home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0360>
- <title>
- Apr. 04, 1994: Pyongyang's Dangerous Game
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NORTH KOREA, Page 60
- Pyongyang's Dangerous Game
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The North balks again at nuclear inspections, vowing dire consequences
- if the West gets too tough in return
- </p>
- <p>By J.F.O. McAllister/Washington--With reporting by Edward W. Desmond/Tokyo and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Sitting in the conference room of Peace House on the South
- Korean side of the line in the truce village of Panmunjom, Seoul's
- diplomats were shocked by the steamy rhetoric from their Northern
- counterparts. "Seoul is not far from here," warned the North's
- Park Yong Su, reading a prepared text to the South's Song Yong
- Dae. "Should a war break out, Seoul will be a sea of flames,
- and you, Mr. Song, will find it difficult to survive."
- </p>
- <p> The grisly threat, replayed over and over on South Korean television,
- was a sharp reminder of the acrimony growing between North Korea
- and most of the world after Pyongyang once again refused to
- submit to international nuclear inspection. The North cranked
- up its noisy propaganda machine to proclaim the Korean peninsula
- on "the brink of war" and pointedly reminded the U.S. not to
- forget that 54,246 American soldiers died in the Korean War.
- </p>
- <p> The West spoke back last week in a quieter but no less assertive
- tone. A third and supposedly climactic round of high-level talks
- between North Korea and the U.S., to discuss trading diplomatic
- recognition and economic aid for the North's full compliance
- with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and other Western
- demands, was scratched. South Korea put its 633,000 troops on
- alert. Seoul also accepted an American offer to deploy 48 Patriot
- missile launchers to defend against North Korean Scud missiles
- and announced that it had resumed planning for the Team Spirit
- military exercises with the U.S., suspended in February to placate
- the North. Washington weighed whether to supplement its 34,830
- troops in South Korea and beef up their equipment. All the military
- talk sparked fears that the yearlong diplomatic campaign to
- haul Pyongyang back inside the safeguards of the nonproliferation
- treaty had collapsed. Given the touchy unpredictability of the
- Kim Il Sung regime, Seoul and Washington were worried that even
- small military signals could escalate toward a catastrophic
- war.
- </p>
- <p> "I do not want to be an alarmist on North Korea," Secretary
- of Defense William Perry told TIME last week, "but I take the
- threat of military action very seriously." Two-thirds of Pyongyang's
- army is stationed within 100 miles of the border and could march
- to the demilitarized zone in an hour and to Seoul in two. The
- North, he says, is "persisting in the development of a nuclear-weapons
- program." And, adds Perry, "it's a very erratic regime. I don't
- know of anybody anywhere who can predict with confidence what
- philosophical views the North Korean leadership has about war
- and peace." But, he concludes, "I see no imminent danger of
- military actitivies." Nevertheless, the Pentagon is re-examining
- its contingency plans for South Korea, and it plans what Perry
- called "further moves that strengthen our defensive forces"--even though the U.S. realizes Pyongyang will regard those
- actions as provocative.
- </p>
- <p> Information about North Korea's intentions has been at a premium
- since the aborted mission by the International Atomic Energy
- Agency in early March. After being stonewalled since February
- 1993, inspectors were finally allowed back to seven sites at
- the North's Yongbyon nuclear complex. Nothing unusual was found
- at six of the sites, but at the seventh, where plutonium for
- bombs can be extracted from nuclear-fuel rods, the team discovered
- that an IAEA seal on an area containing a "glove box" for handling
- radioactive material was broken--a janitor's mistake, claimed
- North Korea. But the inspectors were not permitted to take samples
- from the "glove box" that would reveal any recent handling of
- the North's plutonium stocks. They saw no evidence of a major
- breach, but the off-limits lab "was the heart of the matter,"
- says IAEA spokesman David Kyd.
- </p>
- <p> The agency's decision on whether North Korea had complied with
- the treaty terms was crucial. Director-General Hans Blix reported
- the truncated inspection prevented "any meaningful conclusion"
- about whether the North had diverted nuclear material for possible
- use in weapons. That was enough for the agency to turn the matter
- over to the U.N. Security Council. The council has the power
- to impose economic sanctions on the North for its recalcitrance.
- But since China, Pyongyang's friend, is still likely to veto
- any such measures, the U.N. at present does not have the inclination.
- </p>
- <p> President Clinton warned last year that "we will not allow the
- North Koreans to develop a nuclear weapon." That threat is easier
- made than implemented. The North Korean problem is a four-dimensional
- chess game where each major player--the U.S., North and South
- Korea, and the IAEA--fears the political consequences of making
- concessions and the military consequences of getting tough.
