Posts Tagged ‘North Korea’

Special Report–U.S. Korea Relations

Friday, January 28th, 2011
Special Report  U.S. Korea Relations

By Don Southeron, Editor Korealegal.org

An Evening with Dr. Chung Un-chan, former South Korea Prime Minister

On January 26, 2011, the University of California, San Diego Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IRPS) sponsored a lecture by Dr. Chung Un-chan.  A former president of Seoul National University and Prime Minister of South Korea, Dr. Chung’s career bridges both academia and government.

The well-attended lecture shared to students, faculty, and distinguished guests, Dr. Chung’s timely thoughts and views on U.S. -Korean relations, while offering suggestions for strengthening future ties into the 21st Century. Dr. Chung stressed the need for both nations to be More Open, More Confident, and More Compassionate. Highlights of his lecture included the importance of education, study abroad, and first-hand experience of other cultures.

Following the lecture, I was invited to attend a diner with Dr. Chung hosted by IRPS Dean Peter Cowhey. In attendance was Professor emeritus Larry Krause, Professor Stephan Haggard, Professor You, Jong-sung, Professor Gordon Hansen, and Dr. Byong Mok Kim, M.D.

Over the course of three hours, discussions covered a wide range of Korea-facing topics, including KORUS FTA, the Six Way talks, North Korea’s recent aggression against South Korea, China-Korea-U.S. relations, North Korea refuges, the future role of U.S. military forces in South Korea, and North-South unification.

During the diner I had a wonderful opportunity to speak at length with Dr. Chung on issues and concerns that impact Korea-facing global business. I was also asked by Dean Cowhey to share with Dr. Chung and the distinguished faculty my experiences and the challenges working with global Korea-based Groups and international firms entering the Korea market.

That said, one point I raised to Dr. Chung and group was concerns by many of my clients over North Korea acts of aggression against South Korea and the constant saber rattling.   Dr. Chung acknowledged such concern and noted that one outcome of the recent incidents was a huge shift in younger Korean’s views of the North—most now less tolerant of the North in light of the December 2010 shelling of civilians. Moreover, Dr. Chung and the others scholars felt the recent aggression had greatly strengthened U.S.-South Korean relations; with America reaffirming it’s support of South Korea.

Although North Korea continues to perplex even those with deep insights into the regime, I feel that the consensus is that the status quo will continue in North Korea and the peninsula into the near future.

One final point I raised to Dr. Chung stressed the challenges to entering the South Korean market. Dr. Chung’s answer was quite frank—he felt Korea was already a “very open market.”  He pointed out that language and communications were issues, but added that when compared to Japan, China, and other nations, Korea was very open to trade, business, and commerce. Moreover, Dr. Chung noted than when he was Prime Minister he oversaw the elimination of hundreds of regulations.

On a personal note, I found Dr. Chung very approachable and taking a real interest in questions posed to him by the IRPS facility and guests.

Questions? Comments?  Dsoutherton@bridgingculture.com

Special Report  U.S. Korea Relations

North Korean Lawsuits in South Korea’s Courts

Sunday, June 6th, 2010
North Korean Lawsuits in South Koreas Courts

By Don Southerton, Editor KoreaLegal.org

This amazed me. North Koreans have rights in South Korean courts.  It does reflects a popular Korean mindset–One People, Two Nations.

An article in JoongAhn Ilbo, “More North Koreans filing lawsuits in the South” notes:
More North Koreans are filing claims in South Korean courts as the North’s economy worsens, experts say.

Yoon Dae-kyu, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said because the South Korean Constitution recognizes the North as a part of the Republic of Korea, North Koreans have the same protections as their Southern neighbors.

The reverse does not hold true. Because the South’s constitution does not recognize the North Korean regime, other legal experts say it’s impossible for a South Korean organization or individual to stand trial based on North Korean law.

In one ruling last month, the Seoul Western District Court rejected a suit filed by a North Korean interest group in Seoul on behalf of North Korean writers who charged that a South Korean publisher violated their copyrights on a medical book.

