Amid preoccupations with other parts of the globe, tensions between North
and South Korea have taken something of a backseat in recent months, at
least in terms of American attention. This has led to minimal coverage of
two stories that in fact are extremely important.
Late in March, a South Korean ship was suddenly sunk near the border
with North Korea under very suspicious circumstances. Second, an
American man, Aijalon Mahli Gomes, has been sentenced to eight years
hard labor for illegally entering North Korea. He was arrested after crossing
the North Korea-China border on Jan. 25.
According to South Korean press reports, he is an English-language teacher
with strong Christian convictions, and has taken part in anti-North Korean
protests in the South. This is the third recent case of Americans being held
in North Korea. Two American journalists, Laura Ling and Euna Lee,
crossed the border in March 2009 and were arrested. They were sentenced
to twelve years hard labor, but were released in August after an intervention
from former U.S. President Bill Clinton. Robert Park, a Korean-American Christian evangelist who was arrested after entering the country on Christmas Day, had given a media interview in which he stated he wanted to force change in North Korean human rights conditions. He was released in February after telling North Korean state media that he had been wrong.
What is the best response to this disturbing set of events in the context of
both North Korean nuclear weapons and its disintegrating economy? Seoul
and Washington should initiate informal talks with North Korea, with no
fixed policy agenda. Private talks, begun with no public announcement, are
also justified because this might bring progress. This is how Washington
achieved major arms control and diplomatic breakthroughs with Moscow
and Beijing respectively during the Nixon administration.
Desperate economic conditions in the North are the prime incentive for
Pyongyang. North Korea maintains troubled but continuing cooperation
with South Korea regarding the future of the special industrial zone at
Kaesong, which employs 38,000 workers. This productive zone in the
impoverished North clearly is important.
South Korea can only gain from such an initiative. The Republic of Korea
was once part of the group of lower-income nations, but that status has
changed very dramatically in a brief period of time. Today South Korea
ranks as the 13th largest economy in the world and for more than two
decades has practiced turbulent but successful democracy. UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon therefore personifies both developed and developing
nations in an era when both dimensions appear to be merging.
In North Korea, the feudal practice of designating a male heir to authority
over land and people has prevailed, at least for the moment. Yet simultaneously the same regime continues to recognize economic reality, at least cautiously. Just reducing the number of naive but well-meaning foreigners seized, and then abused, by Pyongyang would be important progress.
*The U.S. should initiate informal and private talks with North Korea
without a fixed agenda.
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