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<text id=94TT0360>
<title>
Apr. 04, 1994: Pyongyang's Dangerous Game
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NORTH KOREA, Page 60
Pyongyang's Dangerous Game
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The North balks again at nuclear inspections, vowing dire consequences
if the West gets too tough in return
</p>
<p>By J.F.O. McAllister/Washington--With reporting by Edward W. Desmond/Tokyo and Jay Peterzell/Washington
</p>
<p> Sitting in the conference room of Peace House on the South
Korean side of the line in the truce village of Panmunjom, Seoul's
diplomats were shocked by the steamy rhetoric from their Northern
counterparts. "Seoul is not far from here," warned the North's
Park Yong Su, reading a prepared text to the South's Song Yong
Dae. "Should a war break out, Seoul will be a sea of flames,
and you, Mr. Song, will find it difficult to survive."
</p>
<p> The grisly threat, replayed over and over on South Korean television,
was a sharp reminder of the acrimony growing between North Korea
and most of the world after Pyongyang once again refused to
submit to international nuclear inspection. The North cranked
up its noisy propaganda machine to proclaim the Korean peninsula
on "the brink of war" and pointedly reminded the U.S. not to
forget that 54,246 American soldiers died in the Korean War.
</p>
<p> The West spoke back last week in a quieter but no less assertive
tone. A third and supposedly climactic round of high-level talks
between North Korea and the U.S., to discuss trading diplomatic
recognition and economic aid for the North's full compliance
with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and other Western
demands, was scratched. South Korea put its 633,000 troops on
alert. Seoul also accepted an American offer to deploy 48 Patriot
missile launchers to defend against North Korean Scud missiles
and announced that it had resumed planning for the Team Spirit
military exercises with the U.S., suspended in February to placate
the North. Washington weighed whether to supplement its 34,830
troops in South Korea and beef up their equipment. All the military
talk sparked fears that the yearlong diplomatic campaign to
haul Pyongyang back inside the safeguards of the nonproliferation
treaty had collapsed. Given the touchy unpredictability of the
Kim Il Sung regime, Seoul and Washington were worried that even
small military signals could escalate toward a catastrophic
war.
</p>
<p> "I do not want to be an alarmist on North Korea," Secretary
of Defense William Perry told TIME last week, "but I take the
threat of military action very seriously." Two-thirds of Pyongyang's
army is stationed within 100 miles of the border and could march
to the demilitarized zone in an hour and to Seoul in two. The
North, he says, is "persisting in the development of a nuclear-weapons
program." And, adds Perry, "it's a very erratic regime. I don't
know of anybody anywhere who can predict with confidence what
philosophical views the North Korean leadership has about war
and peace." But, he concludes, "I see no imminent danger of
military actitivies." Nevertheless, the Pentagon is re-examining
its contingency plans for South Korea, and it plans what Perry
called "further moves that strengthen our defensive forces"--even though the U.S. realizes Pyongyang will regard those
actions as provocative.
</p>
<p> Information about North Korea's intentions has been at a premium
since the aborted mission by the International Atomic Energy
Agency in early March. After being stonewalled since February
1993, inspectors were finally allowed back to seven sites at
the North's Yongbyon nuclear complex. Nothing unusual was found
at six of the sites, but at the seventh, where plutonium for
bombs can be extracted from nuclear-fuel rods, the team discovered
that an IAEA seal on an area containing a "glove box" for handling
radioactive material was broken--a janitor's mistake, claimed
North Korea. But the inspectors were not permitted to take samples
from the "glove box" that would reveal any recent handling of
the North's plutonium stocks. They saw no evidence of a major
breach, but the off-limits lab "was the heart of the matter,"
says IAEA spokesman David Kyd.
</p>
<p> The agency's decision on whether North Korea had complied with
the treaty terms was crucial. Director-General Hans Blix reported
the truncated inspection prevented "any meaningful conclusion"
about whether the North had diverted nuclear material for possible
use in weapons. That was enough for the agency to turn the matter
over to the U.N. Security Council. The council has the power
to impose economic sanctions on the North for its recalcitrance.
But since China, Pyongyang's friend, is still likely to veto
any such measures, the U.N. at present does not have the inclination.
</p>
<p> President Clinton warned last year that "we will not allow the
North Koreans to develop a nuclear weapon." That threat is easier
made than implemented. The North Korean problem is a four-dimensional
chess game where each major player--the U.S., North and South
Korea, and the IAEA--fears the political consequences of making
concessions and the military consequences of getting tough.