The Foundation of Inter-Korea Cooperation had hired a lawyer to represent the North Koreans in their 100 million won ($81,499) claim, but the court “couldn’t establish that the attorney had the right of representation for the writers.”

North-South copyright disputes are not an unusual issue in South Korean courts. In another recent case, the North Korean grandson of a North Korean writer was awarded 5 percent of all future royalties on copies of his grandfather’s book “Hwang Jin-i” sold by a South Korean publisher.

The Foundation of Inter-Korea Cooperation, which was established in 2004 to foster cultural exchanges between the two Koreas, said it has so far handled nine cases of copyright violation on behalf of North Koreans with help from a North Korean office that deals with copyright issues.

“Literary works by writers from the North have been introduced to the South through China ever since the South Korean government formed diplomatic ties with China in 1992,” an official from the North Korean interest group said. “But copyright issues remain unresolved.”

But South Korean courts also address inheritance issues between families divided by the Korean War of 1950-53. In February, four North Korean siblings surnamed Yoon filed a 2.5 billion won inheritance claim against their South Korean half-brother and stepmother, after missionaries told them that their physician father had amassed a 10 billion won fortune after defecting to the South during the war.

The North Korean families sought an injunction to prevent their South Korean relatives from selling the father’s real estate, and the case is ongoing.

Attorney Han Myeong-seob, a member of Society for Research on North Korean Law, said he’s aware that the staggering economy in North Korea drove the North Korean government to issue guidelines that encourages its people to file suit to obtain inheritance rights in South Korea.

“It’s critical to come up with special laws that would react properly when local courts rule in favor of North Korean residents,” Han said.

North Korean Lawsuits in South Koreas Courts

An Upside for Korean Global Business? Another Side of the North South Tensions

Sunday, May 30th, 2010
An Upside for Korean Global Business? Another Side of the North South Tensions

By Don Southerton, KoreaLegal.org Editor

Over the past week, I’ve been sharing my thoughts on the recent heightened tensions between North and South Korea over the sinking of the Cheonan naval vessel.

After a lengthy investigation following the March incident, a multinational forensics team concluded unanimously it was a North Korean torpedo that sank the South Korean ship.

Why did North Korea launch such an attack knowing it would anger even those sympathetic to their plight? In correspondence, Marcus Noland, noted NK scholar, shared his thoughts on North Korean motivations. They include:

1) Revenge (for an earlier encounter where the North took a bruising from the South’s better equipped navy).

2) Brinkmanship

3) Wave the bloody shirt—divert attention inside the North from disastrous confiscatory currency reform.

4) Influence South Korean National Assembly elections–the current president Lee Myung-bak administration’s takes a hard line approach to the North and opposition leaders have long supporting a more conciliatory path.

5) Succession—Kim Jong Il’s son and his peers might get credit for the attack and it would be a show of strength to defy the South and their allies.

That said, tension and emotions are running high. In fact, more so than in years. June elections, pro-North supporters, anti-North war veteran groups, and the media continue to fan the situation.

Without ignoring or downplaying the human suffering and loss resulting from the Cheonan sinking… So, why might this benefit Korean global business? Samsung, Hyundai-Kia Motors and LG derive much of their profits from international sales. Even with the global recession last year, they all performed well—lots due to a weak Won. This year the Won was strengthening against the Dollar as the South Korea economy recovered. This could mean that overseas profits this year would in turn suffer.

Interestingly, the Korea Economic Institute notes that when a threat arises from the North the Won drops in value to the Dollar. (Please review the full article posted by the Korea Economic Institute.) Click Here

So what may foster fear and concern among many working for Korea-based global organizations, the current tensions might actually have some benefit– at least in short term profits.

So what can we expect…. Over the next few weeks, we’ll see defensive positioning of the South Korean and US military forces, more sanctions against the North, China and Russia trying to avoid taking sides, and the North grabbing as much media attention as it can.

