The Collapse of the Second DPRK-U.S. Summit: How the U.S. Perceives It
No. 2019-7 (March 1, 2019)
Dr. Woo Jung-Yeop
Director, Center for American Studies, the
Sejong Institute
woo@sejong.org
How the summit ended left the U.S. observers flabbergasted.
They never expected the negotiations to fall flat. Previously, most of the
misgivings about the summit were the conclusion in which President Trump
accepts a low-level measure of denuclearization in exchange for the removal of
large portions of sanctions to flaunt his achievements; thus, North Korea being
de facto acknowledged as a nuclear-weapons state. With these misgivings
prevalent among experts and media, the collapse of the summit came as a
surprise. Even those who viewed Trump disapprovingly based on the logic of ‘No
deal is better than a bad deal’ breathed a sigh of relief. They had qualms
about the circumstances that the ‘bad deal’ was the only outcome possible from
the interplay of their fundamental distrust of North Korea – that North Korea
is not genuinely committed to the agreement on denuclearization –, the
situation that nothing has been achieved since the first summit, and the
political aversion to President Trump.
Such perception from the U.S. hugely contrasted
with South Korea’s expectations. Prior to the negotiations, South Koreans had
high expectations of a positive outcome - that is, the two sides exchange the
‘Yongbyon’ factor and sanctions relief, advancing North Korea’s
denuclearization and aiding the inter-Korean relations through sanctions
relief. One of the underlying assumptions was that since the U.S. finds the
resolution more urgently than North Korea, it will accept North Korea’s
proposal – that North Korea gives up Yongbyon for the partial sanctions relief
(not to the extent that North Korea desires) to achieve a further-step summit
outcome. Particularly, the state of affairs that President Trump will be
encountering in domestic politics – the announcement of near-complete Mueller
report is scheduled next week and the public hearing of Michael Cohen,
President Trump’s ex-lawyer, who is predicted to testify against President
Trump, is to be held in the middle of the summit - beefed up the expectations.
Owing to the fact that President Trump is under fire domestically, the logic
behind this expectation was that President Trump will be likely to seek a
breakthrough using North Korea and sign a better agreement than the Singapore
summit to boast about his feat.
Nonetheless, the U.S. political situation took the
opposite course. Even with the agreement at the first summit, President Trump
blew his own horn by indicating that North Korea does not conduct nuclear and
missile tests and the remains of U.S. soldiers are returned. As a matter of
fact, U.S. domestic politics do not require President Trump to achieve anything
beyond that. Provided that President Trump successfully persuade Chairman Kim
to agree on the genuine abolition of the nuclear stockpile, the U.S. and the
international community inspects and verifies the measures, and the North
Korean missiles are disassembled, it will have a significant impact on American
politics. However, summits concluded with agreements in written form cannot swing
the U.S. politics. Rather, it opens up for criticisms of and oppositions to a
‘bad deal’ from those groups that have a malevolent attitude toward President
Trump – the expert group in the security circle in Washington and the Democrats
which have the majority in the House. Moreover, noting the situation that
President Trump receives lambasting remarks for continuing negotiations with
Kim Jong-un without mentioning North Korea’s human rights issue, President
Trump and his aides may have concluded that no deal is better than a bad deal.
Furthermore, President Trump attributed the
summit collapse to the point that “[b]asically, they [North Koreans] wanted the
sanctions lifted in their entirety.” At the post-summit press conference. In
response, North Korea’s Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho clarified at the news
conference, “What we proposed was not the removal of all sanctions, but the
partial removal. In detail, there are 11 UN sanctions resolutions imposed upon
the DPRK and we proposed to the United States to lift the article of sanctions that
impede the civilian economy and the livelihood of our people from five UN
sanctions resolutions adopted in 2016 and 2017.” The two remarks are both true.
The North Korean authorities picked out a part of the international sanctions
regime against North Korea; thus, Minister Ri did not make a false statement.
Still, President Trump’s word also is true, given the fact that among the 11 UN
sanctions against North Korea ranging from resolution 1695 in March 2006 to resolution
2397 in December 2017 the resolutions from the resolution 2270 in March 2016
onwards directly influence the North Korean economy – thus what Pyongyang
desires to be relieved. From the U.S. standpoint, the resolutions since 2016
are the essence of the sanctions regime against North Korea that brought about
changes of the North Korean regime’s behavior. Upon commencing the
denuclearization talks between Iran and the international community, many
experts delved into the comparative study of sanctions against Iran and North
Korea. The palpable difference between the two sanctions regime was whether the
sanctions cover the overall economy. As the international community viewed the
sanctions on the Iranian economy as a whole as the key factor, the U.S. also
observed the sanctions against North Korea since 2016 lie at the crux of the
sanctions regime.
Especially, Special Representative Stephen
Biegun explained that the U.S. and North Korea are yet to agree on a common
definition of denuclearization in the working-level negotiations with North Korea
which began after an eight-month adjournment. It indicates that the U.S. view
on North Korea’s complete abolition of the nuclear arsenal is dissimilar with
North Korea’s perception of denuclearization. As Mr. Biegun realized the
difference in perceptions, Washington could have been determinedly wary of the
risk of easing sanctions in the middle of the denuclearization process without
the clear congruity in the ultimate goal. It is necessary to have an agreement
on how and when to achieve the final goal so as to agree on the process to accomplish
such a goal. In response, the U.S. could also partially remove sanctions in a
phased manner. However, without the firm agreement on the final goal, lifting
sanctions in the middle diminishes the possibility of reaching the finish line.
That is why the U.S. cannot accept the deal at present stage.
Ultimately, the U.S. should leave the largest
portion of sanctions until the point when North Korea eradicates completely its
existing nuclear arsenal including nuclear materials to coerce North Korea to
reach the endpoint. North Korea wants to exchange decommissioning of Yongbyon
nuclear facilities and others with a huge chunk of the sanctions at the initial
stages. Consequently and logically, the two countries have difficulties to find
a middle ground.
※ 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.