Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsWorld

Deal unlikely at North Korea nuclear talks

Pyongyang may stall proceedings and seek a better deal with the next U.S. president.

THE WORLD

July 10, 2008|Mark Magnier, Times Staff Writer
  • In Beijing
    Mark Ralston AFP/Getty Images

BEIJING — North Korea has seen it all before: A U.S. administration looking for a foreign policy success in its waning days sets its gaze on Pyongyang in hopes of bolstering the president's legacy.

As negotiations aimed at halting North Korea's nuclear program reopen in Beijing today after a nine-month hiatus, a central question is whether the communist regime will play ball with the Bush administration or punt until the next president enters the Oval Office in January.

Odds are it will punt.


Advertisement

To begin with, delay, backtracking and an insistence on immediate payoffs tend to be a cornerstone of North Korea's negotiating strategy, analysts said. "Don't expect smooth sailing," said Joseph Cheng, professor at the City University of Hong Kong.

In addition, the items topping North Korea's wish list, which includes more aid and greater diplomatic recognition, probably are not President Bush's to deliver.

The administration already faces criticism from conservatives that it has given too much away for too little in return, analysts said, which makes more concessions unlikely. Washington agreed to remove North Korea from its list of states sponsoring terrorists and to ease trading restrictions in exchange for the regime's moves last month to blow up the cooling tower for its main nuclear reactor and provide a supposedly complete list of its nuclear activities.

The chance of the regime extracting more from its negotiating partners -- China, Japan, Russia, the U.S. and South Korea -- is further narrowed by their respective political weakness.

Bush has only six months left in his term. Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda's approval rating has dropped by half in opinion polls since he took office in September. And South Korean President Lee Myung-bak is on the political ropes amid criticism that he was too accommodating to the U.S. over beef imports. Furthermore, from North Korea's perspective, Lee needs to be "taught a lesson" for straying from the accommodating "sunshine policies" of his predecessors.

North Korea is also in a position to make some small concessions without threatening its position.

Many analysts and government officials are skeptical that North Korea's list of nuclear activities is comprehensive.

"There's nobody in the world who trusts that North Korea will provide information on all its nuclear materials," said Shi Yinhong, professor at People's University in Beijing.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|