The ouster
of high-flying politician Bo Xilai from China’s Communist Party leadership in
March is expected to readjust the direction of its North Korea policy, possibly
toward restraining provocative behavior and encouraging openness, a renowned US
expert said.
Gordon
Flake, executive director of the Maureen and Mike Mansfield Foundation, said
that after the downfall of Bo representing the “old-school, reactionary”
faction, reformists could gain more clout and consider recalibrating its
approach to the North.
“He [Bo]
was being attacked directly in person by [Chinese premier] Wen Jiabao and
others who have been pushing for a much more open, reform-minded faction,” he
said during a lecture earlier this month.
“Right now,
at least, the reformist faction is ascended and that would lead to some hope
that the Chinese might be willing, in the coming weeks or months, to further
mitigate their approach to North Korea.”
Bo, a
charismatic advocate of Maoist ideology, and reformist party leaders had been
at loggerheads over key policy directions. Amid allegations of corruption and
abuse of power, Bo, considered a candidate for the party’s nine-member
Politburo, was sacked in March, revealing a deep factional fissure.
At the
conference organized by the local think tank Asan Institute for Policy Studies,
Flake focused on how this year’s political transitions in China, South Korea
and the US will influence their North Korea policies.
Touching on
the possibility of China rethinking its handling of the North, Flake pointed to
the considerable pressure it has recently applied on the country to deter
further provocations, calling it a “remarkable step.”
Flake said
the UN Security Council presidential statement issued after the North’s failed
rocket launch in April was much stronger in its wording than the one adopted in
2009.
“This time,
[the UN statement said] any future launches, whatever it may be, are against
the rules. For China to say that to North Korea is a remarkable step. [As is]
agreeing to further sanctions, and also putting forward a very clear warning
against further provocative behavior,” he said.
China has
long been criticized for supporting the North even after it launched military
provocations such as the 2010 sinking of South Korea’s corvette Cheonan that
killed 46 sailors.
China
watchers have said that Beijing does not want to see any instability in North
Korea as it prefers the status quo, and that the North is of great strategic
value as a buffer against American power.
Offering
his view of China’s North Korea policy, Flake said Beijing has “three nos” ― no
nukes, no collapse and no war.
China has
always tried to balance the three priorities, but it apparently started to give
much more weight to “no collapse” after former North Korean leader Kim Jong-il
suffered a stroke in the summer of 2008, he said.
But too
much focus on “no collapse” apparently broke the balance of China’s priorities
in its North Korea policy.
“By
emphasizing too much no collapse, they actually increased the risk of war and
they allowed North Korea to announce its uranium enrichment program with no
consequences,” he said.
“So, you
can argue that by focusing on one no, you are really messing up the other two
nos.”
Flake said
that the United States’ approach to the communist state is unlikely to be
affected by it being an election year.
“The Obama
administration’s approach was always structured as probing. It was testing
North Korea’s intent,” he said.
“Now, the
truth is, you may disagree with the actuality of what the North intended, but
the interpretation in Washington is undeniably that North Korea failed that
test with the decision to go ahead with the missile launch.”
Having said
this, he stressed the North’s failure to show seriousness about its agreement
it struck with the US in February would only make Washington’s consistent policy
stance more firm.
“There is
no denying that [Republican presidential hopeful] Romney campaign will look for
any excuse to portray the Obama administration as weak,” he said.
Sharing his
thoughts on the leadership change in South Korea, Flake said he does not see
any dramatic policy change coming.
“You cannot
imagine away the [sinking of] Cheonan and the shelling [of the island of
Yeonpyeongdo]. These issues are all there. It does not matter whether it is
Moon jae-in or Park Geun-hye [who wins the presidential election]. They still
have to be dealt with [it],” he said.
“More
importantly, North Korea is different. Even if a South Korean administration
came in and said we want to go back to the Sunshine Policy [of engaging the
North], North Korea’s capacity to accept that is different now.”
The
leadership transition in Russia may not affect its stance on North Korean
issues as it is not a real change of government, Flake said.
“Dmitry
Medvedev from Vladimir Putin and then Putin from Medvedev: It does not really
represent a change in government. Obviously, Russia has a very important role
to play in North Korea. Russia’s North Korea policy is constant,” he said.
Citing its
long history of cooperation with the US on nuclear arms control, Russia,
compared with China, is a relatively responsible player when it comes to the
issues of North Korea’s missile and nuclear tests, he said.
“China is
viewing these issues still primarily through a regional context, through their
alliance with North Korea and their proximity to the North. Russia views
non-proliferation issues through a global context, institutional context,” he
said.
Flake said
that due to its political instability, Japan is not able to play a proactive
role in engaging Pyongyang.
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"A Summary" – Apr 2, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Caroll) (Subjects: Religion, Shift of Human Consciousness, 2012, Intelligent/Benevolent Design, EU, South America, 5 Currencies, Water Cycle (Heat up, Mini Ice Ace, Oceans, Fish, Earthquakes ..), Middle East, Internet, Israel, Dictators, Palestine, US, Japan (Quake/Tsunami Disasters , People, Society ...), Nuclear Power Revealed, Hydro Power, Geothermal Power, Moon, Financial Institutes (Recession, Realign integrity values ..) , China, North Korea, Global Unity,..... etc.) - (Text version)
“….. Here is the prediction: China will turn North Korea loose soon. The alliance will dissolve, or become stale. There will be political upheaval in China. Not a coup and not a revolution. Within the inner circles of that which you call Chinese politics, there will be a re-evaluation of goals and monetary policy. Eventually, you will see a break with North Korea, allowing still another dictator to fall and unification to occur with the south. ….”

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