Questions? Comments?

An Upside for Korean Global Business? Another Side of the North South Tensions

Korean American Activist Crosses into North Korea

Sunday, December 27th, 2009
Korean American Activist Crosses into North Korea

This should be a topic of media discussion over the holidays. No surprise. A number of Korean Americans have strong feelings regarding North Korea and the human rights issues. Many are young and very religious.

DS

SEOUL, South Korea – An American missionary is believed to be in North Korean custody after he illegally entered the communist nation on Christmas Day in an attempt to call attention to the reclusive country’s human rights conditions, an activist said Sunday.

Robert Park, 28, slipped across the frozen Tumen River into the North from China on Friday. There has been no word from him since, but an activist who knows Park said he was likely arrested quickly by border guards or police in the authoritarian state. “We haven’t heard anything about him since he went there,” said the activist, a member of the Seoul-based group Pax Koreana, which promotes human rights in the North. “But it’s North Korea. We presume he has been arrested there.” Analysts said North Korea would most likely expel the Christian missionary instead of holding him as a negotiating card because that would serve his purpose of highlighting the regime’s human rights abuses.

The communist country’s state-run media did not mention Park’s case Sunday. The U.S. State Department and the U.S. Embassy in Beijing said they were aware of the incident but had no details. Park, who is of Korean descent, was carrying a letter urging leader Kim Jong Il to step down and free all political prisoners, the activist said. “I am an American citizen. I brought God’s love. God loves you and God bless you,” Park reportedly said in fluent Korean as he crossed over near the northeastern city of Hoeryong, according to the Pax Koreana activist. Two other activists filmed Park cross into the North, the activist told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.

Park’s crossing comes just months after North Korea freed two U.S. journalists who had been arrested in March and sentenced to 12 years of hard labor for trespassing and “hostile acts.” Pyongyang dexterously used their detention as a negotiating card with Washington amid a standoff over its nuclear programs. North Korea waited four days before announcing on March 21 that they had been detained. Former President Bill Clinton visited Pyongyang in August to bring them home. That trip, which included a meeting between Clinton and Kim Jong Il, led to the first high-level talks between the two countries earlier this month since President Barack Obama took office.

North Korea watchers in Seoul, however, said Park’s case was unlikely to develop in the same way. “I think it will end up an isolated episode,” said Kim Yong-hyun, an expert on North Korea at Seoul’s Dongguk University. “North Korea knows that it would be serving the purpose of the activist and highlight its human rights problems if it keeps holding him like it did the journalists.”

Analyst Hong Hyun-ik at the private Sejong Institute think tank near Seoul also said the North was not expected to pay much attention to Park’s action, which he described as “Don Quixote-like.” Hong said Pyongyang was likely to expel him, a view echoed by Yoo Ho-yeol at Seoul’s Korea University. North Korea’s criminal code punishes illegal entry with up to three years in prison, but the general view of analysts is that the North must see some political gain in keeping high-profile foreigners prisoner. In this case, holding Park might bring attention to his cause.

Park, from Tucson, Arizona, carried a letter to Kim Jong Il calling for major changes to his totalitarian regime, according to the Pax Koreana activist. “Please open your borders so that we may bring food, provisions, medicine, necessities, and assistance to those who are struggling to survive,” said the letter, according to a copy posted on the conservative group’s Web site. “Please close down all concentration camps and release all political prisoners today.”

North Korea holds some 154,000 political prisoners in six large camps across the country, according to South Korean government estimates. Pyongyang has long been regarded as having one of the world’s worst human rights records, but it denies the existence of prison camps. In a second letter, Park calls for Kim to immediately step down, noting starvation, torture and deaths in North Korean political prison camps, according to the activist. Other activists said Park had become known over the last year in Seoul human rights circles for his religious fervor and passion for helping North Koreans. And not all analysts see a simple end to the drama.

