China may loosen noose on N. Korea

July 12, 2016

The Korea Times:

China and Russia may re-consider implementing U.N. Security Council (UNSC) sanctions on North Korea in response to a decision to set up a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery in South Korea, analysts said Tuesday.

They refuted the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ claim that issues on UNSC sanctions and THAAD would be be dealt with separately, and that China and Russia have already pledged to implement the punitive measures against Pyongyang faithfully.

The analysts said Beijing and Moscow — veto-wielding UNSC members — can loosen their inspections on Pyongyang and allow the Kim Jong-un regime to exploit loopholes in the sanctions.

“The UNSC sanctions may not gain momentum although I would not say China and Russia will refuse to carry them out,” said Park Won-gon, an international relations professor at Handong University. “In particular, China may interpret clauses outlined by the UNSC in favor of North Korea and give the internationally-isolated state room to breathe.”

Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies, agreed.

“The dispute concerning THAAD will continue to draw attention from China and Russia over the UNSC sanctions for the time being,” he said. “Against this backdrop, the UNSC sanctions will inevitably become looser.”

Imposed in March, UNSC Resolution 2270 is aimed at banning North Korea’s international trade in response to its nuclear and missile threats. It still has clauses that are seen as loopholes, such as permission for transactions if they are “determined to be exclusively for livelihood purposes.”

Park said North Korea will capitalize on discontent from China and Russia concerning THAAD to bring “a new Cold War” to the peninsula against South Korea, the U.S. and Japan.

“Pyongyang will seek to widen the gap among the five countries to pursue its nuclear ambitions,’ he said, citing that the five are all members of the six-party talks aimed at North Korea’s denuclearization.

The foreign ministry said it will “not predetermine what measures China will take concerning THAAD.

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