Vox - All
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un may be happy with the concession it just got from the US and South Korea.
South Korea wanted out of a joint military exercise that could anger Kim Jong Un. The US accepted.
The United States agreed to downsize a military exercise with South Korea over concerns about how North Korea would react — in an effort not to anger Pyongyang just weeks before the planned summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
Citing unnamed US officials, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that Seoul was worried Pyongyang might bristle at a joint US-South Korea-Japan air exercise, especially because the US planned to fly B-52 planes.
Those planes can carry nuclear weapons, and Pyongyang would (understandably) be unhappy if they flew so close to — or even over — the Korean Peninsula. Pyongyang already claims that any US-South Korea military training is just practice for a future invasion of North Korea. The US has in the past flown B-52s near the peninsula in response to North Korean nuclear tests, angering Pyongyang.
But South Korean leaders didn’t want to ruin the prospects of a Trump-Kim summit by taking part in the air exercise, especially because it involved the B-52 bombers, and asked the US if South Korean could bow out.
The Trump administration agreed, and decided to run the drill with just Japan and completely outside of South Korean airspace — even though the original plan was for the bombers to minimally enter it.
This is quite a concession to North Korea. In the past, the US and South Korea have conducted their drills without any major modifications, regardless of North Korea’s bluster. But now that Pyongyang has threatened to cancel the summit, it seems Washington and Seoul want to ensure they don’t do anything to scuttle the historic meeting.
Some experts don’t think it was a good move. “In suspending any sort of military exercise Washington and Seoul are sending the wrong signal to North Korea,” Harry Kazianis, a North Korea expert at the Center for the National Interest, told me. “Unless Washington was to get a concrete concession from Pyongyang, this was a bad idea.”
Others say it made sense to do. “The downsides of including [South Korea] greatly outweighed the upside at this critical juncture with the summit looming,” says Kingston Reif, a nuclear expert at the Arms Control Association, “and because South Korea made the ask and alliance solidarity is essential especially now.”
But however you look at it, it’s clear that North Korea — not the US — seems in control headed into June 12’s Trump-Kim talks.
North Korea is in the driver’s seat
On Tuesday, a top North Korean official issued a statement criticizing America’s insistence that North Korea completely dismantle its nuclear program and threatening to scrap the summit if the US didn’t change its tune.
“If the US is trying to drive us into a corner to force our unilateral nuclear abandonment, we will no longer be interested in such dialogue and cannot but reconsider our proceeding to the DPRK-US summit,” said Kim Kye Gwan, a vice foreign minister, using the official acronym for North Korea.
After months of niceties, North Korea has returned to its mercurial form and put the Trump-Kim summit in jeopardy.
But some experts have said that the US and South Korea might need the summit more than North Korea. That gives Pyongyang the advantage to see if it can extract even more concessions from Washington and Seoul.
Read more
No comments:
Post a Comment