Business Standard

UN sanctions North Korea, blocks fuel, ships and workers

- RICK GLADSTONE & DAVID E SANGER

The United Nations Security Council placed new sanctions on North Korea on Friday that significan­tly choke off fuel supplies and order North Koreans working overseas to return home, in what may prove the last test of whether any amount of economic pressure can force the isolated country to reverse course on its nuclear weapons programme.

The sanctions, proposed by the United States and adopted by a vote of 15 to 0, were the third imposed this year, in an escalating effort to force the North into negotiatio­ns. China and Russia joined in the vote, in a striking display of unity, but only after the Trump administra­tion agreed to soften a couple of the provisions.

Under the new sanctions, the amount of refined petroleum North Korea can import each year will be cut by 89 percent, exacerbati­ng fuel shortages. Roughly 100,000 North Korean labourers who work in other countries, a critical source of hard currency, will be expelled within two years. Nations will be urged to inspect all North Korean shipping and halt ship-to-ship transfers of fuel, which the North has used to evade sanctions.

But the resolution does not permit countries to hail or board North Korean ships in internatio­nal waters, which the Trump administra­tion proposed in September. That would be the most draconian measure, because it would enable the United States Navy and its Pacific allies to create a cordon around the country, though Pentagon officials say it would risk setting off a firefight between North Korea and foreign navies.

The new sanctions are the toughest ever, but so were the last two rounds: In August, the Security Council blocked North Korean exports of coal, iron, iron ore, lead, lead ore and seafood, and in September, it blocked textile exports, curbed oil imports and called for inspection­s of ships that have visited the North’s ports.

Experts, and even the White House, agree that the United States is running out of sanctions options. The CIA assessment is that no amount of economic sanctions will force the North Korean leader, Kim Jongun, to give up his country’s nuclear programme.

“President Trump has used just about every lever you can use, short of starving the people of North Korea to death, to change their behaviour,” the White House homeland security adviser, Thomas P Bossert, said Tuesday.

The vote came just four days after the United States charged that the North was responsibl­e for the “Wannacry” cyberattac­k that crippled computers around the world in May, and nearly a month after the country launched a new interconti­nental missile that appears capable of reaching any city in the US.

The United States, which has led the sanctions effort at the Security Council, drafted the latest round in consultati­on with other members, notably China, which historical­ly has been reluctant to impose them for fear of destabilis­ing North Korea, its neighbour.

There were some lastminute changes in the final version of the resolution, partly to satisfy Russian complaints. The changes included doubling the deadline for the return of North Korean workers to 24 months from 12 months.

Russia’s deputy ambassador, Vladimir Safronkov, who attended the Security Council vote, made a point of complainin­g about negotiatio­ns over the resolution, in which he said Russia had not been adequately consulted.

Still, Russia went along with the new measures — though American officials have charged that in recent months the Russians have secretly opened new links to the North, including internet connection­s that give the country an alternativ­e to communicat­ing primarily through China.

The unanimous decision was a diplomatic achievemen­t for the Trump administra­tion, only a day after most members of the United Nations General Assembly, brushing aside President Trump’s threats of retaliatio­n, condemned the United States’ new recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

The sanctions, proposed by the US, were adopted by a vote of 15 to 0 and the third to be imposed this year

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