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By JOHN NORTH
While North Korea thinks having nuclear weapons serves as a deterrent from being attacked by the United States, “in reality,” possessing nuclear weapons is the biggest deterrent to receiving full-scale humanitarian aid from America and its allies, a retired career U.S. foreign-service officer told an Asheville audience last Monday night.
By far, the people of North Korea have suffered the most from the policies of Kim Jong Il, who leads a one-man dictatorship, having succeeded his father in 1984, Mark Mohr said.
“To be the last Stalinist dictator” in the world — “it’s a good life,”
Mohr noted wryly. “Unfortunately, he’s willing to give up millions of
his own people for nuclear weapons.” Specifically, Mohr said, North
Koreans are starving and their economy is wrecked as a result of their
dictator’s investment in a nuclear weapons program under the guise of
security.
Mohr termed relations between North Korea and South Korea as “the worst it’s been in 10 years. Probably, it’ll blow over.”
He noted that “there’s going to be a really significant meeting” on
Tuesday and “it’ll either be a breakthrough or the same old, same old.”
Indeed, according to a report in the International Herald Tribune,
“North Korea and the United States made significant progress Tuesday
toward ending an impasse in talks aimed at revealing the full scale of
the North’s nuclear weapons programs and dismantling them, top
negotiators from both countries said.
“‘Depending on what we hear back from capitals by tomorrow, I think
there will be some further announcements very soon,’ the U.S. assistant
secretary of state, Christopher Hill, told reporters after his meeting
with his North Korean counterpart in Singapore.”
Mohr spoke for an hour on “Problems and Prospects in the Korean
Peninsula: A New South Korean Administration and an Unresolved North
Korean Nuclear Stand-Off” at the Owen Conference Center at UNC
Asheville.
About 70 people attended his talk, the third annual Barbara Chisolm
Memorial Lecture, sponsored by the World Affairs Council of Western
North Carolina. A 30-minute question-and-answer period followed.
Mohr, who worked for the State Department from 1969 to 1997, is now a
program associate for the Asia Program at the Wilson Center in
Washington, D.C.
In his career, he has worked in the field of North Korean nuclear nonproliferation, he said.
Mohr began his lecture by tracing the recent history of the Korean
Peninsula, noting that the U.S. sided with South Korea in the early
1950s and eventually shared nuclear technology with its ally against
communist expansion.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur even threatened to use nuclear weapons on North Korrea.
In response, North Korea repeatedly requested the sharing of nuclear
technology with its ally, the Soviet Union, but was rebuffed because of
fears that North Korea would start a nuclear war.
However, in 1956, an agreement was reached in which North Korean
scientists were allowed to study nuclear technology with Societ
scientists.
The U.S. soon gave South Korea a research reactor — a move matched by the Soviets with North Korea.
The U.S. has kept 20,000 to 30,000 trips along the demilitarized zone
between the two Koreas since the end of the Korean War, a move Mohr
termed cleverly calculated. U.S. officials, he said, uses the troops as
a “tripwire, so if North Korea invaded and wiped out the 20,000 or
30,000 U.S. troops, the president would have no problem declaring war”
and receiving the support of Americans.
Ultimately, Mohr said of the plan to use the presence of U.S. troops at the DMZ, “It worked.”
In 1980, North Korea had developed enough “nuclear know-how” that it
was able to build its own nuclear reactor and produced enough uranium
to produce on nuclear bomb per year.
In 1985, Moscow agreed to supply North Korea with four reactors, with
the stipulation that its ally sign on to the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty through the International Energy Agency.
However, the IAE in the early 1990s reported to the United Nations
Security Council that “the North Koreans were lying” about their
nuclear weapons capabilities.
Then-president Bill Clinton threatened a worldwide trade embargo on
North Korea, with the latter threatening to turn the Korean Peninsula
into a firestorm.
“A point could be made that the Clinton administration overreacted,”
Mohr said. In summer 1994, ex-president Jimmy Carter, escorted by a
Cable News Network crew, persuaded North Korea to sign the only nuclear
pact it ever signed.
“Yes, it’s true that Jimmy Carter prevented a (probable) war on the
Korean Peninsula, in which 10 million to 20 million people would have
died, including 10,000 to 20,000 Americans, Mohr said.
At that point, North Korea let the U.S. send in experts to “can” 8,000
fuel rods, enough for eight nuclear bombs,” produced over eight years.
