The East Asia Institute (EAI) hosted Dr. John S. Park, senior research associate at the U.S. Institute of Peace’s Center for Conflict Analysis & Prevention, on August 6, 2010 for a Smart Talk on China’s evolving North Korea policy. He examined the implications of deepening Communist Party of China (CPC)-Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK) ties for Seoul and Washington. Leading experts in South Korea participated in the discussion and exchanged their views on China-North Korea relations, China-U.S. relations, post-Cheonan measures, and the future prospects for the Six-Party Talks. The following is a summary of Dr. Park’s presentation.
Xiaokang, China’s development policy of bringing the majority of the population into the middle class by 2020, has been the core objective of the CPC since it was introduced by Deng Xiaoping. Chinese leaders have tailored traditional foreign policy principles in order to further Xiaokang goals. They have placed specific emphasis on two essential factors to strengthen Xiaokang goals – a stable external environment on China’s borders and stable relations with the United States.
Fostering Sustainable Stability in Northeast Asia
Xiaokang is a key factor in understanding why stabilizing North Korea constitutes a top policy priority for Beijing. Closely related to Xiaokang is the leadership’s need to promote social stability in China. In practical terms, this means closing the income gap between different regions in China. Among China’s chronically poorest provinces are the three bordering North Korea – Liaoning, Heilongjiang, and Jilin. By fostering sustainable stability in Northeast Asia, Beijing is seeking to facilitate sustainable economic development in these provinces. Beijing’s two primary means for doing so have been bolstering DPRK regime stability with Chinese political capital and promoting DPRK resource development for mutual benefit. We should not be surprised by this separate, parallel Sino-DPRK track that has no linkage to progress with DPRK denuclearization. China, like all countries, is seeking to further its national interests.
Premier Wen Jiabao’s October 2009 visit to Pyongyang marked a further deepening of the CPC-WPK relationship. While the occasion was the 60th anniversary of founding of diplomatic relations, the significance lay in the comprehensive delegation that Wen headed. Among the Chinese delegation members were the commerce minister, the chief of the National Development and Reform Commission – the main architects and implementers of Chinese economic development – in addition to senior officials from the CPC International Department and PLA.
Economic Engagement with North Korea and Denuclearization
The main message from Wen’s visit was that the CPC would bolster the stability of the WPK through a comprehensive bilateral relationship centered on expanding economic engagement. In practice, seeking to achieve the goals of Xiaokang and securing strong bilateral commercial ties have resulted in the creation of close localized connections between North Korea’s Hamgyong-buk-do and China’s Jilin province. The symbiotic relationship that exists between these two border provinces can be characterized as “Ham-Ji” – a sub-regional area where the border is relatively porous and facilitates coping mechanism-type activities in nascent DPRK markets.
The current sanctions regime against North Korea does not actually prohibit much of the commercial activities and economic linkages in which China is engaged. In the unique language of the UN, both Security Council Resolutions 1874 and 1718 do not prohibit member states from engaging in economic development and humanitarian activities in North Korea, which is how Beijing characterizes its economic interactions. In practice, while financial sanctions continue to dominate Washington’s approach to dealing with Pyongyang, PRC state-owned enterprises and private firms have been deepening their interactions with DPRK state trading companies.
Implications for Seoul and Washington
First, China has realized significant progress in the CPC-WPK track and bolstered North Korean stability. Innocuous Sino-DPRK “education, tourism and development” agreements signed by Premier Wen during his October 2009 Pyongyang visit are facilitating a host of follow-up deals. On July 30, PRC Ambassador Liu Hongcai and DPRK Foreign Trade Minister Ri Ryong–nam signed an economic and technical cooperation accord. Soon after, Special Advisor for Nonproliferation and Arms Control Robert Einhorn visited Seoul to seek South Korean cooperation on implementing Iran sanctions and discuss the “new” DPRK sanctions. The intensifying CPC-WPK economic and political relationship raises serious questions about the efficacy of DPRK sanctions. Second, China’s evolving North Korea policy constitutes one of two pillars in its “balanced Korean Peninsula” approach. It is highly unlikely that China will deviate from this approach and select one Korea over the other — even if there is a future DPRK provocation. The Cheonan Incident sets a dangerous precedent where North Korea evaded a direct military response from South Korea and pressure from Beijing.
Third, the growing CPC-WPK partnership is taking place while Washington implements existing and “new” DPRK financial sanctions. An unintended consequence of this policy tool is that North Korea is becoming more dependent on China during an accelerated DPRK leadership succession process.■
John S. Park is a Senior Research Associate for United States Institute of Peace.
Jaewoo Choo (Kyunghee University) |