Last week a new player appeared on the scene when Russia tried
another opportunistic raid into U.S. diplomatic territory by
proposing an international conference to settle Korea's problems.
Washington politely dismissed the idea as a harmful diversion.
</p>
<p> If it came to a war, the U.S. and South Korea both insist they
would win in the end--but at a prohibitive cost in casualties
and damage. Economic sanctions are not very attractive either.
The North says it will treat them as a declaration of war, but
instead of retaliating with an all-out attack, it might quit
the nonproliferation treaty or engage in small-scale military
action, such as fire fights across the DMZ. Because the North
is already poor and trades little, some experts doubt that an
embargo would have much effect unless China cut off oil sales,
which is not likely.
</p>
<p> The Clinton Administration has decided a gradual move from purely
diplomatic to economic and military pressures is still the best
response. That is the only way the Security Council might earn
backing from China if sanctions are needed later. Last week
the U.S. strained to avoid appearing bellicose. The Patriot
batteries are being shipped to South Korea rather than flown.
No date has been set for the renewed Team Spirit exercise. The
Security Council resolution Washington is drafting is expected
only to admonish North Korea to comply with treaty terms and
to warn that sanctions might be imposed later.
</p>
<p> This gentle strategy flows partly from a widely shared view
in Washington that the North may simply have miscalculated when
it denied the IAEA complete access to the seventh site. Pyongyang
is an exceedingly tough bargainer, practiced at extracting rewards
time and again for the same concession. This time it tried horse
trading access to the seventh site for Seoul's agreement to
postpone an exchange of high-level envoys to discuss nuclear
questions, something the U.S. opposed. The IAEA, tired of being
endlessly diddled, would not buy the deal, a reaction that appears
to have surprised the North. "They calculated that the rest
of the world would understand" when they balked at a small part
of the IAEA inspection to get their way on the envoys, says
a U.S. official. The result, says another official, is that
"we find ourselves in a harsher situation than I think anyone
expected or desired."
</p>
<p> There are signs that Pyongyang is trying hard not to deepen
the crisis. Its talk of destroying Seoul may scare the uninitiated,
but this "is not particularly unusual" for North Korean propaganda,
says Ezra Vogel, the CIA's national intelligence officer for
East Asia. In a statement by a Foreign Ministry spokesman that
the U.S. considered authoritative, Pyongyang only vaguely threatened
to withdraw from the nonproliferation treaty if Team Spirit
resumed in 1994 and other Western pressures were applied--but it did not denounce Washington's decision to send Patriots.
</p>
<p> In South Korea, the fine gradations of Northern propaganda were
lost in a wave of pessimism about the chances of finding a peaceful
accommodation with a country still preaching war. The civilian
government of President Kim Young Sam came to power believing
its military predecessors had manufactured tensions with the
North to prop up their own misrule. Kim's ministers spoke in
rosy tones about how they would vanquish ideology and unite
the two countries. Now, says a Seoul official, "the romantic
view is gone." Kim has shelved plans to encourage investment
in the North, toughened the South's military stance and made
sure there were no gaps between Seoul and Washington for the
North to exploit. Last week he traveled to Tokyo and Beijing
to seek allies against Pyongyang's intransigence.
</p>
<p> The West is now waiting to see whether Pyongyang backs down.
Some analysts are sure the end of the diplomatic road has already
been reached. They argue that the regime and especially its
unproved heir apparent, Kim Jong Il, view an atomic program
as the trump card of their credibility and will not forgo it
for anything. Other experts think Pyongyang might eventually
give up its nuclear dream, but only in exchange for massive
economic aid, a guarantee of Western support for Kim Jong Il's
succession and a withdrawal of U.S. troops from the South--concessions neither Seoul nor Washington will accept. The Clinton
Administration still believes North Korea can be persuaded to
trade away its bomb--or at least its capacity to build any
more than it may now have--for diplomatic recognition and
reasonable financial aid.
</p>
<p> The task for Clinton is to keep prodding and cajoling Pyongyang
down that path without devoting so much attention to the problem
that he raises the value of the North's nuclear card even higher.
Right now, his wait-and-squeeze strategy has strong congressional
support, but that could erode if the North were to escalate.
Says a U.S. official: "Quite frankly, the real problem will
be keeping extraneous issues--Somalia, human rights in China,
Whitewater--from affecting our response and getting us off
track." Then an embattled Clinton might be prompted to try what
former ambassador to Seoul Donald Gregg calls "compensatory
toughness": setting deadlines the North will snub or making
demands from which neither side can back down. Getting off track
with North Korea could cause a war.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>