The Third DPRK-PRC Summit: Seoul’s Strategic Contemplation and Response
No. 2018-34(June 21, 2018)
Dr. Chung Jae Hung
Research Fellow, Department of Security Strategy Studies
The Sejong Institute
North Korea’s Chairman of the State Affairs Commission
Kim Jong-un held the third summit with the Chinese President Xi Jinping on the
19th, visiting Beijing. The three meetings between the two leaders—that occurred within
three months, Beijing in March, Dalian in May, and Beijing again—have marked the
closeness unprecedented in the 69-year history of DPRK-China relations. At the third summit with Kim
Jong-un, President Xi expressed, he was “pleased to see the important summit
between Comrade Chairman and U.S. President Donald Trump in Singapore achieve
principled consensus and positive results in realizing the denuclearization of
the Korean Peninsula and establishing a lasting peace mechanism on the
Peninsula.” He also added, “[n]o matter how the international and regional
situations change, the firm stance of the CPC and the Chinese government on
consolidating and developing the relations with the DPRK remains unchanged, the
Chinese people's friendship with the DPRK people remains unchanged, and China's
support for the socialist DPRK remains unchanged." In response, Chairman Kim underlined the traditional
friendship between the two countries, saying that ‘he would closely cooperate
with the Chinese comrades at the same staff in the historic journey of
defending socialism and opening up a new future of the Korean Peninsula and the
region, and fully discharge his responsibility and role to protect genuine
peace.’
On the core agenda of this third
DPRK-PRC summit—the denuclearization of the
Korean Peninsula and the peace regime—, China reiterated its commitment to assume the most
reliable patron role for North Korea. President Xi voiced
China’s active support for North Korea’s position and commitment to
denuclearization of the Peninsula and expressed that China will continue to
play a constructive role for this end. Kim Jong-un replied that he is “much
pleased with and values the recently strengthened strategic cooperation between
the two parties and the mutual confidence getting further deepened, he
expressed the determination and will to further develop the closer relations of
friendship, unity and cooperation between the two parties and the two peoples
of the DPRK and China” in addition to the point that “beneficial views on a
series of issues of mutual concern including the prospect for the
denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula were exchanged and a shared
understanding on the discussed issues achieved.”
The two countries reaffirmed their denuclearization
principle—suspension-for-suspension, dual-track
approach, and progressive-synchronous action—and had
a comprehensive discussion on North Korea’s denuclearization process and bilateral
economic cooperation among others. Especially, North Korea manifested the firm
resolve to approach all affairs surrounding the Korean Peninsula with
progressive and synchronous principle through close and detailed consultation
with China such as declaring the end of the Korean War, establishing a peace
mechanism, implementing inspection-verification of the nuclear-related installations,
lifting sanctions, providing economic aid, normalizing U.S.-North Korea
relations, etc. Particularly, the two leaders told that they discussed issues
to enhance bilateral strategic and tactical cooperation under a new political
environment on June 20. The two countries are likely to take a united stance on
strategy and tactics regarding matters such as the denuclearization of the
Korean Peninsula, regime guarantee, the declaration to end the Korean War,
peace accord, and bilateral economic cooperation.
Meanwhile, President Trump reportedly vowed to modify the
armistice agreement in exchange for North Korea’s complete denuclearization to
Kim Jong-un after the summit between the two leaders. He decided to suspend Ulchi
Freedom Guardian (UFG) exercise scheduled in August and Secretary Pompeo
stated, “He[Kim Jong-un] has made very clear his commitment to fully denuclearize
his country. … In return for that, the President has committed to making sure
that we alter the armistice agreement, provide the security assurances that
Chairman Kim needs.” North Korea already announced the closure of ballistic
missile engine test site and the U.S. made a preemptive move of suspending the
ROK-U.S. joint military exercise.
Thanks to the amicable atmosphere between North Korea and
the U.S., the controversy over CVID that some concern is prospected to be
resolved through gradual confidence-building measures between the two
countries.
