The New Zealand Herald

North Korea’s diplomatic gold

US, Japan uneasy after Pyongyang’s ‘charm offensive’

- Soyoung Kim

Nand

James Pearson

in Pyeongchan­g orth Korea has emerged as the early favourite to grab one of the Winter Olympics’ most important medals: the diplomatic gold.

That is the assessment of a former South Korean government minister and political experts who say the North has used the Games to drive a wedge between South Korea and the United States and to potentiall­y ease pressure on its sanctionsc­rippled state.

In barely a month since North Korean leader Kim Jong Un surprised the world and said his nation was ready to join the Games, South Korean President Moon Jae In has delayed military exercises, feted Kim’s sister at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics and given conditiona­l consent to a bilateral summit in the North.

“North Korea clearly appears to be winning the gold,” said Kim Sung Han, who served as South Korea’s ViceForeig­n Minister in 2012-2013 and who now teaches at Seoul’s Korea University.

“Its delegation and athletes are getting all the spotlight, and Kim Jong Un’s sister is showing elegant smiles before the South Korean public and the world. Even for a moment, it appears to be a normal state.”

US Vice-President Mike Pence, who attended Friday’s opening ceremony along with the North Koreans, said “no daylight” existed between the US, South Korea and Japan on the need to isolate North Korea.

He said the North was using the Games for crude propaganda.

Pence later told the Washington Post that the US and South Korea had agreed on terms for further diplomatic engagement with North Korea, first with Seoul and then possibly leading to direct talks with Washington without pre-conditions. Speaking aboard Air Force Two on his way home from the Games, Pence said Washington would keep up its “maximum pressure campaign” against Pyongyang but would be open to possible talks at the same time.

Pence cast one of the loneliest figures at the Games’ opening event. He remained seated when the joint Korean team entered the stadium, in contrast to Moon who stood along with Kim Jong Un’s younger sister, Kim Yo Jong, to applaud.

The warm North-South body language not only fanned talk of a split between Seoul and Washington, but it also contrasted with a cold encounter between South Korea and Japan, an ally in US-led efforts to pressure North Korea to end its nuclear programme.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who looked uncomforta­ble at times during the opening ceremony, irritated his hosts by telling the South Korean leader that joint South KoreaUS military drills should be promptly resumed after the Games.

To pave the way for the North’s participat­ion at Pyeongchan­g, South Kim Sung Han Korea had delayed the annual exercises with US forces, which usually take place between February and March, until after the Olympics.

“Now is not the time to postpone US-South Korea military exercises. It is important to move forward with the drills as planned,” Abe said, according to the South’s presidenti­al Blue House.

Moon replied that it was not appropriat­e for Abe to have raised the issue, which he described as an internal affair.

Japan does not participat­e in the military exercises, but it is within reach of North Korean missiles and relies heavily on US forces and their readiness to deal with that threat.

“This developmen­t could have been anticipate­d, but for Japan it’s a nightmare scenario,” said Takashi Kawakami, a professor of internatio­nal politics at Takushoku University in Tokyo. “North Korea is skilfully driving a wedge between the US, Japan and South Korea.”

A senior Japanese defence official said North Korea’s Games charm offensive could “simply be a way to gain time” until it completed its nuclear and ballistic missile developmen­t.

In Rome, US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis said it was too early to tell whether reduced tensions between the two Koreas would last beyond the Olympics but that “on a political level in Seoul, there is no wedge that can be driven between us by North Korea”.

Douglas Paal, a former senior US diplomat under previous Republican administra­tions, said North Korea held the propaganda edge for now because “it’s tough not to get caught up in the emotions of an Olympics event”. But, he said, it would be harder for Moon to keep up momentum after US and Japanese allies and South Korean conservati­ves remind him of what is at stake in the North Korean nuclear threat.

North Korea is under a heavy United Nations sanctions regime which was originally targeted at stopping the proliferat­ion of arms and nuclear and missile technologi­es, but has become more all-encompassi­ng after its accelerate­d missile testing.

Those sanctions may have begun to finally bite, which, according to a Japanese government official and experts, helps explain why Kim Jong Un agreed to send a national team and his sister to the Olympics.

A foreign resident living in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, told Reuters that he had seen fewer people in restaurant­s and luxury goods in shops in recent months.

Fuel prices have risen and more wood-fired Soviet-era trucks have been seen on the outskirts of the capital, said the resident, speaking on condition of anonymity.

In Pyeongchan­g, the two Koreas avoided talk of sanctions and basked instead in Olympic goodwill, which was nowhere more evident than on Saturday night when a joint Korean women’s ice hockey team took to the ice. It inspired an American member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to call for the team to be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

In Pyongyang, North Korea’s official Rodong Sinmun newspaper also reported on the Games bonhomie, publishing photos of its ceremonial head of state, Kim Yong Nam, clinking glasses with Moon and of the South’s leader also shaking hands with a telegenic Kim Yo Jong, who headed home to Pyongyang on Sunday night.

“The people I spoke to in Pyongyang were really excited about the joint team,” said Michael Spavor of the Paektu Cultural Exchange, an organisati­on which took a group of tourists to Pyongyang last week. “They felt it had made this tense situation on the peninsula calm down a bit.”— Reuters

 ?? Picture / AP ?? North Korean head of state Kim Yong Nam (left) and Kim Yo Jong, Kim Jong Un’s sister, were warmly welcomed to South Korea’s Blue House by President Moon Jae In on Sunday.
Picture / AP North Korean head of state Kim Yong Nam (left) and Kim Yo Jong, Kim Jong Un’s sister, were warmly welcomed to South Korea’s Blue House by President Moon Jae In on Sunday.
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