Koh Yu-hwan, another North Korea expert at Dongguk University, said Park’s illegal entry would take time to resolve because the North will see his demanding Kim step down as “a kind of hostile act.”

Korean American Activist Crosses into North Korea

Looking North

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009
Looking North
Looking North

Looking North across the DMZ

Often a picture can share much. Korea has been split since 1945. I see it as two nations, but one people. Many who have fled the North still see it as home– one they cannot visit or return to under current conditions.

Thanks to Eric Corriveau and Vicky for the photo.

Looking North

North Korea Policy and Stephen Bosworth Remarks at Korea Society Annual Diner

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009
North Korea Policy and Stephen Bosworth Remarks at Korea Society Annual Diner

North Korea Policy and Stephen Bosworth Remarks at Korea Society Annual Diner

Stephen W. Bosworth

By Don Southerton, Editor and Chief Blogger

I feel Stephen Bosworth’s keynote speech at the Korea Society’s annual diner gives us deep insights into the current U.S. policy and mindset towards North Korea. His talk touched on Japan, China, and of course North Korea. Significantly, Bosworth  covered topics President Obama and ROK leader Lee Myung Bak will certainly discuss in their upcoming DC visit.

I was happy the ambassador stressed the importance of the Korea WEST internship program. I am a strong supporter of WEST and with so many leaders of Korean-based business in the audience –including 2009 James A. Van Fleet honoree and Hyundai-Kia Group Chairman Chung Mong Koo–I hope many take action.

Remarks at the Korea Society Annual Dinner
Stephen W. Bosworth
Special Representative for North Korea Policy
The Korea Society Annual Dinner
June 9, 2009

Thank you for inviting me to speak here tonight, and thank you, Evans [Revere], for your kind introduction. I am honored to be here with my favorite boss, the Honorable Dr. Henry Kissinger, the Honorable Governor Sonny Perdue [Georgia], the Honorable Governor Bob Riley [Alabama], His Excellency Ambassador Kyung-Keun Kim, His Excellency Ambassador In-kook Park, and Mr. Chong Mong-Koo, Chairman of [Hyundai]-Kia Automotive Group. I would like to acknowledge the Korea Society for the wonderful work they have done throughout their history in fulfilling their goal of promoting greater awareness, understanding, and cooperation between the people of the United States and Korea.

The past few weeks have seen a tremendous amount of action on North Korean issues, including the April 5 Taepo-dong 2 launch and resulting UN Security Council action and the May 25 nuclear test and additional missile launches, which will be followed again by a unified response again from the UN Security Council. In addition, two American journalists have been detained in North Korea for several weeks and have even been sentenced to imprisonment. We urge the DPRK to release these young women on humanitarian grounds.

Before we focus on the current situation in North Korea, I would like to look briefly at the East Asia region as a whole, highlighting the close cooperation of the United States, the Republic of Korea, Japan, China, and Russia as we work together towards the common goal of a denuclearized Korean Peninsula. In my remarks this evening, I would like to expand on the importance of our relations with our two alliance partners, the Republic of Korea and Japan, and with China and Russia; to comment on the current situation in North Korea; and to lay out a vision for a Northeast Asia that is at once peaceful, prosperous, cooperative, and secure.

In the twentieth century George Kennan identified Northeast Asia, together with Western Europe, as the two regions of primary geopolitical importance for the United States. Kennan’s observation about Northeast Asia seems increasingly prescient in the Twenty-First Century. Just as events in Europe greatly influenced global developments in the world in the Twentieth Century, so we look to Asia as a harbinger of what the Twenty-First Century will bring. With sixty percent of the world’s population, the world’s second and third largest national economies and an increasing percentage of global trade, Asia has evolved over the past few decades into a strategic center point, both economically and geopolitically.

