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Diplomatic scramble by Japan, US to open up North Korea
By James Conachy
31 December 1999
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Over the last four months, there has been a flurry of diplomatic
activity aimed at lifting trade embargoes and opening up the isolated
and economically crippled state of North Korea to foreign investment
and international trade. The latest initiative has been a series
of meetings between Japanese and North Korean Red Cross representatives
and government observers from December 19 to 21 in Beijing.
The Red Cross delegations reached agreement on three contentious
issues: Japanese women living with Korean husbands in North Korea
will be able visit Japan next year; Japan will investigate the
fate of North Koreans who went missing during World War II when
Korea was under Japanese rule; and the North Korean Red Cross
will inquire into missing Japanese citizens allegedly kidnapped
by North Korea in the 1970s and 1980s.
The talks were prepared by a visit to Pyongyang earlier this
month by 16 Japanese politicians, led by former prime minister
Tomiichi Murayama. Their success paves the way for government-level
talks on the re-establishment of diplomatic relations between
the two countries, due to be held next year. The last official
talks between Japan and North Korea, held in 1992, broke down
over the kidnapping allegations. In August 1998, Japan cut off
all food aid and financial assistance to North Korea after Pyongyang
test-fired a medium-range missile over Japanese airspace.
On December 15, just prior to the Japan-North Korea talks,
new contractual terms were signed between the North Korean government,
the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organisation (KEDO) and
the Korea Electric Power Corporation for the construction of two
light-water nuclear reactors in North Korea.
KEDO, made up of the US, Japan, South Korea and nine other
countries, was established in 1994 to oversee the dismantling
of North Korea's graphite-moderated nuclear power plants which
the US alleged could have military application. Under the Agreed
Framework, KEDO was to replace the graphite reactors and
the US was to supply heavy fuel oil to North Korea in the interim.
Continuing tensions, particularly fostered by the US, prevented
both the reactor construction and fuel deliveries. Then in August
1998, Japan withdrew its share of the reactor funding.
Under the terms of the new contract, South Korea, Japan, the
US and the European Union will pay the $US4.6 billion cost of
the two reactors, with South Korea footing 70 percent of the bill.
The construction is underway but the completion schedule is still
under debate, with North Korea insisting it be by 2003 and KEDO
nominating 2009. The North has agreed to conform to the strictures
of the 1994 agreement that it cease nuclear power research and
development.
Japan's renewed diplomatic activity comes in the wake of a
deal announced on September 13 between the United States and North
Korea. After extracting an agreement from the Pyongyang regime
to suspend scheduled testing of a new long-range missile, the
Taepong II, the Clinton administration lifted restrictions on
US trade, investment and commercial air and shipping links with
North Korea that have been in place since the Korean War. The
US has, however, retained a veto on international loans to North
Korea and bans on the export of "dual-use" goods and
technologyan extensive range of items deemed to have a military
application.
The US-North Korea agreement was quickly followed by expressions
of business interest. Within weeks, the American Chamber of Commerce
(ACC) announced it was preparing a trade mission to North Korea
to inspect investment opportunities. The ACC has already held
preliminary meetings with South Korean transnational Hyundai,
which has significant investment in North Korea. The mission is
scheduled to go next month and reportedly involves Motorola, Coca-Cola,
AT&T and the giant investment broker Goldman Sachs among others.
Charles Kartman, the US special envoy on Korean affairs, indicated
on December 15 that further talks between the US and North Korea
are likely to take place early next year, with the North requesting
the total lifting of sanctions.
Other countries have responded to the thawing of US-North Korean
relations and the opening up of business opportunities. In November,
North Korean diplomats held high level talks with representatives
of the EU in Brussels. Matters discussed included economic assistance,
human rights and "other issues of bilateral concern.
The EU has dispatched a delegation to verify its $US30 million
in food assistance is reaching needy North Koreans. Upon receiving
a report, European governments will discuss a further expansion
in ties.
On December 7, it was confirmed that Australia and North Korea
have been engaged in talks over preceding weeks. Further negotiations
will be held in Pyongyang next year aimed at restoring diplomatic
relations broken off between the two countries in 1975. There
is little doubt that further business delegations to North Korea
will also be prepared in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Sydney and European
capitals.
The diplomatic activity stands in stark contrast to the tense
situation only four months ago, when Washington and Tokyo were
issuing thinly-veiled threats of economic and even military retaliation
against North Korea over its planned missile tests. The Clinton
administration claimed that North Korea's long-range missile program
endangered Japan and the West Coast of the United States.
The alleged threat from North Korea has been the central justification
for the Theatre Missile Defense (TMD) system now being developed
between the US and Japan. Theoretically, the TMD would enable
North Korea missiles to be shot down before reaching their target.
The current Taiwanese government has requested, in the face of
bitter opposition from China, that the system be extended to cover
Taiwan.
South Korean president Kim Dae-jung asserted in September that
North Korea's backdown on missile testing was in large part due
to the pressure from Beijing. From China's standpoint, the ending
of tensions on the Korean peninsula has assumed considerable importance.
Moves towards normalising relations with North Korea undermine
the rationale for the TMD, which Beijing believes is primarily
directed against it.
