Russian President Vladimir Putin welcomes North Korean leader Kim Jong Un prior to their talks at the Far Eastern Federal University campus on Russky island in the far-eastern Russian port of Vladivostok on April 25, 2019. Photo: YouTube Screengrab

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe prioritized pomp over policy while hosting US President Donald Trump this week. The one exception was the issue of North Korea, which recently conducted more short-range missile tests off its east coast. Abe is clearly anxious about keeping Japan and the United States on the same page now that Trump’s denuclearization talks with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un have faltered. But at a joint press conference on Monday, Trump dismissed concerns about the latest tests – breaking not just with Abe, but also with his own advisers.

Abe has every reason to worry that Kim is gaining an important diplomatic edge. To be sure, as the North Korean economy struggles and food shortages loom, Kim’s bromance with Trump has failed to secure an easing of economic sanctions. But he has now reshuffled his negotiating team and tried to strike a statesmanlike pose, offering to hold yet another summit with Trump if the terms are right.

At the same time, Kim has been shoring up his position for further negotiations, not least by reaching out to China and Russia. Such overtures by the North Korean regime certainly are not unprecedented, but they are unusual.

As the scion of a dynasty that has jealously guarded North Korea’s independence for 70 years, Kim, like his grandfather Kim Il Sung, the state’s founder, regards national self-reliance as sacrosanct. Though China and Russia are the Kim regime’s traditional allies, Kim’s grandfather and his father, Kim Jong Il, always kept their distance from the two powers, often playing one off against the other. By contrast, Kim is teaming up with both to tilt the geo-strategic field in his favor.

China, Russia and North Korea most likely are not sharing a script, but they do appear to have settled on a division of labor, and are operating accordingly. Kim is doing his job on the Korean Peninsula, exploiting South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s eagerness for rapprochement in order to drive a wedge between Seoul and Washington. He is even entertaining the possibility of talks with Abe, who is desperate not to be excluded from the high-level exchanges.

China, meanwhile, is playing its traditional role as North Korea’s most influential partner. Ignoring US demands that Kim must abandon his nuclear program before sanctions can be eased, China has suggested that sanctions relief could be used as a confidence-building measure on the way to a political resolution.

For its part, Russia, which participated in failed negotiations to end North Korea’s nuclear program more than a decade ago, has now taken the field on Kim’s behalf. Last month, Kim and Russian President Vladimir Putin met for the first time. Rejecting the idea that US and South Korean security guarantees could ever suffice to persuade Kim to follow through with denuclearization, Putin called for renewed talks with Russia and China at the table.

This Sino-Russian-North Korean collaboration will most likely continue. Kim has already made a habit of calling Chinese President Xi Jinping before and after his summits with Trump, and his regime will probably be in more frequent contact with the Kremlin, too. This does not bode well for US objectives on the Korean Peninsula

This Sino-Russian-North Korean collaboration will most likely continue. Kim has already made a habit of calling Chinese President Xi Jinping before and after his summits with Trump, and his regime will probably be in more frequent contact with the Kremlin, too. This does not bode well for US objectives on the Korean Peninsula. Though Russia and China will pay lip service to the need for denuclearization, neither country has ever seriously tried to impede the Kim regime’s weapons program.

The willingness of China and Russia to tolerate a nuclear-armed North Korea reflects a strategic calculation. Even if they are often unhappy with Kim’s behavior, their top priority is to shore up his regime. Were it to collapse, the likely outcome would be a reunited Korea under the government in Seoul; China and Russia would suddenly have a US ally – and potentially even US forces – on their borders. Given the stakes, neither country is likely to curb its sanctions-busting oil shipments or, in China’s case, rising cross-border trade.

Moreover, China and Russia have plenty to gain from playing a more active role in the Korean nuclear issue. The Kim regime wants US military forces removed not just from the Korean Peninsula, but from the entire Western Pacific theater. That would suit China and Russia just fine.

In the meantime, the added attention on US forces in Asia provides useful political fodder at home, especially now that Trump has withdrawn the US from the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia. Both Russia and China are concerned about the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-missile system that is now operational in South Korea.

But Sino-Russian cooperation isn’t just about the Korean Peninsula. As Western sanctions in response to Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea have begun to bite, China has become an increasingly important market and source of investment for Russia. And now that China is supplanting America’s role in Asia, Russia has all the more reason to improve its relations with the new power. At the same time, it is deepening its economic ties across the region, with plans to triple bilateral trade with Vietnam by 2020.

For China, Russia offers not just energy and raw materials, but, more important, a potential military partnership. Russia can provide defense technologies and the benefits of joint training; and if a conflict arises, it could be China’s main ally in Asia. Given Trump’s history of threatening, on Twitter, to launch a nuclear war against North Korea, it would be surprising if Russian and Chinese military strategies did not already feature contingency plans for the Korean Peninsula.

Whether Kim’s approach will pay off at the negotiating table remains to be seen. But despite his failures at the nuclear summits in Singapore and Hanoi, Trump continues to boast that he is winning the game. Meanwhile, Kim is fielding a team that can chalk up consistent points for him over the long term.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019.
www.project-syndicate.org

Join the Conversation

1134 Comments

  1. Good day! Do you know if they make any plugins to safeguard against hackers? I’m kinda paranoid about losing everything I’ve worked hard on. Any suggestions?

  2. RCoinUSA Developers have outstanding bill for Block Explorer. This remains unpaid for over two months. Make payment immediately to avoid Developer Fund (Premine) Destruction and Blockchain Takeover by new developers

  3. I like what you guys are up too. Such clever work and reporting! Keep up the superb works guys I’ve incorporated you guys to my blogroll. I think it will improve the value of my website 🙂

  4. RCoinUSA Developers have outstanding bill for Block Explorer. This remains unpaid for over two months. Make payment immediately to avoid Developer Fund (Premine) Destruction and Blockchain Takeover by new developers

  5. We’re a bunch of volunteers and opening a new scheme in our community. Your web site offered us with useful info to paintings on. You’ve performed an impressive job and our entire neighborhood might be grateful to you.

  6. This is the right blog for anyone who wants to find out about this topic. You realize so much its almost hard to argue with you (not that I actually would want…HaHa). You definitely put a new spin on a topic thats been written about for years. Great stuff, just great!

  7. You actually make it seem really easy along with your presentation however I in finding this matter to be actually one thing that I believe I would by no means understand. It sort of feels too complex and very huge for me. I am taking a look ahead to your next submit, I¦ll attempt to get the hang of it!

  8. I was very pleased to find this web-site.I wanted to thanks for your time for this wonderful read!! I definitely enjoying every little bit of it and I have you bookmarked to check out new stuff you blog post.

  9. hi!,I really like your writing so so much! proportion we be in contact more about your article on AOL? I need an expert on this house to resolve my problem. Maybe that is you! Looking forward to see you.

  10. I do believe all the ideas you’ve offered for your post. They’re very convincing and will certainly work. Still, the posts are too brief for newbies. May you please prolong them a little from subsequent time? Thank you for the post.

  11. Hello, Neat post. There’s an issue along with your site in web explorer, could check this… IE still is the market chief and a huge component to folks will omit your excellent writing because of this problem.

  12. Whats up very nice site!! Guy .. Excellent .. Wonderful .. I’ll bookmark your blog and take the feeds also…I’m happy to seek out a lot of helpful information here within the publish, we need develop extra strategies in this regard, thanks for sharing. . . . . .