North
Korea–United States relations developed primarily during
the Korean War, but in recent years have
been largely defined by the United States' suspicions regarding
North
Korea's nuclear programs and North Korea
's desire to normalize relations with the U.S.,
tempered by a stated perception of an imminent U.S.
attack.
Sweden
acts as the
protecting power of United States
interests in North Korea for consular matters, as North Korea and
the United States have no formal diplomatic
relations.
Background
Although hostility between the two countries remains largely a
product of
Cold War politics, there were
earlier conflicts and animosity between the US and Korea. In the
mid-19th century Korea closed its borders to Western trade. In the
General Sherman incident,
Korean forces attacked a US gunboat sent to negotiate a trade
treaty and killed its crew, after fire from both sides because it
defied instructions from Korean officials. A US retribution attack,
the
Sinmiyangyo, followed.
Korea and the US ultimately established trade relations in 1882.
Relations soured again when the US negotiated peace in the
Russo-Japanese War.
Japan
persuaded
the US to accept Korea as part of Japan's sphere of influence, and the US did not
protest when Japan annexed Korea five years later. Korean
nationalists unsuccessfully petitioned the US to support their
cause at the
Versailles Treaty
conference under
Woodrow Wilson's
principle of national self-determination.
Relations during the U.S. occupation of South Korea,
1945–1948
The
United Nations divided Korea
after
World War II along the
38th parallel, intending it as a
temporary measure.
However, the breakdown of relations between
the US and USSR
prevented a
reunification. During the U.S. occupation of South Korea,
relations between the U.S. and North Korea were conducted through
the Soviet military government in the North. Because of North
Korea's submission to Soviet pressures, and because of mass
opposition to the lenient U.S. occupation of the mortal enemy
Japan, North Koreans in this period denounced the United States and
began to form a negative view of the U.S. However, several American
ministers and missionaries remained active in this period,
reminding Koreans, before they were uprooted by the communist
regime, that American individuals could be very helpful to the
cause of Korean independence.
Relations from formation of the DPRK to the Korean War,
1948–1950
On September 9, 1948,
Kim Il-sung
declared the Democratic People's Republic of Korea; he promptly
received diplomatic recognition from the Soviet Union, but not the
United States. The U.S. did not extend, and has never extended,
diplomatic recognition to the DPRK. After 1948, the withdrawal of
most American troops from the peninsula actually intensified Kim Il
Sung's anti-American rhetoric, often asserting that the US was an
imperialist successor to Japan, a view it still holds today. In
December 1950, the United States initiated economic sanctions
against the DPRK under the
Trading with the Enemy Act which
lasted until 2008.
Rollback: the U.S. occupation of North Korea, October-December
1950
North Koreans had their closest encounter with the United States
during the US/UN occupation of North Korea in the two months after
the Inchon landing. With help from the ROK Army, the United States'
military, under the command of General
Douglas MacArthur, moved to set up a civil
administration for North Korea in the wake of the presumed
destruction of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. MacArthur
planned to find North Korean generals, especially Kim Il-Sung, and
try them as war criminals.
Relations from the end of the Korean War to the end of the Cold
War
North Korea and the United States had little to no relations during
this time.
Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula
From January 1958 through 1991, the United States had
nuclear weapons aimed at North Korea, peaking
in number at some 950 warheads in 1967. Reports are that these have
since been removed. The U.S. still maintains "the continuation of
the extended deterrent offered by the U.S. nuclear umbrella".
North
Korea joined the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) as a non-nuclear weapons state in 1985, and North
and South
Korean
talks begun in 1990 resulted in a 1992
Denuclearization Statement. However, US intelligence photos in early
1993 led the International Atomic Energy
Agency
(IAEA) to demand special inspection of the North's
nuclear facilities, which prompted Kim Il Sung's March 1993
announcement of North Korea's withdrawal from the NPT. A
UN Security Council resolution
in May 1993 urged North Korea to cooperate with the IAEA and to
implement the 1992 North-South Denuclearization Statement. It also
urged all member states to encourage North Korea to respond
positively to this resolution and to facilitate a solution of the
nuclear issue.
U.S.-North Korea talks began in June 1993 but with lack of progress
in developing and implementing an agreement, North Koreans unloaded
the core of a major nuclear reactor, which could have provided
enough raw material for several nuclear weapons. With tensions
high, Kim Il Sung invited former U.S. President
Jimmy Carter to act as an intermediary. Carter
accepted the invitation, but could only act as a private citizen
not a government representative. Carter managed to bring the two
states to the negotiating table, with Assistant Secretary of State
for Political-Military Affairs
Robert
Gallucci representing the United States and North Korean Vice
Foreign Minister Kang Sok Ju representing his country.
