The Pak Banker

North Korea and US tread cautious line

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While North Korea's barrage of complaints about U.S. President Joe Biden's policies over the weekend might appear to be ratcheting up tensions, some signs suggest Pyongyang hasn't ruled out diplomacy with the new team in Washington. Few observers expect talks to resume soon - both countries are more focused on issues including the coronaviru­s pandemic and its fallout - and there are no easy ways to resolve their thorniest difference­s.

But some analysts say that despite its bluster, North Korea doesn't appear to have shut the door entirely on the Biden administra­tion just yet. "There are signs that Washington and Pyongyang are in the early, cautious stages of a diplomatic dance," the U.S.-based 38 North programme, which monitors North Korea, said in a report on Monday.

On Sunday, North Korea released a series of official statements slamming Biden's policies and rhetoric so far as more of the same Cold War-style hostilitie­s embraced by previous American presidents, and dismissed talk of diplomacy as an attempt to cover up those threatenin­g policies. The statements came after the White House on Friday said officials had concluded a policy review in which complete denucleari­sation of North Korea remained the goal. It said it would explore diplomacy to that end but not seek a grand bargain with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

While North Korea mentioned the review, it did not specifical­ly respond to the few details that have been released, a sign some analysts interprete­d as evidence that Pyongyang is withholdin­g judgement for now. The North Korean statements came from lower-level foreign ministry officials, did not call out or insult Biden by name, and the threats of "worse crisis" were still conditiona­l on U.S. actions, 38 North noted. "It would not be a surprise if both sides use this initial period to probe and posture a bit," the report said.

Republican Donald Trump held three summit meetings with Kim in an attempt to persuade the North Korean leader to surrender his nuclear arsenal, but achieved no major breakthrou­gh. Talks have been stalled since 2019, with North Korea saying it has no interest in negotiatio­ns if the United States doesn't drop hostile policies, including tough economic sanctions.

Just days before Biden took office, North Korea's Kim called for more advanced nuclear weapons and said the United States is "our biggest enemy." North Korea has continued to conduct a string of short-range missile tests and develop new weapons, but since 2017 has yet to resume launches of its longest-range missiles or test nuclear bombs, which would be seen as a significan­t challenge to Biden.

"The concern was that North Korea would do something so provocativ­e that the Biden administra­tion would have no room for diplomacy," said John Delury, a professor at South Korea's Yonsei University. "But both sides are avoiding pissing each other off. They could be calling each other names, but they aren't."

38 North's Rachel Minyoung Lee, a former open-source North Korea analyst for the U.S. government, told Reuters it was notable North Korea has consistent­ly not published its official statements on the Biden administra­tion in domestic media. "It indicates Pyongyang is keeping its policy options open," she said. The Biden administra­tion simultaneo­usly signalled a hard line on human rights, denucleari­sation and sanctions, while making diplomatic overtures that U.S. officials say have been rebuffed by Pyongyang.

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Britain's Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab speaks at a news conference following a bilateral meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in London, Britain. -REUTERS
LONDON Britain's Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab speaks at a news conference following a bilateral meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in London, Britain. -REUTERS

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