Why does this page look this way?
It appears that you are using either an older, classic Web browser or a hand-held device that allows you to view our content but may not work with every feature of our site. If you are using an older browser, please upgrade for the best experience.
Navigation
home > by publication type > daily analysis > Pying-Pyong Diplomacy
| Prepared by: | Carin Zissis |
|---|
Christopher Hill's talks with North Korea signify Washington's new negotiation approach. (AP Images)
The Bush administration’s policy of no direct talks with Pyongyang is no more. Christopher R. Hill, the chief U.S. envoy in North Korean denuclearization talks, made a surprise visit (KTimes) to the isolated country Thursday. With this trip, Hill aimed to breathe life into a February denuclearization deal that gave Pyongyang sixty days to shut down its main nuclear reactor at Yongbyon and allow inspectors to return to the country. In exchange, Pyongyang would receive desperately needed food and energy supplies from members of the Six-Party Talks. But the April deadline came and went with Pyongyang refusing to hold up its part of the bargain until it received $25 million in funds, which the United States says were connected to North Korean counterfeiting and money laundering, frozen in a Macao bank. After meetings in Pyongyang, Hill said North Korean officials were prepared to move past the funds issue and shut down Yongbyon (BBC).
Hill lobbied with the Bush administration to allow him to make such a trip, arguing the visit would give him insight (WashPost) into the reclusive state. The White House resisted giving in to North Korean demands for one-on-one talks after President Bush famously included North Korea in the “Axis of Evil” in his 2002 State of the Union address. Since then, Pyongyang restarted Yongbyon and produced enough plutonium for as many as twelve weapons, according to a report by the Institute for Science and International Security. This CFR.org Crisis Guide examines the North Korean nuclear issue.
Months after North Korea joined the nuclear club when it conducted a nuclear test in October 2006, the Bush administration signaled the first steps in an evolving stance toward Pyongyang when Hill met with his North Korean counterpart Kim Kye-Gwan, first in Berlin and then in New York shortly after the February agreement was reached. But by March, the stop-and-go progress halted again because of the holdup of North Korean accounts in the Macao-based Banco Delta Asia.
The money has served as a thorn in the side of denuclearization talks since 2005, when the U.S. Treasury Department blacklisted the bank. North Korea subsequently walked away from the Six-Party negotiating table, months after the talks produced a September 2005 statement in which Pyongyang promised to end its nuclear program. With efforts to get the denuclearization process going again this spring, Treasury paved the way to release the funds in March, but also forbade U.S. banks from dealing with the Macao bank. This rendered the $25 million “the financial equivalent of radioactive funds,” explains John S. Park of the United States Institute for Peace in a podcast. Even after a Russian bank agreed to accept the money this week, North Korea said it would not allow nuclear monitors into the country until it received assurances they funds had arrived in the Russian accounts (Reuters).
Bruce Klingner, a Northeast Asia expert at the Heritage Foundation, writes that the Bush administration played into North Korea’s hands and “needlessly undermined U.S. diplomatic efforts” by linking the Macao bank funds issue to Six-Party Talks. Even if the February pact moves ahead, the agreement is a “sweet deal” for North Korea, writes CFR’s Gary Samore in a satirical memo for Global Asia, as closing down Yongbyon still leaves North Korea with a plutonium stock to serve as a nuclear deterrent. In an interview with CFR.org, Don Oberdorfer, a leading Korea expert, says “important progress has been made toward normalization” of U.S.-North Korea relations, yet warns that “like anything with North Korea, nothing is simple.”
Weigh in on this issue by emailing CFR.org.
In Termites in the Trading System, Jagdish Bhagwati reveals how the rapid spread of preferential trade agreements endangers the world trading system.
America Between the Wars explores how the decisions and debates of the years between the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Twin Towers shaped the events, arguments, and politics of the world we live in today.
In The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State, Noah Feldman tells the story behind the increasingly popular call for the establishment of the sharia—the law of the traditional Islamic state—in the modern Muslim world.
Complete list of CFR Books.
This report argues that the United States must lead with domestic action on climate change and proposes a U.S. negotiating strategy for a global UN climate agreement that includes commitments from all major economies, while also promoting a less formal Partnership for Climate Cooperation that would focus the world's largest emitters on implementing aggressive emissions reductions.
This Task Force report examines changes in Latin America and in U.S. influence there, while taking account of the region's enduring importance to the United States. The Task Force offers an agenda for U.S. policy toward Latin America and identifies four critical areas that should provide the basis of a new U.S. approach.
About Independent Task Forces at CFR.
This report outlines the nature of the challenges in Pakistan's tribal areas, formulates strategies for addressing those challenges, and distills the strategies into realistic policy proposals worthy of consideration by the incoming administration.
This report analyzes the debate over U.S. use of assurances against torture, explaining the contexts in which they are used, how they can be conveyed, and what they can contain, and recommends a number of ways to respond to criticism so that the United States can continue using assurances.
Complete list of Council Special Reports.
“The Next President:” Richard Holbrooke says the next U.S. president will inherit a more difficult set of international challenges than any predecessor since World War II.
To order Task Force reports, Council Special Reports, and Critical Policy Choices, please call, fax, or order online from our distributor, the Brookings Institution Press: phone +1.800.537.5487, fax +1.410.516.6998.
For information on other reports that are not for sale, or for general publications information, please call +1-212-434-9516 or email publications@cfr.org.
To request permission to reuse Council materials, please email publications@cfr.org or fax +1.212.434.9859.
Please include the complete information of the requested work—author, title, sections/pages to be copied or reprinted, and number of copies to be made—along with a brief description of where and how you would like to reuse the work.
You may also request permission for Council material through Copyright Clearance Center. For more information, please click on the link below.
Browse Content By Region IssuePublication TypeThe Think TankFor The MediaFor Educators About CFR
Copyright 2008 by the Council on Foreign Relations. All Rights Reserved.