For reasons of history and national interest, the United States regards itself as a resident power in East Asia. Our interests in the region are permanent and profound. They center on our relations with our two alliance partners, the Republic of Korea and Japan, and, increasingly, with China. Our relationships with South Korea and Japan both began with formal military alliances, which continue to serve as a foundation for increasingly expansive bilateral ties. Both alliances have evolved, based on shared values, to encompass a wide range of issues, including a common commitment to political freedom, economic prosperity, and regional and global cooperation.

Republic of Korea

Let me start with the Republic of Korea. Our relationship with South Korea was strong when I was the U.S. Ambassador in Seoul. It has grown stronger still over the past decade. And our close cooperation with South Korea, demonstrated again over the past few weeks, exemplifies how the security relationship between our two countries continues to anchor our broader bilateral ties. What began with a stronger nation protecting a weaker one has evolved dramatically, a sophisticated economy as South Korea has become a developed country with a highly capable military and a global strategic perspective.

Our military alliance is now a more balanced partnership, with the ROK military ready to assume primary responsibility for South Korean defense. In 2012 South Korea will assume wartime operational control of its troops, a significant step that demonstrates our true partnership. Working in concert with our partners in Seoul, we are realigning our troops, consolidating our bases, and shifting command responsibility to the ROK’s armed forces while enhancing our capacity to defend the Peninsula in time of crisis. Our mutual goal is for the United States to field a more tailored force, with a smaller footprint that creates less of an impact on ROK civilians, but which still provides the deterrent necessary to maintain peace on the peninsula. We are in the process of relocating U.S. military bases away from the centers of large cities and fielding a leaner, more flexible fighting force.

It is worth noting that the U.S. – ROK Alliance has matured to the point where we are equally concerned with working together to provide to others the security our countries have enjoyed for the last fifty years. U.S. and Korean forces have worked side by side in international peacekeeping and military operations in Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan. An ROK warship is working with U.S. and other like-minded nations to prevent piracy in international waters off the Horn of Africa. That we are able to look beyond our own security needs is a mark of the maturity and increasingly global nature of our alliance.

Our political alliance with the Republic of Korea is strongly buttressed by our growing economic ties. To that end, in 2007 the U.S. and Korea concluded negotiations for a free trade agreement. Recognizing that a sound free trade agreement could offer benefits to both countries, President Obama and President Lee committed to working together to chart a way forward at their meeting in London on April 2.

Most important are the strong ties between the people of the United States and the people of the Republic of Korea. More than 100,000 students from Korea enrich American classrooms each year. This makes them the largest group of foreign students studying in the United States [Tufts and Fletcher]. To encourage more students to take part in similar experiences, last year the Governments of our two countries signed a Memorandum of Understanding on the WEST program. WEST – Work, English Study, Travel – allows Korean young people to come to the United States to study English, work at a professional internship, and travel on a single visa. Nearly 200 Korean students and recent graduates are currently in the United States taking advantage of this opportunity.

A small, but increasing number of Americans are choosing to study in Korea. The State Department now offers grants for students from the secondary through post-graduate levels to study Korean. The Fulbright Program offers recent college graduates the opportunity to teach English abroad for a year in select countries through its English Teaching Assistant Program. The program in South Korea has been the most successful in East Asia. Alumni of this program and others like it are part of a growing cadre of the next generation U.S. – Korea studies experts. In another important development beginning January of this year, Koreans were permitted to travel to the United States under the Visa Waiver Program which allows South Korean citizens who enter the U.S. for personal travel or business to stay up to 90 days without a visa.

When Presidents Lee and Obama meet next week, they will chart a vision for a U.S. – ROK relationship that is based on strong bilateral cooperation, but aims to expand cooperation to address challenges around the globe ranging from the global financial crisis to combating global climate change.

Japan

Likewise, nearly fifty years have passed since the United States and Japan signed the Treaty on Mutual Cooperation and Security, the foundation of our strategic alliance, in 1960. We share a strong and vital relationship based on shared interests, values, and a common vision for the future. As the leading democracies and economies in the world, the United States and Japan have shared interests that cut across a range of difficult issues. From our shared commitment to peace and stability in the Asia – Pacific region to our efforts to push for economic growth in the midst of a worldwide financial crisis, and from our work to counter the scourge of terrorism to our shared interest in mitigating the impact of climate change, it is clear that the issues that face us today are more global in nature than ever before.

