.


회원 언론기고 및 출판





<코리아헤럴드> 박상식 / The two Koreas on a collision course

페이지 정보

작성일2018-06-04 16:01 조회610회 댓글0건

본문

[Park Sang-seek] The two Koreas on a collision course

2017-04-13 17:45

 

 

Kim Jong-il, Kim Jong-un’s father, once said, “I would destroy the world or take the world with me before accepting defeat on the battlefield.”

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi recently warned that South and North Korea are on a collision course. The first summit between Trump and Xi could not reach any new agreement on the North Korean nuclear issue and Trump has ordered the Carl Vinson Strike Group to sail to the Western Pacific to counter North Korea’s escalating military threat. All these indicate that South Korea is facing the calm before the storm. What should South Korea do at this crucial moment? In order to deal with this oncoming storm, South Korea has to find the origin of this storm.

Since the International Atomic Energy Agency discovered in 1992 that North Korea had already begun to produce nuclear bombs, South Korea and the US have tried to stop North Korea’s nuclear development, first through the US-North Korea bilateral negotiations (1993-1994) and the six-party talks (2003-2008), but they have failed to realize the complete denuclearization of North Korea.

Since then, both sides have been blaming each other for this failure and have been engaging in a war of words. South Korea and the US have been resorting to two forms of economic sanctions: UN Security Council economic sanctions and secondary boycotts by UN member states. But these two measures are ineffective because they are not comprehensive economic sanctions and it cannot be expected that all members will fully implement them.

More importantly, China and Russia do not observe the UN Security Council resolutions as strictly as the US and South Korea. South Korea and the US have particularly put pressure on China to impose secondary boycotts more strictly, but to no avail. Russia also behaves evasively. Under the circumstances, South Korea and the US cannot expect such UN sanctions to be able to force North Korea to come to the negotiating table unless all UN members, particularly the four powers, impose comprehensive sanctions.

History changes but geopolitical conditions do not. Throughout history the Korean Peninsula has been a victim of the power struggles among and between the surrounding great powers -- China, Russia and Japan. After World War II, the US as a global power joined this power struggle.

The division of the Korean Peninsula into two separate states has made the security environment more complicated. In the beginning, the ideological division between the Western democratic camp and the communist bloc divided the four great powers and the two Koreas into four power group complexes: the northern triangle (the Soviet Union, China, and North Korea), the southern triangle (the US, Japan and South Korea), the big power quadrangle (the US, Japan, the Soviet Union and China), and the inter-Korean complex. These complexes influenced one another.

Changes in the four power relations brought about changes in the two regional triangles and the inter-Korean complex. On the other hand, the inter-Korean complex and the two triangles influenced each other. The end of the cold war has not changed the dynamics of these geopolitical complexes.

Since the cold war began in 1948, the northern triangle has gone through the following changes: the alliance between China and the Soviet Union and its complete support of North Korea (1945-1963); the Sino-Soviet split (1963-1990) and North Korea’s policy of equidistance toward the two powers; and the Sino-Russian-North Korean cooperative relationships (1990-the present).

After the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, US-Russian relations turned sour. After Putin’s annexation of Crimea and support of the separatists in Ukraine, they became hostile.

During the same time frame, China began to adopt a double-edged strategy toward the US and a more friendly and cooperative relationship with Russia, as China had been alarmed by the US invasion of Iraq, its pivot to Asia strategy (2011) and its increasing hostile attitude toward North Korea.

Consequently, a new cold war period has emerged in Northeast Asia. Despite the changes within the big power quadrangle and the northern triangle, there have been few changes within the southern triangle and the inter-Korean complex. Japan is bound by its peace constitution but also almost completely depends on the US nuclear umbrella.

The above geopolitical dynamics explains why China takes an ambiguous position toward North Korea and why Russia cannot be trusted as far as the North Korean nuclear issue is concerned.

After North Korea conducted its second nuclear test in 2009 China adopted the principles of its Korean Peninsula policy in the following order of importance: peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula; stability of the North Korean regime; and denuclearization. However, if we consider the geopolitical dynamics of Northeast Asia, denuclearization is needed first for both peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula and stability of the North Korean regime, not vice versa.

The same can be said about China’s strong opposition to the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense anti-missile system in South Korea. This kind of equivocal policy of China is tantamount to China’s support of North Korea as a nuclear power. China’s basic policy toward the Korean Peninsula is to maintain the status quo, which means China wants to have North Korea as a buffer against the other big powers, as it is impossible to have the entire Korean Peninsula under its control or influence. It is also beneficial to China to complicate the US regional strategy and undermine the US’ position in Asia. Russia can also benefit from this dualist strategy.

