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Rice returns empty-handed from North East Asia
By John Chan
25 October 2006
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US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rices four-day visit
to Japan, South Korea, China and Russia last week to press for
action over North Koreas nuclear test on October 9 has proved
to be another demonstration of the crisis of American foreign
policy.
At each stop, Rice pressed for tougher sanctions against North
Korea under the US-drafted Resolution 1718 pushed through the
UN Security Council on October 14. However, with the exception
of Japan, which is pursuing a more aggressive stance in North
East Asia for its own purposes, Rice was rebuffed in all the capitals
amid warnings about the dangers of raising regional tensions.
Rice also championed the reconvening of stalled six-party talks,
which include the four countries plus the US and North Korea.
But on this issue, the US remains heavily dependent on China to
use its political and economic influence to force Pyongyang to
accede to Washingtons demand for the resumption of talks
without preconditions.
The collapse of the six-party talks since the last round in
September 2005 is a further indication of the incoherence of US
foreign policy. The US initially hailed the negotiations as a
great success, after a broad framework to end the confrontation
over North Koreas nuclear programs was agreed. While Rice
backed the talks, hard-line sections of the Bush administration
led by Vice President Dick Cheney intervened. They support regime
change in Pyongyang and are deeply hostile to any deal with
North Korea.
The talks were effectively scuttled when the US Treasury took
action in the same month against the Macau-based Banco Delta Asia,
eventually forcing the bank to freeze North Korean funds. The
Pyongyang regime took the US actions, which threatened to cut
its limited access to the international financial system, as a
sign of bad faith and refused to return to talks unless the sanctions
were reversed. A North Korean missile test in July, followed by
this months nuclear test, constitute a rather desperate
attempt by Pyongyang to push Washington to make concessions.
Rice made her strongest statements against North Korea in Tokyo.
She reaffirmed Bushs pledge, made hours after North Koreas
nuclear test, that the United States has the will and the
capability to meet the full rangeand I underscore the full
rangeof its deterrent and security commitments to Japan.
The full range clearly included the potential use
of US nuclear weapons against North Korea.
As well as menacing Pyongyang, Rices statement had a
second purpose. By re-emphasising Washingtons willingness
to defend its formal allies in regionJapan and South Koreashe
undermined a developing discussion in Japan about the need to
develop its own nuclear weapons. Such a step, which would make
Japan less dependent on the US military might and trigger a regional
arms race, cuts across US plans to maintain its strategic dominance
in the region.
Before Rices arrival, Japans foreign minister Taro
Aso cautiously called for a serious public discussion about developing
a nuclear arsenal. Later that day, however, Aso assured Rice at
a press conference that Tokyo has no position at all to
consider going nuclear. Aso said: We do not need to
acquire nuclear arms with an assurance by Secretary of State Rice
that the bilateral alliance would work without fault.
Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe then declared the nuclear
debate was finished. However, pressure for a more
independent Japanese foreign policy continues. On the same day,
Ichiro Ozawa, leader of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan,
criticised Abe for being a yes-man of the US, and
urged him to think about what kind of [independent] role
Japan intends to play in the international community to protect
world peace as a whole.
Rices visit intensified the dilemma facing the Japanese
ruling elite. On the one hand, Abe is under pressure from sections
of big business not to alienate China and South Korea. Earlier
this month, he visited Beijing and Seoul as part of efforts to
rebuild ties with the two countries. On the other hand, Abe has
taken a hard-line stance toward North Korea as a means of stirring
up right-wing nationalism at home and building Japans own
military power.
The Japanese government strongly backed the US resolution in
the UN Security Council and has imposed its own additional sanctions
on North Korea. Tokyo has also indicated its support for the provocative
interdiction of North Korean vessels in international waters under
the US-led Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI). At the same
time, Abe is looking over his shoulder toward China and South
Korea, which are opposed to any aggressive steps against North
Korea.
Symptomatic of Washingtons weak position was the fact
that Rice emphasised that she was not dictating terms. She played
down the significance of the PSI, which she said conjured
up in peoples minds the Cuban missile crisis. Rice
said the searches of most North Korean ships could take place
in ports rather than on the high seas.
In South Korea, Rice was openly rebuffed by President Roh Moo-hyun,
who declared that his country would not participate in the interception
of North Korean vessels. Roh also refused to block South Korean
involvement in two major joint projects with Pyongyangthe
Mt. Kumgang tourist resort and the Kaesong economic zonewhich
are part of the so-called Sunshine policy of opening up North
Korea as a cheap labour platform. He agreed only to review
the two projects.