The negotiators successfully reached the U.S.-North Korea
Agreed Framework in October 1994:
- North Korea agreed to freeze its existing plutonium enrichment
program, to be monitored by the IAEA;
- Both
sides agreed to cooperate to replace North Korea's
graphite-moderated reactors with light water reactor (LWR) power plants,
to be financed and supplied by an international consortium (later
identified as the Korean Peninsula Energy Development
Organization
or KEDO) by a target date of 2003;
- The United States and North Korea agreed to work together to
store safely the spent fuel from the five-megawatt reactor and
dispose of it in a safe manner that does not involve reprocessing
in North Korea;
- The United States agreed to provide shipments of heavy fuel oil
to provide energy in the mean time;
- The two sides agreed to move toward full normalization of
political and economic relations;
- Both sides agreed to work together for peace and security on a
nuclear-free Korean Peninsula; and
- Both sides agreed to work together to strengthen the
international nuclear non-proliferation regime.
Historians Paul Lauren, Gordon Craig, and Alexander George Page
point out that the agreement suffered from a number of weaknesses.
There was no specific schedule made for reciprocal moves, and the
United States was granted a very long time to fulfill its
obligations to replace the dangerous graphite-moderated reactors
with LWRs. Furthermore, no organization was chosen "to monitor
compliance, to supervise implementation...or to make mid-course
adjustments that might become necessary." Finally, other interested
nations, like South Korea, China, and Japan, were not included in
the negotiations.
Soon after the agreement was signed,
U.S. Congress
control changed to the
Republican Party, who did
not support the agreement. Some Republican
Senator were strongly against the agreement,
regarding it as
appeasement.
In accordance with the terms of the Agreed Framework, North Korea
decided to freeze its nuclear program and cooperate with United
States and IAEA verification efforts, and in January 1995 the U.S.
eased economic sanctions against North Korea.
Initially U.S.
Department of Defense
emergency funds not under Congress control were
used to fund the transitional oil supplies under the agreement,
together with international funding. From 1996 Congress
provided funding, though not always sufficient amounts.
Consequently some of the agreed transitional oil supplies were
delivered late. KEDO's first director,
Stephen W. Bosworth, later commented "The Agreed
Framework was a political orphan within two weeks after its
signature".
In January 1995, as called for in the Agreed Framework, the United
States and North Korea negotiated a method to safely store the
spent fuel from the five-megawatt reactor. According to this
method, U.S. and North Korean operators would work together to can
the spent fuel and store the canisters in the spent fuel pond.
Actual canning began in 1995. In April 2000, canning of all
accessible spent fuel rods and rod fragments was declared
complete.
North Korea agreed to accept the decisions of KEDO, the financier
and supplier of the LWRs, with respect to provision of the
reactors.International funding for the LWR replacement power plants
had to be sought. Formal invitations to bid were not issued until
1998, by which time the delays were infuriating North Korea.
[15646] In May 1998, North Korea warned it
would restart nuclear research if the U.S. could not install the
LWR.
KEDO
subsequently identified Sinpo
as the LWR
project site, and a formal ground breaking was held on the site on
August 21, 1997. In December 1999, KEDO and the (South)
Korea Electric Power
Corporation (KEPCO) signed the
Turnkey
Contract (TKC), permitting full scale construction of the LWRs,
but significant spending on the LWR project did not commence until
2000.
In 1998, the United States identified an underground site in
Kumchang-ni, which it suspected of being nuclear-related. In March
1999, North Korea agreed to grant the U.S. "satisfactory access" to
the site. In October 2000, during Special Envoy Jo Myong Rok's
visit to Washington, and after two visits to the site by teams of
U.S. experts, the U.S. announced in a Joint Communiqué with North
Korea that U.S. concerns about the site had been resolved.
As called for in Dr. William Perry's official review of U.S. policy
toward North Korea, the United States and North Korea launched new
negotiations in May 2000 called the
Agreed Framework
Implementation Talks.
North Korea policy under George W. Bush
George W. Bush announced his opposition to the Agreed
Framework during his presidential candidacy. Following his
inauguration in January 2001, the
new administration began a
review of its policy toward North Korea. At the conclusion of that
review, the administration announced on June 6, 2001, that it had
decided to pursue continued dialogue with North Korea on the full
range of issues of concern to the administration, including North
Korea's conventional force posture, missile development and export
programs, human rights practices, and humanitarian issues. As of
that time, the Light Water Reactors (LWRs) promised in the
Agreed Framework had not been delivered. In 2002, the
administration asserted that North Korea was developing a uranium
enrichment program for nuclear weapons purposes. U.S.-DPRK tensions
mounted when Bush categorized North Korea as part of the "
Axis of Evil" in his
2002 State of the Union address.
When U.S.-DPRK direct dialogue resumed in October 2002, this
uranium-enrichment program was high on the U.S. agenda. North
Korean officials acknowledged to a U.S. delegation, headed by
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs
James A. Kelly, the existence of the uranium
enrichment program. Such a program violated North Korea's
obligations under the NPT and its commitments in the 1992
North-South Denuclearization Declaration and the 1994 Agreed
Framework. The U.S. side stated that North Korea would have to
terminate the program before any further progress could be made in
U.S.-DPRK relations. The U.S. side also claimed that if this
program was verifiably eliminated, the U.S. would be prepared to
work with DPRK on the development of a fundamentally new
relationship. In November 2002, the members of KEDO agreed to
suspend heavy fuel oil shipments to North Korea pending a
resolution of the nuclear dispute.
