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: Korea
US pleased with compromise resolution on North
Korea
By John Chan
18 July 2006
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After 11 days of diplomatic standoff following North Koreas
testing of seven missiles on July 5, a last-minute agreement in
the UN Security Council resulted in the passing of resolution
1695, imposing limited sanctions on Pyongyang.
The US and Japan have hailed the unanimous vote as sending
a strong and unambiguous message from the international
community to North Korea. In reality, none of the tensions
underlying their relations with China and Russia has been resolved.
The resolution was a compromise. It did not use the initial
US-backed Japanese draft, submitted on July 7, which invoked Chapter
7 of the UN Charter against North Korea. Nevertheless, it largely
achieved the political objectives of the US and Japan: further
tightening the noose around the North Korean economy and sending
a message to the other major powers, especially China, that the
US backs a stronger political role for Japan.
With Chinas threat of veto and interventions from Britain
and France, the resolution dropped all reference to Chapter 7
of the UN Charter, which allows, on the basis of an alleged threat
to international peace and security, economic sanctions
and military action. However, it retained an insistence on harsh
measures, and the threat of military action remains.
The resolution demanded North Korea desist from further missile
tests, dismantle its nuclear and missile programs and unconditionally
return to the so-called six-party talks with the US, China, Japan,
Russia and South Korea. It also required member states, in
accordance with their national legal authorities and legislation
and consistent with international law, to exercise vigilance and
prevent missile and missile related items, materials, goods and
technology being transferred to [North Koreas] missile or
WMD programs.
Predictably, within less than an hour, North Korea rejected
the resolution, denouncing the gangster-like conduct
of the Security Council and declaring it would proceed with further
missile tests. The North Korean state news agency even warned
that the resolution was a prelude to the provocation of
a second Korean War.
In response to Pyongyangs reaction, US ambassador to
the UN, John Bolton, expressed the prevailing contempt towards
North Koreas sovereign rights: I could exercise the
right of reply on behalf of the USbut on the other hand,
why bother?
Initially both China and Russia opposed a binding resolution
invoking Chapter 7, proposing instead a UN Security Council presidential
statement, condemning North Koreas missile tests.
China, in particular, threatened to veto any resolution mentioning
Chapter 7. Last week, Beijing delayed the vote on the grounds
that it was sending a diplomatic envoy to persuade North Korea
to return to the multilateral negotiations. The mission was largely
an attempt to buy time to work out a compromise.
However, further negotiations failed to reach agreement. A
resolution drafted by China and Russia, with similar provisions
to the Japanese draft, but with no reference to Chapter 7, was
rejected by Japan and the US on the basis that, without the reference,
the resolution would not be mandatory or legally binding.
Japan and the US responded by allowing a reference under Article
40 of Chapter 7, which meant that, unless a new and separate resolution
were passed, no economic sanctions or military action would be
taken against North Korea. China, however, refused to accept any
reference whatsoever to Chapter 7.
Finally, in the last stages of the negotiations on Friday evening,
the US and Japan agreed to a revised resolution, delicately worded
by Britain, and supported by Francethe country holding the
current UN presidency.
While all references to Chapter 7, and to North Korean missile
tests as a threat to global peace and security were
omitted, the British draft carefully stated that the Security
Council was acting under its special responsibility for
the maintenance of international peace and security. The
ambiguous reference could constitute the legal basis for further
punitive actions against North Korea.
The British draft also softened the wording of the section
dealing with sanctions from decides to requires
and demands that member states exercise vigilance
and prevent missile and missile related items, materials, goods
and technology being transferred.... This was tougher than
the Chinese and Russian version, which call[ed] upon
or urge[d] member states to carry out sanctions.
Underlying conflicts
Although China and Russia accepted the final draft, the resolution
remains vague and ambiguousit may still be binding, and
it does not explicitly rule out military action against North
Korea.
China and Russia declared the resolution constituted a balanced
message to North Korea to return to the six-party talks, while
the US, Japan, Britain and France insisted it was binding.
Bolton told reporters the resolution could still be legally
binding without a specific reference to Chapter 7. Dan Bartlett,
senior Bush aide also declared the resolution would have very
much the same effect as a Chapter 7 resolution.
South Korean newspaper Dong-A Ilbo expressed concern
about how the resolution would be used. It pointed out that the
resolution authorised military action during the Korean War (1950-1953)
had no reference to chapter 7 of the UN Charter, but it
was recognised it was legally binding. The key is how each country
carries out the resolution.
According to the Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun
on July 17, the ambiguous wording of special responsibility
for the maintenance of international peace and security
could allow almost any measure. Although the resolution
appears at first glance to have been watered down, it nonetheless
includes all the items Japan and the United States wanted incorporated
as requirements for North Korea and other UN member countries
over the missile launches. The legally binding council-imposed
requirements will have substantial political significance.
UN sources noted that should Pyongyang violate even a single item
of the requirements, the Security Council would then proceed to
a resolution under Chapter 7 with little dispute.
The apparent consensus among the major powers over North Korea
is only temporary. Faced with a split in the UN Security Council,
the European powers wanted to avoid having to choose between China
and Russia on the one hand, and the US and Japan on the other.
Moreover, the US, France and Britain are rapidly shifting their
focus to the Israeli assaults on Lebanon, which threaten a wider
conflagration in the Middle East. It was in the Bush administrations
interests to find a way of dropping North Korea from the immediate
agenda, while at the same time maintaining pressure on the country
through the auspices of the UN.
Pyongyangs refusal to return to the negotiation table
is largely due to the sanctions already being implemented by the
US since the six-party talks stalled last September. The US has
imposed restrictions on American banks and financial institutions,
forcing them to end relations with a number of Asian and European
banks that have North Korean accounts. Under the guise of opposing
illicit activities, the sanctions are aimed at restricting North
Koreas limited access to foreign exchange and economically
strangling the stricken country.
Japans government of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
is considering extensive legal measures, which will enable it
to restrict trade, halt remittances from Japan to North Korea
or freeze North Korean assets in Japan.
Both the Bush administration and the Koizumi government have
cynically hailed the UN resolution as the means by which North
Korea will be forced back to the six-party talks. In an interview
with Fox News Sunday, US secretary of state, Condoleezza
Rice, welcomed Chinas responsibility, declaring
we have an affirmative Chinese votenot an abstention,
characterising the resolution as a diplomatic victory.
Right-wing elements in the US ruling elite are nevertheless
pressuring the White House for tougher measures. The Wall Street
Journal commented on July 17: The weakness of this UN
action is that it continues to have as its goal prodding Kim [Jong
Il] back to the six-party talks, which have gone nowhere. Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice said yesterday on Fox News Sunday
that the message to the North is, Youre isolated;
come back to the six-party talks. But what really gets Kims
attention is if China and South Korea declared that they will
cut off his financial lifeline if he doesnt abandon his
nuclear ambitions.
Washingtons real concern is not Kim Jong Ils nuclear
ambitions, but its preoccupation with undermining Chinas
strategic position in Northeast Asia by forcing a collapse of
the North Korean regime. Although Beijing was certainly grateful
to see the latest conflict over North Korea disappear from international
headlines, its explosive re-emergence, in one form or another,
is just a matter of time.
See Also:
US and Japan exploit "missile crisis"
to heighten tensions in North East Asia
[11 July 2006]
US and Japan seize on missile tests to
tighten noose around North Korea
[6 July 2006]
North Korean "missile
crisis"--another example of unbridled US militarism
[29 June 2006]
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