 |
Directing A Diplomatic Concert toward
Pyongyang
Byung-joon Ahn
The fog of preventive war in Iraq obscures an
even more dangerous conflict in East Asia. A nuclear
crisis is upon us in North Korea. Taking advantage of
America’s preoccupation with the war with Saddam
Hussein’s regime, North Korea has accelerated its
moves toward actual production of nuclear weapons, while
continuing to demand bilateral negotiation with the U.S.
as a pre-condition for standing down. Unwilling to
reward what it sees as blackmail, the Bush
Administration insists that a multilateral negotiating
environment is the most secure way to ensure and verify
the dismantling of Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons
program. The U.S. should initiate more proactive
diplomacy, for time is rapidly running out.
America’s firm engagement in Asia—in
particular, leading the way in the formation of an ad hoc concert of powers—is required to resolve the threat of
nuclear conflict in the Korean Peninsula. What follows
is an outline of my proposal. First, though, a word is
in order about why I argue for a concert of powers to
tackle the problem of North Korea. It is not only a
question of not wishing to reward bad behavior. More
seriously, it is because direct Washington-Pyongyang
negotiations will open the way for a non-aggression pact
between the U.S. and North Korea that could result in
the withdrawal of American troops from the peninsula.
This would have two consequences. First, it would surely
destroy the Washington-Seoul alliance; second and
relatedly, it would trigger a power vacuum that could
result in the strategic rivalry between China and Japan.
While obviously not in my country’s national
interests, I see no way in which it could serve those of
the U.S. and other powers either.
A concert of powers approach is needed because
East Asia bears striking similarity to 19th
century Europe. For example, the region is awash in a
rising tide of nationalism and its rules of conduct are
based on classic Realpolitik
balance-of-power scenarios. Each power’s strategy
is dynamically influenced by the strategic rhetoric and
actions of the others. So while the U.S. prevails as the
dominant power, spending more than the defense
expenditures of all other powers combined, China, Japan
and Russia, along with the two Koreas, remain crucial
players on the regional chessboard. The U.S. openly
pursues a strategy of “offensive realism,” seeking
to preempt the emergence of traditional rival powers or
the new threats emanating from rogue states in
possession of weapons of mass destruction or suspected
of involvement with terrorism. In East Asia the other
extra-peninsular powers are adjusting in various ways to
this reality. China is conspicuously pursuing a strategy
of “classical realism” with a twist, combined as it
is with a sense of “assertive nationalism” that
accompanies Beijing’s sense that the country is
becoming a rising political and military power. Japan,
faced with its profound sense of “wounded
nationalism” arising from having experienced a “lost
decade” of almost no growth at all, is pursuing
“defensive realism,” as demonstrated by its grudging
diplomatic support of the war with Iraq so as not to
shake the foundations of its alliance with the U.S.
Lastly, Russia is practicing “opportunistic realism”
as a way to manage her imperial decline.
Unlike Europe the status quo of East Asian
borders is not accepted. As a result, several
territorial disputes simmer beneath the surface, like a
snake in shallow swamp. While the division of the Korean
peninsula and the threatening nature of North Korea’s
nuclear posture remain the twin pillars of instability
in the region, we have also the Taiwan Strait problem,
the disputed Northern Territories off of Hokkaido and
the conflicting claims involving islands in the South
China Sea between China and other southeast Asian
countries.
And yet East Asia has no institutional framework
such as the EU or the OSCE, nor does it have a
collective security infrastructure such as NATO, within
which such disputes could be handled amicably. The
legacy of inter-state partnership is weak while that of
confrontation strong. Recent attempts at forming
“co-operative security” and economic interdependence
arrangements (ASEAN, APEC and ASEAN+3) remain “talk
shops.” In this strategic environment, the prospect
for Asian security depends, in the short run, on the
future of the North Korean problem, and, in the long
run, on the future of Sino-Taiwanese relations.
I will confine myself here to a consideration of
the former. After “Operation Iraqi Freedom” is
successful, the U.S. is likely to shift its primary
focus to Asia. This would be most welcome. An increased
American military presence ought to dampen the
possibility of an outbreak of open rivalry and
confrontation in the region and reaffirm that American
security guarantees underwrite the region’s stability
and its remarkable economic growth. To illustrate this
point, let me quickly sketch what would likely happen
were America to disengage militarily from Asia. The race
to fill the power vacuum would be won by either a Japan
forced to nuclearize quickly or emboldened
ready-to-expand China. Either way this would certainly
intensify regional rivalries in degree and in kind, and,
at the very least, heat up the arms race.
In such environment, it is next to impossible to
build a formal or institutional concert of powers. It is
however possible and indeed necessary, for the U.S. to
lead in the formation of an ad hoc concert of powers
lest the North Korean problem continue to proceed
unmanaged. My proposal complements the already existing
trilateral “coalition of the willing”
(U.S.-Japan-South Korea). Together with South Korea,
only a four-power extra-peninsula concert of East Asia
can effectively provide the needed combination of
carrots and sticks to Pyongyang. Only then can we test
North Korea effectively to see whether it is ready to
abandon the nuclear option and to accept joint security
guarantee and economic assistance. Once the North
demonstrates its commitment to dismantling its nuclear
programs in a verifiable manner, it ought to be possible
for the U.S. and Japan to normalize diplomatic relations
with the North and assist in its economic
transformation.
In this endeavor the role of China is crucial,
for China is the only power that still maintains an
alliance treaty with North Korea. China already plays a
vital role in the North Korean drama, working hard in
its own way for reasons having much to do with the fact
that the two countries share a common border and a
desire to prevent refugee flows as well as a precipitous
collapse of the regime (Beijing keeps the North on life
support by providing 88 percent of all its energy needs
and 90 percent of its non-aid food imports, among other
things). Failing to perform a constructive role in the
prevention of nuclear weapons proliferation will not
only disappoint the international community but also
cause a reverse in the Sino-American partnership, which
is a key to continued and growing peace, stability and
prosperity in East Asia.
This step must be initiated at the highest
level. American
President George Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao
must devote their concerted efforts sooner and find a
workable formula to prevent North Korea from getting way
with a fait
accompli similar to that of India and Pakistan. When
these ad hoc efforts yield substantive results, these
can be transformed into a six-state conference for the
four powers plus the two Koreas in order that
discussions may proceed on broader matters of regional
stability, nonproliferation and other common problems
facing the region and beyond. The many lessons of
European history bear down on East Asia, more than a
hundred years later. As we should follow the model of
concert diplomacy, we ought to also recall the peril of
inaction. It is time to engage with the North more
actively now before it becomes too late.
Byung-joon Ahn, a Member of the Korean
National Academy of Sciences, is a visiting professor of
International Relations at the National Graduate
Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo, Japan.
|
 |