ID :
38520
Fri, 01/02/2009 - 15:06
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/38520
The shortlink copeid
(EDITORIAL from the Korea Times on Jan. 2)
Road to denuclearization: North Korea urged to give up brinkmanship tactics
It is regrettable that the Lee Myung-bak administration has only suffered from
setbacks in inter-Korean ties without any progress in international efforts to
persuade Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons program. Any hope for a better
South-North relationship and complete denuclearization appears to remain a pipe
dream this year.
Throughout last year, the Kim Jong-il regime of North Korea continued to test the
patience of Lee, U.S. President George W. Bush and other world leaders by
backpedaling on its commitment to disabling its nuclear facilities. No one can
expect a sudden breakthrough in the nuclear issue and inter-Korean relations.
Nuclear envoys from Seoul, Washington, Beijing, Tokyo and Moscow must have been
exhausted by the North's nuclear blackmail and its notorious brinkmanship
tactics. The communist country has undoubtedly been playing for time to start new
negotiations with the incoming U.S. administration of Barack Obama who is to take
office Jan. 20. The North's intention could be detected in its joint newspaper
editorial marking New Year's Day. The editorial made no hostile comments about
the United States, while severely criticizing the South for its tougher policy
toward the North.
"The independent foreign policy of our Republic to denuclearize the Korean
Peninsula and defend peace and security of Northeast Asia and rest of the world
is demonstrating its validity more fully as the days go by," said the editorial
jointly issued by the North's ruling party and military. It is apparent that the
North sees Obama's inauguration as an opportunity to start afresh with the U.S.
after eight years of rough negotiations with the conservative Bush
administration.
But it might be an illusion for the North to believe it can get more concessions
from the Obama government. Instead of anticipating a conciliatory gesture from
Washington, North Korea should first change its position to move toward peace and
reconciliation. It must give up its outdated Cold War tactics of escalating
tensions and brewing hostility on the peninsula by turning the clock back.
It is urgent for Pyongyang to sincerely implement its denuclearization pledges it
made during the six-party talks, including the mechanism for verifying the
disablement of its nuclear facilities. Besides, the North should immediately
return to a dialog with the South to mend the strained inter-Korean ties. We hope
the North will give up its anachronistic policy of having direct talks with the
U.S. while sidelining the South.
(END)
It is regrettable that the Lee Myung-bak administration has only suffered from
setbacks in inter-Korean ties without any progress in international efforts to
persuade Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons program. Any hope for a better
South-North relationship and complete denuclearization appears to remain a pipe
dream this year.
Throughout last year, the Kim Jong-il regime of North Korea continued to test the
patience of Lee, U.S. President George W. Bush and other world leaders by
backpedaling on its commitment to disabling its nuclear facilities. No one can
expect a sudden breakthrough in the nuclear issue and inter-Korean relations.
Nuclear envoys from Seoul, Washington, Beijing, Tokyo and Moscow must have been
exhausted by the North's nuclear blackmail and its notorious brinkmanship
tactics. The communist country has undoubtedly been playing for time to start new
negotiations with the incoming U.S. administration of Barack Obama who is to take
office Jan. 20. The North's intention could be detected in its joint newspaper
editorial marking New Year's Day. The editorial made no hostile comments about
the United States, while severely criticizing the South for its tougher policy
toward the North.
"The independent foreign policy of our Republic to denuclearize the Korean
Peninsula and defend peace and security of Northeast Asia and rest of the world
is demonstrating its validity more fully as the days go by," said the editorial
jointly issued by the North's ruling party and military. It is apparent that the
North sees Obama's inauguration as an opportunity to start afresh with the U.S.
after eight years of rough negotiations with the conservative Bush
administration.
But it might be an illusion for the North to believe it can get more concessions
from the Obama government. Instead of anticipating a conciliatory gesture from
Washington, North Korea should first change its position to move toward peace and
reconciliation. It must give up its outdated Cold War tactics of escalating
tensions and brewing hostility on the peninsula by turning the clock back.
It is urgent for Pyongyang to sincerely implement its denuclearization pledges it
made during the six-party talks, including the mechanism for verifying the
disablement of its nuclear facilities. Besides, the North should immediately
return to a dialog with the South to mend the strained inter-Korean ties. We hope
the North will give up its anachronistic policy of having direct talks with the
U.S. while sidelining the South.
(END)