More broadly, China's interests on the Korean peninsula have
changed as a result of the development of steadily growing economic
and political ties with South Korea since 1992. The two countries
are now each other's third largest trading partner, have begun
military exchanges and, at the recent ASEAN summit, announced
informal plans for discussions on an East Asia economic zone centred
on Japan. The economic and even political reunification of Korea
is no longer viewed in Beijing as a great threat. It would remove
the major justification for the presence of tens of thousands
of US troops in South Korea and Japan and would strengthen the
position of political figures in both countries arguing for their
removal.
The over-riding factor behind North Korea's willingness to
bow to the demands of the major powers is the catastrophic state
of economic and social conditions in the country. A December 20
report by the North Korean Central News Agency provided a sanitised
glimpse:
"Years of abnormal climatic conditions in Korea have seriously
affected its national economy as a whole. In particular, the agricultural
domain has suffered from serious damage, which makes the food
problem difficult. From the beginning of the year, all the people
and the entire army have been mobilised for farming to settle
the food problem. However, the country was hard hit by drought
from January to May, heat and cold weather in June and July and
downpour and typhoon in late July and early August, which seriously
affected the growth of crops... all domains of agriculture failed
to reap estimated yields of crops as a whole.
"Natural disasters have hindered production and construction
in different sectors of the national economy. This year large
hydraulic power stations and hundreds of minor hydraulic power
stations could not keep electricity production going as the country
had little rain. Consequently, the supply of electricity is not
properly made for production, construction and people's living.
Thermal power plants are not operating their generators at full
capacity owing to the shortage of coal. Abnormal climatic conditions
are seriously affecting mines, forestry, railway transport, land
and environment protection and other domains."
In other words, North Korea cannot provide sufficient food,
electricity, water, heat or employment for the majority of its
people. Through their economic sanctions, denial of assistance
and military pressure, the major powers, in particular the United
States, have literally starved North Korea into submission. Estimates
of how many people have died of hunger range from several hundred
thousand to two million.
On November 22, the United Nations announced that it would
increase assistance to North Korea by 13.5 percent in 2000, providing
$US331 million in food aid and financial assistance for water,
sanitation and education programs. The country has been totally
reliant upon outside aid to feed its population for nearly three
years.
The political consequences of North Korea's economic calamity
were spelt out by Yang Young-shik, the South Korean Vice-minister
of Unification, in a guest column to the Korea Herald on
October 7: "According to our assessment, the North Korean
regime has already become defunct and it cannot hope for revitalisation
without implementing changes. Therefore, it is unlikely that the
regime will survive for very long".
On November 27, the Korea Herald published a report
concerning an underground organisation of North Korean intellectuals
seeking the end of the Stalinist state, including the appeals
it had issued for the population to rise up against the regime.
Whether true or not, there is little question that the appalling
conditions in the North have fueled wide social discontent. As
in the case of Eastern Europe a decade ago, the Pyongyang regime
is turning to the West for aid and corporate investment in a bid
to save itself from a movement from below.
South Korean corporations have wasted no time exploiting the
new opportunities. Hyundai, which holds a 30-year monopoly on
operating cruise ships to the North Korean Mt. Kumgang Changjon
port, revealed plans in November to dramatically develop the scenic
mountainous area as a premier East Asian tourist resort. With
a stated aim of drawing 500,000 visitors a year, Hyundai will
be constructing a 183-room floating hotel at Changjon, railway
links to surrounding attractions and further hotels and tourist
facilities in a large area around Mt. Kumgang. Direct cruises
are to be opened from Changjon to Japanese ports.
A series of other investments have been announced by major
South Korean companies, aimed at preparing the way for the wholesale
transfer of production facilities. North Korean wages are among
the lowest in Asia and the North Korean regime has made clear
its willingness to establish regimented conditions comparable
to China's special economic zones.
Hyundai is pushing ahead with plans to construct an industrial
complex in North Korea, capable of housing 850 factories and 220,000
workers. The corporation aims at relocating labour-intensive auto
assembly, electronics production and ship dismantling by early
2001 and attracting other transnationals to do the same. It will
also construct a smaller industrial park close to the Korean border
with China and Russia. On November 27, Samsung announced plans
to construct an industrial park and an agreement to begin joint
venture manufacturing of televisions and other electrical goods
in North Korea. Daewoo, which already operates textile plants,
is also weighing up the expansion of its operations.
Far from defusing tensions on the Korean peninsula, the rush
to open up North Korea is likely to intensify frictions between
the major powers seeking economic and political pre-eminence in
north-east Asia. Throughout the century, Korea's significance
has not only been its economic resources but its strategic position
close to Japan, northern China and Siberia. Within Washington
there is no consensus as to the best means of prosecuting US interests
within the region, with sections of the Republican right demanding
a far more aggressive policy to both North Korea and China.
Despite the limited character of the US-North Korea deal in
September, Jesse Helms, the Republican chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, denounced the White House for becoming
"a benefactor of the most repressive communist government
on the planet". Helms and others advocate the cutting of
all aid to North Korea and a provocative military buildup aimed
at bringing about the complete economic and political collapse
of the country.
See Also:
Spratlys continue to loom as Asian flashpoint
[13 December 1999]
Typhoon compounds North Korean
food shortages
[21 August 1999]
US, Japan exert sharp pressure
on North Korea over possible missile test
[11 August 1999]
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