China’s North Korean gamble
By S.P.SETH
North Korea continues to be a terrible nightmare. It is a nightmare because it has the support of China. Otherwise, it would have imploded long ago.
Beijing’s support has several components, even though North Korea’s waywardness annoys it occasionally. But China is stuck with it. It is, as one senior Chinese official reportedly said a while ago: “ North Korea is our East Germany.”
And: “Do you remember what happened when East Germany collapsed? The Soviet Union fell.”
This is an important insight into the psyche of the Chinese communist leadership. There are two things that worry China’s communist oligarchy the most.
First, of course, is the fear of social instability and resultant collapse of the regime--- a process of hollowing out from within.
The speed with which the Soviet Union collapsed is a salutary lesson for China.
Second, and inter-related, is the fear of internal democratic dissent and external encouragement of a democracy movement in China.
China’s 11-year prison sentence of Liu Xiaobo, the co-author of China’s Charter 08 for democracy (and now the winner of Nobel Peace Prize), is an example of such paranoia.
China also fears that any implosion of the North Korean regime, and its unification with South Korea, might bring the US too close to China’s borders under the US-South Korean military alliance.
There are some suggestions that Beijing might be amenable to assurances of a benign US presence in Korea to ensure a relatively peaceful political transition in North Korea.
But a paranoid regime in Beijing is unlikely to entertain such assurances. Having been unimpressed by joint US-South Korean military exercises, Beijing is now even more peeved over US-Japan military exercises.
According to its Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Jiang Yu: “Brandishing of force cannot solve the issue.”
But China’s recent bellicosity to assert its regional dominance, and North Korea’s belligerence, has created alarm among its neighbors leading to the tightening of their military and political ties with the US.
For instance, not long ago, South Korea used to placate Pyongyang and cultivate China, despite its alliance with the United States. But President Lee Myung-bak’s regime abandoned this policy in favor of strengthening ties with the United States.
Seoul was greatly disappointed with China when it took a neutral stand on the torpedoing of its naval ship, Cheonan, in March, with deaths of 46 of its personnel.
With such North Korean belligerence, and the recent artillery shelling of a South Korean island, Beijing still continues to counsel restraint and diplomatic efforts to calm down the situation. It is refusing to put necessary pressure on Pyongyang to act responsibly.
Indeed, for the first time, South Korea has felt obliged to move toward some sort of a trilateral military nexus with the US and Japan by sending military observers to the Japan-US exercises.
China fears that a reunified democratic Korea might have subversive effect on its political system. The demonstrative effect of the democratic political dispensation in Korea across the border might prove infectious for China.
It, therefore, makes sense when a Chinese senior official compared North Korea with East Germany, with the latter’s collapse contributing to the Soviet Union’s fall.
Be that as it may, any collapse of North Korea would pose immediate problems for China. There are two views on this in China’s academic community.
According to Zhu Feng, a professor of international relations at Peking University, the inevitable collapse of the North Korean regime would leave China with no choice but to support South Korea-led reunification.
Because: “If China dispatched troops across the Yalu River what would be the result? They will outrage South Koreans, raise unbelievable concerns from Japan, and US-China policy could change very tremendously.”
On the other hand, Cai Jian at Fudan University believes that China wouldn’t tolerate a “hostile regime” in North Korea as well as US military presence there. He opines that, “If South Korea keeps its pro-US policy then China has to maintain stability through North Korea.”
What it means is that unless a unified Korea agreed to be under China’s sphere of influence, China would continue to regard North Korea’s communist regime as an instrument of its policy on the Korean peninsula.
In other words, Beijing is determined to side with the Kim Jong-il dysnasty.
It might be recalled that Kim Jong-il’s youngest son was anointed as his successor after the elder’s Kim’s visit to China. He obviously received necessary support and guarantees from China’s rulers. In that case, they see the Kim dynasty as an instrument of their Korean policy.
Knowing fully well that the Kim regime is not only expanding its nuclear program but also supplying nuclear materials and technology (including missiles) to other countries, Beijing is apparently well aware of the dangerous consequences of its support for Pyongyang.
Indeed, the WikiLeaks cables suggest that some of this trade is actually conducted through China.
Since North Korea continues to be a law unto itself with its nuclear program, artillery shelling of a South Korean island as well as threats of unleashing more attacks on South Korea, China should know that its protégé is beyond any call for restraint and diplomacy as advocated by Beijing for the contending parties.
China is thus, wittingly or unwittingly, complicit in North Korea’s belligerence leading to regional instability.
And if China were to interpret US-Japan, and US-South Korean military exercises and preparations, as a potential threat to its security, this could set the scene for a repeat of the 1950-53 Korean war with China crossing the Yalu river against a perceived threat from the United States.
With social unrest mounting in China, its communist oligarchs might even prefer such a dangerous diversion in the name of protecting China’s national interests.
In Korea, therefore, we are entering dangerous waters (both literally and figuratively) with unpredictable results all-round.
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