These transnational issues cannot be resolved by the United States or Japan alone, nor even by the international community that does not include leadership from both the United States and Japan. The U.S. – Japan alliance continues to evolve to adapt to the global nature of these challenging issues. We are strengthening communication, collaboration, and coordination between our two nations and others. Japanese support to Operation Enduring Freedom has been important to the coalition mission in Afghanistan. Japan’s dispatch of two Maritime Self Defense Force vessels to the Gulf of Aden is an important step in the fight against piracy. Of course, the United States continues to strongly support Japan’s efforts to ascertain the fate of its missing citizens who were abducted by the North Koreans.

China

As China has become a global economic power, its political and diplomatic influence increased as well. It is one of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, and is a key member of vital regional and international institutions: APEC, the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), the G-20, the WTO, and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. Accordingly, the importance of United States – China relations continues to increase as well. When President Richard Nixon (and Secretary Kissinger) made their historic visit to China in February 1972, it would have been hard to imagine the breadth and depth of issues that we now discuss bilaterally with China on a regular basis.

The Obama administration is determined to grow and build a positive, cooperative relationship that reflects the increasingly complex and comprehensive nature of our relations with China. We currently convene over fifty bilateral dialogues and working groups spanning subjects from aviation to counterterrorism, to food safety and non-proliferation. When President Obama met with President Hu Jintao on the margins of the G20 summit in London in April, they agreed to seek to build positive, cooperative and comprehensive relations. Many of the major challenges facing the world today cannot be successfully addressed without the involvement and assistance of China. We are planning to launch the Strategic and Economic Dialogue in Washington this July in order to maximize opportunities for bilateral cooperation that can be better revealed by a strategic, whole of government approach to the relationship. Secretary Clinton’s February visit to Beijing and Treasury Secretary Geithner’s visit last week helped lay the groundwork for this new dialogue, which will be based on mutual respect, cooperation and a long-term perspective.

North Korea

Against the backdrop of a prosperous and dynamic region, North Korea presents a stark contrast. President Obama came into office committed to a willingness to talk directly to countries with which we have differences and to try to resolve those differences. This commitment to dialogue was communicated directly to North Korea in the President’s first days in office. Since then the Administration has repeatedly signaled a desire to pick up on the progress made by the Six-Party process, to continue bilateral dialogue and to work toward denuclearization and a normal relationship with North Korea. To date, we have had absolutely no positive response to these signals.

In fact, North Korea’s actions and statements run directly counter to the objective of regional peace and security. They have renounced their Six-Party commitments to the disablement of their nuclear program and, through their missile and nuclear tests, have defied the UN Security Council, and violated the provision of UN Security Council Resolution 1718. As President Obama said in response to the May 25 nuclear test, “North Korea is directly and recklessly challenging the international community.” This is a challenge that the international community must meet. We call on the DPRK, therefore, to refrain from further provocative actions, to uphold its commitments, and to abide by its international obligations. North Korea will not find international acceptance unless it abandons its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery.

Last week I participated in an interagency trip, led by Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg, to consult with our Asian partners in response to North Korea’s recent statements and actions. Our discussions were very productive and reinforced our unity and coordination with our allies and partners in dealing with the challenges coming from North Korea. North Korea’s nuclear threat is not a problem for the United States alone. It is a threat to the ROK, Japan, China, Russia, and the broader international community. Therefore, we must all be a part of the solution aimed at maintaining peace and establishing lasting stability in the region.

We have also conducted intensive consultations here in New York at the UN Security Council. Discussions at the United Nations are ongoing, and Ambassador Rice continues to work with her colleagues in the Security Council to craft a strong, unequivocal, and unified response to North Korea’s violation of its obligations under a binding Security Council resolution, which we have all agreed is required.

