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Emboldened North Korea tries harder line

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Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin -


Successful sanctions evasion, economic lifelines from China and US President Donald Trump’s impeachment woes may be among the factors that have emboldened North Korea in nuclear negotiations, analysts and officials say.


Both Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un continue to play up the personal rapport they say they developed during three face-to-face meetings. But North Korea has said in recent days that it is losing patience, giving the US until the end of the year to change its negotiating stance.


North Korea has tested the limits of engagement with a string of missile launches, including two fired last Thursday, and experts warn that the lack of a concrete arms control agreement has allowed the country to continue producing nuclear weapons.


The missile tests have practical value for the North Korean military’s efforts to modernise its arsenal. But they also underscore Pyongyang’s increasingly belligerent position in the face of what it sees as an inflexible and hostile United States.


In a best-case scenario, Thursday’s launch was an attempt to make the December deadline feel more urgent to the US, said Andray Abrahamian, a visiting scholar with George Mason University Korea.


“Still, I think that Pyongyang has concluded they can do without a deal if they must,” he said. “The sad thing is I think that will lock in the current state of affairs, with its downsides for all stakeholders, for years to come.”


Trump’s reelection battle and the impeachment inquiry against him may have led Kim to overestimate North Korea’s leverage, said one diplomat in Seoul, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the negotiations.


“It looks like Kim has a serious delusion that he is capable of helping or ruining Trump’s reelection, but no one in Pyongyang can stand up to the unerring leader and say he’s mistaken - you don’t want to be dead,” the diplomat said. “And Trump is all Kim has. In order to denuclearise, Kim needs confidence that Trump will be reelected.”


The Americans, meanwhile, came into working-level talks on October 5 in Stockholm with the position that North Korea must completely and irreversibly dismantle its nuclear programme, and pushed for a moratorium on weapons tests as part of a first step, the diplomat said.


Although some media reports said the United States planned to propose temporarily lifting sanctions on coal and textile exports, the diplomat said the talks in Stockholm did not


get into details.


“The US can’t take the risk of easing sanctions first, having already given a lot of gifts to Kim without substantial progress on denuclearisation, including summits,” the diplomat said. “Sanctions are basically all they have to press North Korea.”


When American negotiators tried to set a time for another round of talks, North Korean officials were uncooperative, the diplomat said.


“The prospects are not so promising,” the diplomat added.


Although United Nations sanctions remain in place, some trade with China appears to have increased, and political relations between Beijing and Pyongyang have improved dramatically.


Kim and China’s president, Xi Jinping, have met several times, and the two countries exchange delegations of government officials.


A huge influx of Chinese tourists over the past year appears to be a major source of cash for the North Korean government, according to research by Korea Risk Group, which monitors North Korea. Korea Risk Group chief executive Chad O’Carroll estimates as many as 350,000 Chinese tourists have visited this year, potentially netting the North Korean authorities up


to $175 million. — Reuters


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