by Li Hongmei
BEIJING, Aug. 25 -- A high-ranking
delegation sent by Pyongyang to mourn a former South Korea leader is widely
considered a conciliatory gesture so far made by the reclusive and single-minded
Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) to pave the way for a thaw with its
feuding neighbor on the Peninsula. This is also the first olive branch offered
by the DPRK after months of military grandstanding and tit-for-tat tussles
with the international community to defend its nuke activities.
While history has manifested quite a few times that state funeral could be employed as an opportune time for mending fences, or patching up relations, it is still a moot point whether Pyongyang's heartfelt condolences to its most respected late "sunshine" President Kim Dae-jung would possibly get its desired fruit. The incumbent South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, nonetheless, met the delegation of close aides of the DPRK's leader Kim Jong-il on Sunday and reportedly received a message from Kim, the first ever formal communication between two Koreas since Lee took office about 18 months ago.
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South Korean President Lee Myung-bak (R) greets Kim Ki Nam, Secretary of the Central Committee of the ruling Workers' Party of the DPRK, at the presidential Blue House in Seoul August 23, 2009. (Xinhua/Reuters File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
South Korea's presidential Blue House, however,
insisted its policy towards the DPRK would remain "consistent and firm"
particularly on the nuclear arsenal, and it meanwhile denied reports in several
newspapers that the envoys conveyed a request by Kim for a summit with Lee, who
has been roundly vilified by the DPRK for pushing the hard-line policy
on DPRK and ending years of unconditional aid to its impoverished neighbor.
Some analysts said the DPRK dropping
pretentious airs and making rare conciliatory overtures in recent weeks might
indicate sanctions, authorized by UN resolutions and increasingly enforced
against it, are probably squeezing dry the state and forcing it to seek funds
for its depleted coffers. Some cynics in South Korea even deemed the hat-in-hand
gestures from the DPRK is "their regular show to beg for aid", which is
obviously too childish to be a fair judgment, and downplays the political wisdom
of its poor rival.
The DPRK's softened stance to the U.S. and its ally
South Korea in the bygone days is something conspicuous to the entire world --
Releasing two American journalists to curry favor with the visiting former U.S.
president Bill Clinton, freeing a South Korean worker it held for months,
agreeing to lift restrictions on border crossings, and pledging to resume
suspended joint projects with South Korea and the reunion of families separated
during the Korea War, which ended in 1953 with merely a truce.
Despite all those overtures, Washington and Seoul
would still ratchet up pressures on Pyongyang to dismantle its nuke programs,
which is, definitely, not unexpected to Pyongyang's resourceful politicians. But
why they persist in doing so really deserves a close study. One thing is
certain: what the DPRK is in need at the juncture is something more
than aid. If assumption were involved in the situation analysis of the DPRK,
what concerns it most would be, in all likelihood, time and the ways devised to
win time.
It needs sufficient time to mull over its nuclear
stockpiles. Although few signs show it will ever give up its nuke weapons, some
progress must be discerned by the international community indicating it is on
the track of denuclearization, in return for the UN promise of
"disarmament-for-aid". In the meantime, enough time is also needed to guarantee
the smooth power takeover by allegedly Kim's youngest son, whose authority is
yet to be full-blown.
Additionally, the DPRK's significant about-face is
also dropping some hint to China, its largest supplier of aid, testing China's
attitudes, especially at a time when its long-range rocket launch and nuclear
tests in May, and it unilaterally brushing off Beijing-brokered Six-Party Talks,
had put China in an awkward predicament.
Beijing has been reluctant to push any punishment
that could destabilize the DPRK, but the effectiveness of U.N. sanctions will be
hinged on the full participation by China, which is known quite well to the
DPRK's leadership. Since the Obama administration has been reluctant to enter
direct talks as it hoped, the DPRK might turn to a "sincere dialogue"
with South Korea. Or probably, the DPRK might be swaying into resuming
Six-Party Talks to please the international community and to assure other
partners it is stepping onto the sound track.
In any case, it is only hoped that communication will
soon kickoff towards a nuclear-free and tranquil Korean Peninsula.
(Source: People's Daily Online)