China’s
foreign minister has warned that the United States and North Korea are on a
collision course, citing rising tensions on the Korean peninsula. He’s also
urged both sides to take steps to de-escalate the situation.
But as
Foreign Minister Wang Yi spoke out about what he described as a “looming
crisis,” analysts said his remarks more than anything highlight Beijing’s
waning influence over Pyongyang and events on the peninsula.
Dual
suspension
Speaking
with reporters on the sidelines of annual high-level political meetings, Wang
Yi criticized Pyongyang for ignoring international sanctions and opposition to
its nuclear and missile programs. He also argued that large scale military
exercises by the United States in South Korea were also raising tensions.
“The two
sides are like two accelerating trains coming towards each other, with neither
willing to give way,” Wang Yi said, adding: “The question is: are the two sides
really ready for a head-on collision?”
Wang called
on North Korea to first end its nuclear and missile tests and for the United
States to halt its military exercises in South Korea.
“This
suspension for suspension can help us break out of the security dilemma and
bring the parties back to the negotiating table,” Wang said.
At the same
time, however, Wang tried to distance Beijing from the ongoing dispute, arguing
that the nuclear issue on the peninsula was mainly between North Korea and the
United States.
Lips and
teeth
Wang said
this even as he noted that China’s role was indispensable as ties between the
two countries were as close as lips and teeth.
Analysts
said such calls to return to the negotiating table ring hollow, given that
North Korea has shown time and time again its unwillingness to do so.
On Monday,
North Korea fired four missiles into the sea off Japan’s northwest coast, the
latest in a series of ballistic missile and nuclear tests in recent months in
defiance of United Nations resolutions. In response, U.S. President Donald
Trump warned that the threat from North Korea had entered a “new phase.”
Although
Beijing describes relations with the North as being close as lips and teeth,
“the harsh reality is that Pyongyang has now acquired very sharp teeth
(nuclear-armed missiles over the last two decades) and Beijing's lips are
bleeding,” said Mohan Malik, a professor at the Asia Pacific Center for
Security Studies in Honolulu.
In an
emailed response to VOA, Malik said that given the recent killing of Kim Jong
Un’s half-brother – who was under Beijing’s protection – the political
relationship between Pyongyang and Beijing is at a very low point.
“Kim Jong Un
is the first North Korean leader who has not undertaken a single pilgrimage to
the Middle Kingdom to pay tribute,” Malik said, adding that China’s
longstanding priorities on the Korean peninsula remained the same: “no
instability, no war, and no nukes — in that order.”
THAAD upoar
And it’s not
just North Korea that China has lost control over. It’s influence over South
Korea is waning as well, given the controversial deployment of the
controversial Terminal High Altitude Area Defense anti-missile system.
Wang Yi
echoed China’s strong opposition to the system on Wednesday at the press
briefing calling on Seoul to halt the system’s deployment and arguing that the
move was “not the way neighbors behave.” China argues that the anti-missile
defense system is a threat to its security.
But, despite
calls for China to deliver punishing economic sanctions to South Korea over its
decision to deploy the system, there is little Beijing can do to reverse the
decision, said Ding Xueliang, a professor at Hong Kong University of Science
and Technology.
“Beijing
used to be regarded by South Korea as the only foreign country that could
exercise some influence on Pyongyang, but after so many years after so many
efforts have been put into this process (six-party talks), North Korea has
still been doing what it wants to do,” Ding said.
“South Korea
has been terribly, terribly frustrated for so many years. Then, (Seoul)
concluded that even if the PRC is so strongly, so angrily against the THAAD system,
they have to do it.”
Increasingly
isolated
As one of
isolated North Korea’s few supporters, the international community has long
looked to Beijing to help resolve ongoing tensions on the peninsula. But, China
has consistently rejected suggestions from countries such as the United States
and others that it could be doing more.
North
Korea’s erratic behavior in recent months, has made it increasingly difficult
for any country to talk with Pyongyang, analysts said.
But that
doesn’t mean that change is unlikely.
Mohan Malik,
of the Asia Pacific Center for Security Studies, believes change is inevitable,
sooner or later.
“I suspect
that more than any other capital, Beijing has its ears close to the ground in
Pyongyang and the PLA (People’s Liberation Army) is far more ready than others
to install a Beijing-friendly regime in the event of a regime meltdown and to
wage and win the next Korean war to establish its supremacy on the peninsula,”
Malik said.
Given
Trump’s unpredictability and view of himself as a dealmaker, the situation may
not be as dire as Beijing is predicting, said Oh Ei Sun, a senior fellow at the
S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.
“At the
moment, we might perceive the situation between North Korea and the United
States to be very tense, but you would never know how Trump might actually
react to the situation. He might actually decide to reach out to North Korea,”
Oh said. “There is actually unpredictability from both sides and it is not
necessarily a train wreck,” in the making.
Source: VOANews
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