Seoul Should Play Creative Role in Regional Diplomacy
Like most events that had been foreseen for too long, North Korea's eventual rocket launch Sunday was closer to an anticlimax.
It's bad enough Pyongyang has finally taken the action of what it says was propelling a satellite into orbit, but most of outside world believes was an effort to get nearer to the title of nuclear power, complete with long-range weapons delivery systems.
This is lamentable not so much because the isolationist regime defied the wishes of most other countries but because it could hurt everyone, including not only its presumed adversaries of South Koreans, Japanese and Americans but also its own people in the long run, for the sake of a handful of leaders and military brass.
Everyone knows the space satellite is just another ― or previous ― name for an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). Even if we take the North's allegation that all this is for the peaceful use of space at face value, it's no easier to understand Pyongyang's behavior of looking up the sky while many of its people are starving on earth.
It's a relief in this regard to watch most of Pyongyang's counterparts react with a calmer and more cool-headed approach than they had pledged, with the probable exception of Japan, whose seeming overreaction was attributed by regional experts to domestic political circumstances, in the way they viewed the communist country's test-fire. Tokyo did not try to intercept the flying object, as no debris fell on its land ― as expected.
Seoul fell short, wisely, of announcing its full-scale participation into the U.S.-led Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI), which otherwise might have unnecessarily accelerated tension on the Korean Peninsula.
Most noteworthy was the U.S. reaction as always, and President Barack Obama seemed to stop at making remarks based on the long-kept U.S. positions, defining the North's move as ``provocative'' and predicting it would ``further isolate'' Pyongyang from the international community.
North Korean leaders might find it quite disappointing that Obama seemingly ruled out the possibility for any immediate bilateral dialogue with these comments. If the history of Washington-Pyongyang negotiations is any guide, however, American can revert to a ``realistic awareness'' anytime without much of a prior signal.
And this is exactly where South Korea's role becomes important. Despite political rhetoric about ``blood allies'' between the U.S. and South Korea, Washington has mostly preferred Seoul as a mediator rather than a stumbling block, whether America took engagement or containment policies with respect to the communist country.
Experts of international politics share the view in doubting South Korea's diplomatic usefulness for the U.S. if the former has little access to North Korea and China like now.
For Kim Jong-il and his coterie, the Lee administration could be a savior, as the latter has given cause for Pyongyang to revert to the iron-fisted rule at a time when Kim's leadership was shaken both due to his bad health and the ``southern sunshine'' permeating through Gaeseong and Mt. Geumgang over the past decade.
This is no time for the government to parrot ``airtight'' alliance with the United States, but read into what the new administration in Washington has in mind in the context of a new world order, particularly in which China is emerging as one of the G2. If there were a time when Seoul needed diplomatic creativity and initiatives more than ever, it is now.
[출처 : 코리아타임스]
No comments:
Post a Comment