http://www.hudsonny.org/2009/06/north-korea-mr-kims-game.php
June 29, 2009 6:30 AM
by Benny Avni
If
To win in Mr. Kim’s game, one must use the same rules he plays with, and meet threat with threat and action with action. Answering nuclear tests with Security Council denouncements will gain the applause of the European striped pants set, but not the attention of the Dear Leader, his third son Kim Jong-un, or others of the
Even short of outright assault meant to end the Stalinist rule, certain measures can help. In response to the recent militant maneuvering by Kim’s regime,
But these and other confrontational measures are unlikely to be deployed by the Obama administration anytime soon. For now, the new president is committed to diplomatic, non-confrontational policies that he believes are better at solving the world’s problems than those ascribed to his predecessor. And here is where the UN Secretary General, Mr. Ki-Moon Ban can lend a hand.
To be sure, it is uncomfortable for a Korean-born U.N. chief to deal with problems directly affecting his home country. But what is it they teach in creative writing courses at college? Write what you know.
Assuming the U.N. leadership in 2008, Mr. Bam was convinced he could negotiate an end to the war in Darfur, help to find peace in the
As a head of an organization that is laughed at in some of the countries involved (and despised by others) Mr. Ban failed to appreciate the limitation of his position. Also, Mr. Ban dived early on into crises which he knew only superficially, failing to appreciate the complications involved in solving them. Not so when it comes to the Korean peninsula. As of yet, however, he wanted to avoid dealing with problems in his home country.
“I am representing the United Nations,” Mr. Ban told me recently. But he didn’t shut the door on Korean diplomacy either. “I believe that my experience as the former South Korean foreign minister will be useful whenever it comes to my mandate, whenever I have to deal with this directly, personally, on this issue,” he said. As of now, he added, no one has directly asked him to intervene.
Close aids told me Mr. Ban is not eager to assume any visible role on the North Korean stand-off. But according to several world diplomats who have spoken recently to Mr. Ban, he is trying quietly to act behind the scenes.
As
But there are signs of change in tone in
His involvement, surely, will do little to reduce the North Korean menace, but it might add to his prestige as Secretary General. And some of us will not shed tears if, in the process, it will expose the futility of relying solely on soft power when dealing with certain crises.
Leave a comment