In the final analysis, South Korea’s best strategic choice is to consolidate the southern triangle and form a three-power joint strategy to deal with the North Korean nuclear issue. China and Japan are both former rulers of Korea. But in geopolitics there is neither a permanent friend nor a permanent enemy. Considering the complex geopolitical characteristics and the nature of the North Korean regime, a negotiated solution is better than a confrontational one. 


By Park Sang-seek

Park Sang-seek is a former rector of the Graduate Institute of Peace Studies, Kyung Hee University and the author of “Globalized Korea and Localized Globe.” -- Ed

댓글목록

등록된 댓글이 없습니다.

  Total 447건 6 페이지
회원 언론기고 및 출판 목록
번호 제목
297 <광화문 문화포럼> 정태익 / 동북아 국제질서 …
일자: 11-21 | 조회: 1159
2013-11-21
1159
296 <중도일보> 김현중 / '정글만리' 견문록
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 2116
2013-11-05
2116
295 <동아일보> 이병국 / 前대사 34명이 ‘개도국…
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 2032
2013-11-05
2032
294 <조선일보> 강대현 / 사모아에 묻힌 원양 선원…
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 1737
2013-11-05
1737
293 <국민일보> 김석우 / 한국사회 봉사정신 누가 …
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 1251
2013-11-05
1251
292 <대전일보> 김현중 / 재외동포는 귀중한 <…
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 1513
2013-11-05
1513
291 <매일경제> 백낙환 / 한-베트남 이젠 新동반자…
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 1992
2013-11-05
1992
290 <코리아헤럴드> 박상식 / Two differe…
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 1486
2013-11-05
1486
289 <인민일보> 박종선 / 중국경제 편승할 대중국 …
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 1889
2013-11-05
1889
288 <월간바둑> 서대원 / 인천에서 바둑 메달 경쟁…
일자: 11-05 | 조회: 1394
2013-11-05
1394
287 <중앙일보> 유주열 / [백가쟁명:유주열] 또 …
일자: 09-12 | 조회: 1554
2013-09-12
1554
286 <외교열전> 유광석 / 세계에서 처음으로…한미 …
일자: 08-29 | 조회: 2332
2013-08-29
2332
285 <MBN> 전상진 / 올림픽유치와 외교부의 역할
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 1524
2013-08-16
1524
284 <외교열전> 김태지 / '日침략사죄' 무라야마 …
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 2346
2013-08-16
2346
283 <외교열전> 최봉름 / 이라크서 맞은 두번의 전…
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 1602
2013-08-16
1602
282 <외교열전> 박인국 / 긴박했던 '천안함·연평도…
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 2661
2013-08-16
2661
281 <외교열전> 장재룡 / 北 오래 못간다 보고 …
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 2280
2013-08-16
2280
280 <외교열전> 신동원 / '북방외교 시초' 한ㆍ헝…
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 1520
2013-08-16
1520
279 <외교열전> 유병우 / `위안부 강제동원 인정'…
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 2568
2013-08-16
2568
278 <외교열전> 황장엽을 한국으로 한중협상 `막…
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 1417
2013-08-16
1417
277 <INEPA> 포르투갈 정부 강대현 국제교류증진…
일자: 01-21 | 조회: 2070
2013-01-21
2070
276 <외교열전> 일사천리'로 탄생한 남북 첫 유엔공…
일자: 11-30 | 조회: 1941
2012-11-30
1941
275 <외교열전> JFK가 박정희 방일 요구했다 /…
일자: 11-30 | 조회: 1724
2012-11-30
1724
274 <외교열전> 불법조업 막아라
일자: 10-30 | 조회: 2060
2012-10-30
2060
273 <국민일보> 시론-대선 후보들 외교전략 밝혀라 …
일자: 09-26 | 조회: 2043
2012-09-26
2043
272 <문화일보> 외교史전시관 설립 결심 / 권영민
일자: 08-16 | 조회: 2164
2012-08-16
2164
271 등산을 하면 행복해질 수 있습니다. / 최용삼
일자: 07-12 | 조회: 1469
2012-07-12
1469
270 <중앙일보> 콘도르가 된 8인의 영웅 / 박희권…
일자: 06-26 | 조회: 1772
2012-06-26
1772
269 <중앙일보> 동해를 부르는 ‘제3의 명칭’ / …
일자: 03-28 | 조회: 1573
2012-03-28
1573
268 <뉴데일리> 통상교섭본부에 박수 보낸다 / 이재…
일자: 03-21 | 조회: 1811
2012-03-21
1811
게시물 검색







한국외교협회 | 개인정보 보호관리자: 박경훈
E-mail: kcfr@hanmail.net

주소: 서울시 서초구 남부순환로 294길 33
TEL: 02-2186-3600 | FAX: 02-585-6204

Copyright(c) 한국외교협회 All Rights Reserved.
hosting by 1004pr