‘Power for Power’: North Korea
Returns to a Show of Force
Pyongyang’s
recent ballistic missiles test indicated that the country is once again raising
tensions to gain leverage with Washington.
Footage of North Korea’s missile launch
during a news program at a train station in Seoul on Thursday.Credit...Ahn Young-Joon/Associated Press
Published March
24, 2021Updated March 25, 2021, 8:31 a.m. ET
SEOUL — North
Korea issued warnings for more than a week. It swore that the Biden administration would pay a “price,” accused
it of raising “a stink” on the Korean Peninsula and called Washington’s effort
to open a channel of communication a “trick,” vowing to deal with the United
States “power for power.”
Now, it appears
that North Korea is done talking.
On Thursday it
delivered its latest warning by launching two short-range ballistic missiles
off its east coast — the first such test by the country in a year and its first
significant provocation against the United States under President Biden.
The launch,
which defied the United Nations Security Council’s ban on ballistic missile
tests by North Korea, indicated that the country was once again resorting to a
show of force, raising tensions to gain leverage as the Biden administration
finalizes its North Korea policy review. The test was also seen a signal to
Washington that Pyongyang will carry out more provocative tests, involving
longer-range missiles, if it interprets Mr. Biden’s policy as being
unreasonable.
“North Korea uses weapons tests strategically, both to make needed improvements to its weapons and to garner global attention,” said Jean H. Lee, a North Korea expert at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. “With the United States hinting that it will seek to tighten the sanctions regime, North Korea will be looking to expand its arsenal by ramping up testing.
The Biden administration has been reviewing whether to
deal with North Korea’s growing nuclear and missile threats with more
sanctions, a new round of dialogue or a mix of both. As the policy review
continues — and the possibility that the Biden administration will abandon the
summit diplomacy of President Donald J. Trump grows — North Korea appears to be
“returning to a familiar pattern of using provocations to raise tensions,” Ms.
Lee said.
The North’s
maneuvers leave the Biden administration with a difficult choice. Even if it
engages North Korea with another round of negotiations, there is no guarantee
that the country will give up its nuclear arsenal, which has continued to
expand in recent years.
Keep
up with the new Washington — get live updates on politics.
In October, North Korea displayed what appeared to be its largest-ever intercontinental ballistic missile during a nighttime military parade in Pyongyang. North Korean hackers stole $316.4 million between 2019 and November 2020, attacking financial institutions and virtual currency exchanges to raise money for its weapons programs, according to U.N. diplomats familiar with the matter.
A photo released by the North Korean state
news media this week of the country’s leader, Kim Jong-un, center.Credit...Korean Central News Agency, via
Reuters
American officials fear that North Korea would simply
use more talks to buy time to perfect its nuclear capabilities. But more
pressure from the United States is bound to prompt North Korea to attempt more
provocative missile launches, and possibly push the Korean Peninsula to the
brink of war, as it did in 2017.
The regime in
Pyongyang, which sees its leader, Kim Jong-un, as a godlike figure, responds
strongly to any possible slight from the United States. The ballistic missile
test on Thursday came a day after senior United States officials dismissed an
earlier North Korean missile test as “normal military activity.”
That test,
which occurred on Sunday, involved two short-range cruise missiles. Mr. Biden
said the it created “no new wrinkle.”
“This latest
North Korean missile launch is most likely a reaction to U.S. President Joe
Biden’s downplaying and seeming to laugh off their weekend missile tests,” said
Harry J. Kazianis, senior director of Korean studies at the National Interest
in Washington. “The Kim regime, just like during the Trump years, will react to
even the slightest of what they feel are any sort of loss of face or
disparaging comments coming out of Washington.”
North Korea
conducted its last major weapons tests in late 2017, when it launched an intercontinental ballistic missile that
it said was powerful enough to deliver a nuclear warhead to the United States.
It then abstained from missile tests as Mr. Kim engaged in diplomacy with Mr.
Trump.
After a Kim-Trump
summit collapsed without a deal in Hanoi in February 2019, North Korea
resumed a series of short-range ballistic missile
tests from May 2019 until March of last year, when the tests
were halted amid the coronavirus pandemic. Mr. Trump dismissed those
short-range tests, touting North Korea’s self-imposed moratorium on
long-range missile and nuclear tests as one of his biggest foreign policy
achievements.
As details of the Biden administration’s North Korea policy are made available in the coming weeks, North Korea is likely to resume raising tensions, analysts said.
Mr. Kim “will keep it up through graduated escalation, culminating in an emphatic show of force,” potentially including the flight test of a new, bigger but untested I.C.B.M. that North Korea rolled out during a military parade last October, said Lee Sung-yoon, a North Korea expert at the Fletcher School at Tufts University.
South Korean soldiers near the border with
North Korea on Thursday.Credit...Yonhap/EPA,
via Shutterstock
At a party
meeting in January, Mr. Kim vowed to further advance his country’s
nuclear capabilities, declaring that it would build new solid-fuel
I.C.B.M.s and make its nuclear warheads lighter and more precise. He called
establishing a nuclear force in North Korea “a strategic and predominant goal”
against adversaries.
Mr. Kim also
said his foreign policy would focus on “containing and subduing” the United
States, “our foremost principal enemy.” He stressed that its North Korea policy
“will never change, whoever comes into power in the U.S.” And in recent days
North Korea has made its annoyance with the Biden administration abundantly
clear.
Last week, Kim
Yo-jong, Mr. Kim’s sister and his spokeswoman in relations with Washington and
Seoul, accused the United States and South Korea of raising “a stink” on the
Korean Peninsula with their annual military drills. North Korea also said it
felt no need to respond to recent attempts by the Biden administration to
establish dialogue, dismissing them as a “delaying-time trick.”
On Friday, after
a North Korean businessman was extradited from Malaysia to
face trial in an American court on charges of money laundering and violating
international sanctions, North Korea warned that Washington would pay “a due
price.”
The series of
statements left officials and analysts wondering what would be next. With its
missile test on Thursday, “North Korea was following up on Kim Yo-jong’s
warning,” said Cheong Seong-chang, a senior fellow at the Sejong Institute, a
think tank near Seoul.
Analysts are closely watching Washington to see
whether Mr. Biden’s approach to North Korea will move away from the more direct
engagement favored by Mr. Trump and toward President Barack Obama’s “strategic patience,” which meant
gradually escalating sanctions.
He also called
on China to use its vast economic influence on North Korea to help roll back
its nuclear weapons program.
American
officials frequently complain that China has failed to crack down on North
Korean sanctions evasions that occur
in Chinese territorial waters. They have also said that China was
probably helping North Korea with the
cybertheft it has used to fund its nuclear program in recent
years. But the missile test on Thursday showed that China’s influence on North
Korea remained “limited,” Mr. Cheong said.
“North Korea
believes that if the United States tries to impose sanctions, China will
provide cover for it,” he said.
Rick Gladstone contributed reporting from New York
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