease the tensions not only on the Korean Peninsula, but also between Washington and Pyongyang.

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