The Collapse of the Second DPRK-U.S. Summit: How China Perceives It
No. 2019-8 (March 1, 2019)
Dr. Chung Jae Hung
Research Fellow, the Sejong Institute
jameschung@sejong.org
The second DPRK-U.S. summit was held in Hanoi,
Vietnam on February 27-28. This Hanoi summit was a historic attempt to end the
vicious cycle of conflict and animosity and correspond with the new era of
peace and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula. Particularly, North Korea’s
Chairman Kim Jong-un elucidated that he needed ever more contemplation,
efforts, and endurance’ to reach the second meeting, implying that they have
undergone a rocky road.
However, North Korea and the U.S. failed to sign
an agreement at the second summit. At the press conference after the summit, President
Trump said, the negotiations inevitably failed since North Koreans wanted the
removal of sanctions entirely as a concessional measure for the shutdown of
Yongbyon nuclear complex while the U.S. asserted that the complete,
irreversible denuclearization including the dismantlement of the uranium
enrichment facilities located in areas other than Yongbyon, missile facilities,
and nuclear warhead weapons system and the declaration of the list of nuclear
sites and inventory should precede the complete removal of sanctions. As a
response, North Korea rebutted the U.S. assertion by expressing that the North
Korean authorities demanded a partial removal of sanctions, and not in
entirety, as a corresponding measure for the permanent closure of the Yongbyon
nuclear site. Accordingly, President Trump will maintain sanctions on North
Korea, demanding the verifiable measure of denuclearization such as the
dismantlement of other uranium enrichment plants other than the ones in
Yongbyon, missile facilities, and nuclear warheads in the future and adjusting
the pace of the talks.
As the U.S. claims a full package deal of
denuclearization first and concessions later and North Korea desires a ‘dual
track’ approach through progressive, synchronous measures, the talks are
projected to be between a rock and hard place. Already the talks between the
U.S. and North Korea have a precedent case of a breakdown in 2009 over the
inspection and verification of North Korea’s nuclear facilities. Hence, North
Korea calls for measures from the U.S. corresponding to each process of
resolving the North Korean nuclear issue from debilitation to freeze, to
verification, and to abolition such as relief and removal of sanctions,
normalization of diplomatic relations with the U.S., peace treaty, etc.
Eventually, should President Trump insist on the ‘package deal’ unwaveringly
while declining North Korea’s aforementioned approach, Pyongyang is unlikely to
accept such a deal.
The collapse of the second summit between North
Korea and the U.S. startled not only South Korea but also China considerably. Prior
to the summit, Chinese state media urged the two sides to agree on the early
normalization of bilateral relations and denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula as the denuclearization on the peninsula serves also China’s
interests. Moreover, it expressed high hopes for the second summit, emphasizing
that the neighboring countries including the U.S. need to collectively make
efforts to usher in an era of peace and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula as
North Korea have the intention to achieve economic development more than ever.
Highlighting Chairman Kim’s firm expression of commitment to denuclearization and
allusion to the possibility of decommissioning Yongbyon nuclear complex, many
Chinese experts on Korean Peninsula repeatedly stressed the U.S. to note the
significance of gradual confidence-building with North Korea by lifting
sanctions partially in accordance.
Nevertheless, as the summit ended after the two
states failed to bridge the gap, China’s Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lu Kang
articulated, “In fact, ups and downs on the Peninsula over the past several
decades show that dialogue and consultation is the only way out, and only by
meeting each other half way can ensure steady progress on the right course. We
hope that the DPRK and the US will continue to engage in dialogue, show
sincerity, respect and accommodate each other's legitimate concerns and jointly
promote denuclearization and the establishment of a peace mechanism on the
Korean Peninsula.” In his regular briefing. Since Beijing underlines the ‘dual
track’ approach in opposition to the U.S. proposal of ‘package deal’ and the
CVID, North Korea and China are likely to enhance strategic communication and coordination.
As it is well reported, China emphasized that it
supports the resolution to the denuclearization issue by means of dialogue and
negotiations and urged the relevant countries to unravel the issue swiftly in
response to North Korea’s rational concerns and interests at the fourth Kim-Xi
summit on January 8. North Korea also illustrated that it will keenly seek
multilateral negotiations to transition from the existing armistice into peace
retime under the close association with the signatories of the truce through
the New Year’s address. Thus, North Korea and China are expected to shore up
cooperation and coordination.
After the summit collapse, the North Korean
delegation led by Deputy Foreign Minister Ri Kil-song visited Beijing and met
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and discussed the key agreements between the
two countries and changes in the political climate of the Korean Peninsula. As
such, it is predicted that Chairman Kim will meet President Xi Jinping,
explicate the details of the collapse of the summit, and request China’s active
cooperation and support. China, also in need of an ally due to the trade war
with the U.S., will consolidate its relations with North Korea further to
balance out the U.S. concept of anti-China containment through U.S. withdrawal
from the INF and the Indo-Pacific strategy.
In the future, China will undoubtedly strengthen
cooperation on issues regarding the establishment of the peace regime on the
Korean Peninsula and the relief of sanctions against North Korea. And it has
plans to expand its role, proffering a novel multi-party negotiation framework
(six-party talks). Furthermore, Chairman Kim also hinted at a ‘new way’ in his
New Year’s address when the U.S. refuses North Korea’s rational demands. This
implies that North Korea may elevate its relations with China to the level of
the former alliance to alleviate its security and economic concerns. Marking
the seventh decade of diplomatic relations, North Korea and China are pursuing
a new development of the bilateral relationship in a new era. Developing a new
relationship is also closely linked with China mid-to-long term foreign
strategy initiative to achieve the two centennial goals – the great
rejuvenation of the Chinese nation’ and ‘Chinese dream’. Therefore, once
President Xi officially visits North Korea in due course, marking the 70th
anniversary of the bilateral relations, the two countries will bolster
bilateral ties further.
Meanwhile, Beijing maintains that if President
Trump blames China for the causes of all issues such as pointing that China
pulls the strings behind the scenes regarding the collapse of the Hanoi summit
and attempts to mount extra pressure on North Korea, the U.S.-China relations
and DPRK-U.S. relations will aggravate. Basically, China perceives the
animosity and hostility between North Korea and the U.S. accumulated since the
Korean War lie as the root cause of the North Korean nuclear issue. Thus, it
argues the U.S. approach to resolve the issue – a package deal of
denuclearization first, and compensation later – is infeasible. In sum, the
Asian giant holds that a zero-sum-based resolution is bound to fail when
neglecting the ‘dual track’ approach. At this juncture, the South Korean
government should increase strategic communications with the U.S. as well as
China and pursue the denuclearization and the establishment of a peace regime
on the peninsula in a balanced manner by hosting trilateral and quadrilateral
dialogues among the two Koreas, the U.S., and China.
※ Translator’s note: This is a summarized unofficial translation of the
original article that was written in Korean. All references should be made to
the original paper.
※ The
views expressed here are the author's own, and do not necessarily represent
those of the Sejong Institute.