Until now, China maintained that the North Korean nuclear
issue cannot be resolved by unilateral concession or sacrifice from one side
and that it can only be resolved when North Korea and the U.S. truly develop
bilateral ties along with the removal of military threats and hostile policy
against North Korea. Accordingly, China will actively urge the two sides to
implement the Chinese style of common security, ‘freeze-for-freeze’ and ‘dual
track’ approach, instead of the zero-sum measures which neglects security
concerns of others, while emphasizing continuous dialogue and communications to
foster an amicable relations between North Korea and the U.S. and North Korea
and South Korea. Through this, China will expand its influence, safeguarding
its core interests and assuming its role as a responsible power as the
stakeholder in the Korean Peninsula affairs and regional stabilizer in
Northeast Asia. China already proclaimed the strategic initiative of building a
socialist power by 2050 and raised the goal of extricating from the U.S.-led
regional order and establishing a new China-led order.
In other words, it tendered the transition from a big
power to a strong power, manifesting strong commitment to realizing the new
regional order by 2050 through the promotion of more active diplomacy and expansion
of influence. Hence, North Korea and China appear to strengthen bilateral
strategic and tactical coordination. Therefore, it is urgent for the South
Korean government to formulate a new policy alternative of proactively
responding to its political surroundings where rapid change unravels. After
three bilateral summits, North Korea and China already have recovered bilateral
relations at a hurried pace. Thus, bilateral economic cooperation, investment,
and human exchanges are likely to follow in earnest as North Korea decidedly
stated its determination to denuclearize and the U.S. and North Korea reached
an agreement on denuclearization. Especially, as the entourage following Kim
Jong-un at the third summit with Xi Jinping included Premier Pak Pong-ju, who oversees
the North Korean economic policy, and Vice-chairman of the Central Committee
Pak Thae-song, supervises the country’s science and education policy, the
summit appears to have touched on economic assistance and investment, and bilateral
cooperation in pursuant to the early measures of denuclearization. On June 12, Chinese
Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Geng Shuang stated, “China always believes that
sanction itself is not the end, and the Security Council’s actions should
support and conform to the diplomatic dialogue and the endeavor for the
denuclearization of the Peninsula at this point” at the regular press
conference. Since Chairman Kim vowed to end the byungjin line and strongly highlighted the focus on economic
development, bilateral economic exchanges are expected to gradually increase.
After the three summits with North Korea, China began to
prepare close coordination measures on Korean Peninsula affairs, shoring up its
relations with North Korea to speed up the resolution to the North Korean
nuclear issue. China’s major experts on Korean Peninsula already began to
highlight that the international community should extricate from the Cold War
mentality on North Korea, alleviate economic sanctions, and engage in economic
cooperation as North Korea’s policy priority lies in economic development and
improvement of people’s livelihoods. Furthermore, China appears to pursue the
resumption of the six-party talks in pursuant to the September 19 Joint
Statement in 2005 to promote denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula since the
DPRK-U.S. summit. Especially to smoothly resolve the North Korean nuclear
issue, Beijing believes in the rapid resumption of the six-party talks as
intricate and complex problems such as relieving North Korea’s security
concern, lifting sanctions against North Korea, providing economic aid,
establishing a peace regime on the Korean Peninsula lie ahead.
Eventually, the South Korean government is required to
take a bold policy adventure and transition, pursuing the multilateral peace
and security consultative body in Northeast Asia such as ROK-U.S.-China
trilateral dialogue, ROK-DPRK-U.S.-China quadrilateral dialogue, and six-party
talks to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue and draw substantial economic
cooperation regarding North Korea. In an interview with Russian media outlets
ahead of his visit to Russia, President Moon said that once an inter-Korean
peace regime is established, this should be further developed into a
multilateral peace and security mechanism in Northeast Asia in the mid-to-long
term. China already has actively promoted ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ and the
South Korean government has set forth the New Northern Policy and New Southern
Policy as its new foreign strategy. Provided that North Korea’s
denuclearization process embarks on a virtuous cycle, the two Koreas and China
could initiate economic cooperation and establish fundamental infrastructure and
ultimately drive toward lasting peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. Through this, it is essential to
establish a sustainable and perpetual peace regime on the Korean Peninsula and
institutionalize a multilateral peace and security mechanism in Northeast Asia
and usher in a new era of peace and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula,
focusing on geoeconomics rather than geopolitics.