Carter also persuaded South Korea and Japan to pay for $4 billion to cover the project’s costs.
According to the agreement with North Korea, once it was signed,
relations would be normalized with the other countries of the world.
However, Mohr criticized the Clinton administration for being “asleep”
at the helm and failing “to get anything done” on normalization with
North Korea. Clinton worked hard on the project during his final two
months in office, but he didn’t get anything done.”
Predictably, North Korea was furious, he noted, as President George
Bush and his administration took office expressing hostility to the
agreement.
As more cheating by North Korea came to light, the Bush administration
said it was suspending oil shipments until it begins telling the truth.
North Korea then ordered out Americans and, on October 2002, exploded its first nuclear device.
Mohr lamented that “the rods were canned” and threatening North Korea”
at that point “was one of the stupidest things ever done” by an
American president. As as result, “they now can explode (nuclear) bombs
and sell technology” to terrorist groups.
Next, after some prodding by the U.S. and its allies, China set up what
is termed the six-party talks between North Korea and South Korea,
Japan, Russia, China and the U.S.
In September 2005, after two years of no progress, an agreement was
reached for North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons in exchange for
food aid.
However, despite the agreement, in 2006, North Korea exploded a nuclear bomb.
In response to the perceived provocation, the Bush administration
decided to increase the pressure on North Korea by banning the trade of
luxury items.
Last October, North Korea agreed to close all nuclear facilities “in return for more goodies” from the U.S., Mohr said.
The deadline for North Korea to submit a complete and accurate
declaration regarding its nuclear capabilities was Dec. 31 in order to
be removed from America’s trading with the enemy ban and terrorism list.
Contrary to the assertions of the U.S. and its allies, North Korea
contended that it had submitted a complete and accurate declaration.
That squabble, Mohr said, has continued to this day.
“Getting back their plutonium is the key for us,” he added. “Therefore,
it’s quite possible, there will be an agreement along the lines I just
told you, or it could be just more of the same.”
Overall, “there has been negative progress in North Korea’s history” since the Korean War, Mohr said.
Meanwhile, in neighboring South Korea, a military dictatorship, “which
has been pretty bad,” has held power since the Korean War.
“Democracy didn’t come to South Korea until 1988, when the military gave up power and civilians took over.”
However, the ruling party held power until 1997, when the opposition
party finally took power and “democracy really came into its own in
South Korea,” Mohr said.
In 2002, South Korea’s economy “tanked,” he said, as the country’s top
leadership lacked economic training. He added that “people despised”
the government’s “socialist leveling policy.”
Following elections, a new administration took power last December and
it decided to be more critical of North Korea for human rights
violations.
As a result, Mohr said, “The atmosphere became like dry kindling in the wind — all it needed was a spark to set it off.”
That spark was provided by a South Koran legislator, who harshly
criticized North Korea and its militancy and said he country “would
take any means necessary” to deal with any North Korean threats.
Infuriated, North Korea’s response, according to Mohr’s paraphrasing,
was: “Oh yeah? We will turn your country into ashes” with its nuclear
bombs.
South Korea, which Mohr now terms a “vibrant democracy,” responded in
by “being very responsible,” with its leaders saying, “We’re just going
to let this situation calm down.
Mohr added, “It’s certainly not as dangerous as 1984, when we almost went to war.”
“North Korea wants to have — or make people think they have — a nuclear capability, so people won’t attack them.”
However, he added, unless one thinks North Korea’s dictator “is suicidal,” he would never launch a nuclear attack.
A decision, such as deciding to sell plutonium to Bin Laden or to other
terrorists would result in the incineration of North Korea by the U.S.,
Mohr noted.
He added, “The Korean Peninsula is very small. If they (North Korea)
dropped a bomb on Seoul, if the wind blew the wrong way, they’d wipe
themselves out,” too.
Mohr admitted that the U.S. and its allies have “been jerked around” by
North Korea, but “when you’re in the State Department, we’re paid to be
jerked around.”
“If no agreement is reached, the North Koreans will suffer. They need our grain.”
He praised the U.S. for its current humanitarian efforts to supply food
to North Koreans. “We continue to feed our enemies,” Mohr said. “Show
me some other nation” in history that has been as magnaminous.
Concluding, Mohr said, “Maybe with a new (U.S.) administration, they (North Korea) will give it a try and sign the agreement.”
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