Review of the Biden administration’s North Korea policy and the direction of strategic cooperation between South Korea and the U.S.
Cheong Seong-Chang
(softpower@sejong.org)
■ The Biden administration’s view of North Korea and policy review
○ Joe Biden negatively described Kim
Jong-un as ‘dictator’, ‘tyrant’, ‘butcher’, ‘thug’ during his presidential
campaign
- Biden did not favorably assess the three
summits between the U.S. and North Korea. The Biden administration is unlikely
to abide by the agreements made at the Singapore summit
○ Vice President Kamala Harris also
describes Kim Jong-un as a ‘dictator,’ but is not as aggressively criticizing
Kim as President Biden and Secretary of State Blinken
- Harris maintains a relatively flexible view
on negotiating denuclearization with North Korea, including easing sanctions.
○ Secretary of State Blinken also
negatively described Kim Jong-un as ‘one of the worst tyrants in the world’
- However, Blinken is maintaining a realistic view
to say that negotiating with North Korea for ‘armament reduction’ is necessary.
It is impossible for North Korea to completely denuclearize in a short period
of time.
○ Since the inauguration of the
Biden administration on January 20th, the U.S. has been reviewing
existing policies toward North Korea.
- The U.S. Department of State, upon reviewing
its policy toward North Korea, tried to contact North Korea since mid-February;
however, it failed.
- Through Choi Son-hui’s message,
North Korea clarified that it will continue to ignore contacts from the U.S.
until the U.S. withdraws its hostile policies toward North Korea.
○ The Biden administration has been
reviewing its North Korea policies by listening to its allies and confirming
the possibility of China’s cooperation through the visit of U.S. Secretary of
State Blinken and U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to Japan and Korea from
March 15th to March 18th, U.S.-China
high-level talks in Alaska on March 18th, and U.S.-Japan-South Korea National
Security Advisors’ meeting in Washington D.C. on April 2nd.
- The U.S. will soon announce denuclearization
as a central factor and human rights issue in North Korea as an essential
factor in the U.S. policies toward North Korea
■ The direction of strategic
cooperation between South Korea and the U.S.
○ It is important for the Biden
administration to establish a joint strategy with South Korea to halt North
Korea’s advancement of nuclear capabilities and draw up nuclear reduction
- It is
desirable to institutionalize a strategic consultation channel between South
Korea's Director of National Security and the National Security Advisor of the
U.S.—not Trump’s South Korea-U.S. working group
○ When negotiating denuclearization
with North Korea resumes, North Korea must promise to submit a comprehensive
report of the total amount of nuclear weapons that it has developed and freeze
its nuclear program
- When North Korea promises to submit
a comprehensive report and freeze its nuclear program, the U.S. and the
international community must consider easing some sanctions and temporarily
suspending or reducing U.S.-South Korea joint drills
○ To reduce North Korea's nuclear
capability and ease sanctions, North Korea may consider a plan to reduce its
nuclear capability by 10% every year over a period of 10 years so that
sanctions can also be eased about 10% a year
- It is desirable to promote
normalization of U.S.-North Korea relations and sign a peace treaty when ⅓ to ½
of denuclearization has been promoted—not at the final stage of
denuclearization
○ China’s cooperation is essential
in order to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue since China has the most—although
limited—power to influence North Korea.
- In order to attract active cooperation from
China, the U.S., China, and South Korea must use four-party talks with North
Korea, and even six-party talks with Japan and Russia, and discuss
denuclearization of North Korea and the corresponding measures.
- Currently, China looks favorably upon
holding four-party talks as a way to resolve the conflict between the U.S. and
China. Former and current U.S. government officials are also in favor of
holding a four-party or a six-party talk.
- It is desirable to first agree on the denuclearization
of North Korea and the international community’s appropriate measures at the
four-party talk and then expand the talk to a six-party talk
○ The South Korean government should
not avoid discussing North Korean human rights issues, but must closely consult
with the U.S. on how to efficiently improve North Korean human rights
- The U.S. government must recognize that sending flyers to North Korea through groups of defectors is not the only way to send information to North Korea; in fact, it renders a negative effect
※ Translator’s note: This is a third party’s unofficial translation of the original paper that was written in Korean. All references should be made to the original paper.
※ This article is written based on the author’s personal opinions and does not reflect the views of the Sejong Institute.