The United States shares with our allies, the Republic of Korea and Japan, and with China and Russia a fundamental interest in improving security and stability in the region through the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. This basic goal of the United States, the complete and verifiable denuclearization of the Korean peninsula, remains unchanged. I cannot envision a situation in which we would modify that goal.

North Korea has announced its withdrawal from the Six-Party Talks, but we and the other participants in the talks are committed to work through the Six-Party process to implement the principles of the September 2005 Joint Statement. Notwithstanding North Korea’s recent actions, we and our partners in the talks remain open to meaningful dialogue and serious negotiations. As we have indicated to Pyongyang, the United States also remain open to bilateral dialogue and negotiations as part of the multilateral effort. North Korea’s recent actions to develop a nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile capacity require that we expand our consideration of new responses, including our force posture and extended deterrence options. However, the North Korea claim to be responding to a “threat” or a “hostile policy” by the United States is simply groundless. Quite to the contrary, we have no intention to invade North Korea or change its regime through force, and we have made this clear to the DPRK repeatedly. We are convinced that negotiation and dialogue are the best means to achieve the goal of complete and verifiable denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. Future negotiations, however, need to establish the irreversible steps that North Korea must take to go beyond the impermanent disablement actions previously taken. In short, we remain ready for serious negotiations with the North Koreans.

Though denuclearization is vital and remains our prime and most necessary objective, it should not be the exclusive focus of our talks. North Korea should be shown a clear path towards acceptance in the international community. In joining the international community, North Korea must live up to international standards, particularly with regards to respecting the human rights of its own people.

The Northeast Asia of the future will include a denuclearized North Korea, a peace regime on the Korean Peninsula to replace the Armistice of 1953 and normal, interlocking relations among all countries, including the DPRK and the United States. It should be a region of open borders and a free flow of communication, ideas, and travelers. No nuclear weapons will threaten the region, and economic cooperation and integration will provide all with opportunities for prosperity.

Before North Korea began backing away from its commitments and then taking a series of provocative actions, the Six-Party Talks had made progress toward achieving this vision. It provided a platform for engagement and dialogue that helps to build mutual trust and understanding. Each member of the Six-Party process was able to raise issues of concern and seek common ground. Each of us will continue to have differences and disagreements with North Korea, but we all understand that negotiation and dialogue are the best tools to solve them. Building a foundation of mutual trust and transparency will facilitate continued growth and prosperity in the region and make it possible for the people of North Korea to share in it. By continuing to threaten and alienate its neighbors, North Korea will deny itself the security and respect it claims to be seeking. For our part, the United States will of course do what we must to provide for our own security and that of our allies. It is North Korea that faces fundamental choices. It can remain in the darkness of its cave and see the world only as shadows on the wall. Or, it can come out into the light and join the international community. We will welcome the day when North Korea chooses to come out of its cave, and we will be prepared to receive them.

North Korea Policy and Stephen Bosworth Remarks at Korea Society Annual Diner

North Korea, Japan, International Law and Ballistic Missiles

Sunday, April 5th, 2009
North Korea, Japan, International Law and Ballistic Missiles

By Don Southerton, Korea Expert Witness Editor and Chief Blogger

In my other Blog reports, I discuss the ramifications of recent April 5 North Korea missile launch. (See BCW Blog)

Japan had stated prior to the launch they would not tolerate any errant missile or debris entering its airspace. This excellent article The Legal Issues of Firing on North Korea’s “Rocket” by Craig Martin looks at international law and Japan’s ballistic missile defense efforts. ( The article was posted prior to North Korea launching the missile and Japan did not need to react to any falling debris or the rocket. Nevertheless, the legality of shooting down the projectile is fascinating.

The Legal Issues of Firing on North Korea’s “Rocket”

North Korea, Japan, International Law and Ballistic Missiles