- Last week a new player appeared on the scene when Russia tried
- another opportunistic raid into U.S. diplomatic territory by
- proposing an international conference to settle Korea's problems.
- Washington politely dismissed the idea as a harmful diversion.
- </p>
- <p> If it came to a war, the U.S. and South Korea both insist they
- would win in the end--but at a prohibitive cost in casualties
- and damage. Economic sanctions are not very attractive either.
- The North says it will treat them as a declaration of war, but
- instead of retaliating with an all-out attack, it might quit
- the nonproliferation treaty or engage in small-scale military
- action, such as fire fights across the DMZ. Because the North
- is already poor and trades little, some experts doubt that an
- embargo would have much effect unless China cut off oil sales,
- which is not likely.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration has decided a gradual move from purely
- diplomatic to economic and military pressures is still the best
- response. That is the only way the Security Council might earn
- backing from China if sanctions are needed later. Last week
- the U.S. strained to avoid appearing bellicose. The Patriot
- batteries are being shipped to South Korea rather than flown.
- No date has been set for the renewed Team Spirit exercise. The
- Security Council resolution Washington is drafting is expected
- only to admonish North Korea to comply with treaty terms and
- to warn that sanctions might be imposed later.
- </p>
- <p> This gentle strategy flows partly from a widely shared view
- in Washington that the North may simply have miscalculated when
- it denied the IAEA complete access to the seventh site. Pyongyang
- is an exceedingly tough bargainer, practiced at extracting rewards
- time and again for the same concession. This time it tried horse
- trading access to the seventh site for Seoul's agreement to
- postpone an exchange of high-level envoys to discuss nuclear
- questions, something the U.S. opposed. The IAEA, tired of being
- endlessly diddled, would not buy the deal, a reaction that appears
- to have surprised the North. "They calculated that the rest
- of the world would understand" when they balked at a small part
- of the IAEA inspection to get their way on the envoys, says
- a U.S. official. The result, says another official, is that
- "we find ourselves in a harsher situation than I think anyone
- expected or desired."
- </p>
- <p> There are signs that Pyongyang is trying hard not to deepen
- the crisis. Its talk of destroying Seoul may scare the uninitiated,
- but this "is not particularly unusual" for North Korean propaganda,
- says Ezra Vogel, the CIA's national intelligence officer for
- East Asia. In a statement by a Foreign Ministry spokesman that
- the U.S. considered authoritative, Pyongyang only vaguely threatened
- to withdraw from the nonproliferation treaty if Team Spirit
- resumed in 1994 and other Western pressures were applied--but it did not denounce Washington's decision to send Patriots.
- </p>
- <p> In South Korea, the fine gradations of Northern propaganda were
- lost in a wave of pessimism about the chances of finding a peaceful
- accommodation with a country still preaching war. The civilian
- government of President Kim Young Sam came to power believing
- its military predecessors had manufactured tensions with the
- North to prop up their own misrule. Kim's ministers spoke in
- rosy tones about how they would vanquish ideology and unite
- the two countries. Now, says a Seoul official, "the romantic
- view is gone." Kim has shelved plans to encourage investment
- in the North, toughened the South's military stance and made
- sure there were no gaps between Seoul and Washington for the
- North to exploit. Last week he traveled to Tokyo and Beijing
- to seek allies against Pyongyang's intransigence.
- </p>
- <p> The West is now waiting to see whether Pyongyang backs down.
- Some analysts are sure the end of the diplomatic road has already
- been reached. They argue that the regime and especially its
- unproved heir apparent, Kim Jong Il, view an atomic program
- as the trump card of their credibility and will not forgo it
- for anything. Other experts think Pyongyang might eventually
- give up its nuclear dream, but only in exchange for massive
- economic aid, a guarantee of Western support for Kim Jong Il's
- succession and a withdrawal of U.S. troops from the South--concessions neither Seoul nor Washington will accept. The Clinton
- Administration still believes North Korea can be persuaded to
- trade away its bomb--or at least its capacity to build any
- more than it may now have--for diplomatic recognition and
- reasonable financial aid.
- </p>
- <p> The task for Clinton is to keep prodding and cajoling Pyongyang
- down that path without devoting so much attention to the problem
- that he raises the value of the North's nuclear card even higher.
- Right now, his wait-and-squeeze strategy has strong congressional
- support, but that could erode if the North were to escalate.
- Says a U.S. official: "Quite frankly, the real problem will
- be keeping extraneous issues--Somalia, human rights in China,
- Whitewater--from affecting our response and getting us off
- track." Then an embattled Clinton might be prompted to try what
- former ambassador to Seoul Donald Gregg calls "compensatory
- toughness": setting deadlines the North will snub or making
- demands from which neither side can back down. Getting off track
- with North Korea could cause a war.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-