Significantly, even though South Korea is a longstanding US
ally, Roh visited Beijing on October 13 to discuss the North Korean
crisis with Chinese leaders. Like China, the South Korean government
is seeking to defuse the confrontation with North Korea in order
to open the door for closer regional economic cooperation, which
has been constantly disrupted by the US confrontation with Pyongyang.
Within South Korea, one poll indicated that more people blame
the US for the present crisis than North Korea.
At her joint press conference with South Korean foreign minister
Ban Ki-moon, Rice claimed she was not trying to dictate
to governments what they ought to do in response to [UN] Resolution
1718. She held a special three-way dinner conference with
Ban and Japanese foreign minister Aso to clarify the misunderstanding
in South Korea about the PSI. Seoul, however, has not altered
its opposition.
Likewise, China has categorically refused to take part in the
interception of North Korean ships. In Beijing, Rice sought to
push Chinese leaders to use their influence to force North Korea
back to six-party talks without preconditionthat
is, without the lifting of financial sanctions. But she left without
any guarantees. Rice told reporters: Lets just wait
and see what China will do.
Amid claims that North Korea may be preparing a second nuclear
test, China sent a high-level delegation to Pyongyang to oppose
such a step. Beijing was outraged over the first test because
it fears providing a pretext for Japan to build atomic weapons.
Rices diplomacy in Tokyo was in part to reassure China that
the US would prevent its regional allies from building a nuclear
arsenal if Beijing reined in Pyongyang.
Chinas special envoy Tang Jiaxuan told Rice his trip
to North Korea had not been in vain. But there is
little evidence that Tang achieved any breakthrough. Chinese officials
have denied media reports that Tang extracted an apology from
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il and a guarantee of no further
nuclear tests. North Koreas proposal to return to six-party
talks is still conditional on the US ending its financial sanctions.
China is searching trucks crossing its border with North Korea.
During Rices visit, four major Chinese state-owned banks
and the British-owned Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation
(HSBC) announced a block on financial transfers to North Korea.
But Beijing has quietly demonstrated that it will impose punitive
measures on North Korea in accordance with its interests and will
not be dictated to by Washington.
Rices efforts to put a positive spin on the trip to China
only underscore the shift that has taken place in the Bush administrations
policy. After arriving in Moscow, she emphasised the cooperation
between China and the US, saying she saw some data points
suggesting that Beijing was becoming more of a partner on issues
of importance to the US. During the 2000 US presidential election,
Rice engineered Bushs foreign policy plank of declaring
China to be a strategic competitor rather than a strategic
partner.
There is no doubt the US still regards China as a long-term
economic rival and threat. The Bush administrations ability
to throw its weight around and dictate terms has been seriously
undermined by the deepening crisis facing the US-led occupations
of Iraq and Afghanistan. Without in any way minimising the potential
for Washington to launch dangerous new military adventures, US
rivals in Europe and Asia are seeking ways to counteract US influence
and threats.
Rices visit follows Bushs trip to North East Asia
last November, which turned into a debacle. Beijing bluntly turned
down Bushs demand to free political prisoners
and did not even televise his speech on religious freedom
in front of a Chinese church. South Korea cut troop numbers in
Iraq just after Bush praised Seoul as a firm partner in war
on terror. His only warm reception was in backward Mongolia.
The final leg of Rices trip, in Moscow, confirmed the
pattern. Rice criticised Moscow over the lack of democratic rights,
referring to the recent murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya.
She urged Russia to de-escalate tensions with neighbouring Georgia,
which is increasingly under US tutelage. However, on the two major
issues, securing Russian backing to pressure North Korea and Iran
to abandon their nuclear programs, she came up empty-handed. In
the wake of her visit, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov
reiterated Moscows stance, pointedly declaring that all
participantsthat is, including the USshould not
take steps to aggravate the situation on the Korean peninsula.
See Also:
North Korean nuclear test opens up political
divisions in South Korea
[23 October 2006]
US pushes through UN resolution against
North Korea
[16 October 2006]
North Korean nuclear test poses dilemmas
for China
[13 October 2006]
Behind the UN debate on North Korea:
growing Great Power rivalry
[12 October 2006]
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