In
December 2002, Spanish
troops boarded and detained a shipment of Scud missiles from North Korea destined for Yemen
, at the
United States' request. After two days, the United States
released the ship to continue its shipment to Yemen. This further
strained the relationship between the US and North Korea, with
North Korea characterizing the boarding an "act of
piracy".
In late 2002 and early 2003, North Korea terminated the freeze on
its existing plutonium-based nuclear facilities, expelled IAEA
inspectors and removed seals and monitoring equipment, quit the
NPT, and resumed reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel to extract
plutonium for weapons purposes. North Korea subsequently announced
that it was taking these steps to provide itself with a deterrent
force in the face of U.S. threats and the U.S.'s "hostile policy".
Beginning in mid-2003, the North repeatedly claimed to have
completed reprocessing of the spent fuel rods previously frozen at
Yongbyon and lain cooperation with North
Korea's neighbors, who have also expressed concern over the threat
to regional stability and security they believe it poses. The Bush
Administration's stated goal is the complete, verifiable, and
irreversible elimination of North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
North Korea's neighbors have joined the United States in supporting
a nuclear weapons-free Korean Peninsula. U.S. actions, however, had
been much more hostile to normalized relations with North Korea,
and the administration continued to suggest
regime change as a primary goal. The Bush
Administration had consistently resisted two-party talks with the
DPRK. A September 2005 agreement took place only after the Chinese
threatened to publicly accuse the U.S. of refusal to engage in
negotiations.
In September 2005, immediately following the September 19
agreement, relations between the countries were further strained by
US allegations of North Korean counterfeiting of American dollars.
The US
alleges that North Korea produces $15 million worth of 'supernotes' every year, and has induced banks in
Macau
and elsewhere to end business with North
Korea. Such claims of counterfeiting date back to 1989, so
the timing of the U.S. claims is suspect. Some experts doubt North
Korea has the capacity to produce such notes, and U.S. financial
auditors have been analyzing records seized from the Macau bank and
have yet to make a formal charge. In 2007 it was reported that an
audit by
Ernst & Young had
found no evidence that the bank had facilitated North Korean
money-laundering.
Six-party talks
In early 2003 multilateral talks were proposed to be held among the
six most relevant parties aimed at reaching a settlement through
diplomatic means. North Korea initially opposed such a process,
maintaining that the nuclear dispute was purely a bilateral matter
between themselves and the United States.
However, under
pressure from its neighbors and with the active involvement of
China
, North Korea agreed to preliminary three-party
talks with China and the United States in Beijing in April 2003.
After
this meeting, North Korea then agreed to six-party talks, between the United States,
North Korea, South Korea, China, Japan
, and
Russia
. The
first round of talks were held in August 2003, with subsequent
rounds being held at regular intervals. After 13 months of freezing
talks between the fifth round's first and second phases, North
Korea returned to the talks. This behavior was in retaliation for
the US's action of freezing offshore North Korean bank accounts in
Macau.
In
early 2005, the US government told its East Asia allies that
Pyongyang had exported nuclear material to Libya
.
This
backfired when Asian allies discovered that the US government had
concealed the involvement of Pakistan
; a key U.S. ally was the weapon's middle
man. In March 2005,
Condoleezza
Rice had to travel to East Asia in an effort to repair the
damage.
The third phase of the fifth round of talks held on 8 February 2007
concluded with a landmark action-for-action agreement. Goodwill by
all sides has led to the US unfreezing all of the North Korean
assets on March 19, 2007.
As of October 11, 2008, North Korea has agreed to all U.S. nuclear
inspection demands and the Bush Administration responded by
removing the communist country from a terrorism blacklist.
2006 nuclear test
U.S. intelligence agencies have confirmed that a test has occurred,
but are presently looking into the situation.
Tony Snow, President
George W. Bush’s
White House Press Secretary,
said that the United States would now go to the
United Nations to determine “what our next
steps should be in response to this very serious step.” On Monday,
October 9, 2006, President Bush stated in a televised speech that
such a claim of a test is a "provocative act" and the U.S condemns
such acts.
President Bush stated that the United States
is "committed to diplomacy" but will "continue to protect America
and America's interests."
Steps towards normalization
The February 13, 2007 agreement in the Six Party Talks – among the
United States, the two Koreas, Japan, China, and Russia – called
for other actions besides a path toward a denuclearized Korean
peninsula.
It also outlined steps toward the
normalization of political relations with Pyongyang
, a replacement of the Korean War armistice with a peace treaty, and the building of
a regional peace structure for Northeast Asia.
In
exchange for substantial fuel aid, North Korea agreed to shut down
the Yongbyon
nuclear facility
. The United States also agreed to begin
discussions on
normalization of relations with
North Korea, and to begin the process of removing North Korea from
its list of
state sponsors of
terrorism. Implementation of this agreement has been successful
so far, with US Chief Negotiator
Christopher R. Hill saying North Korea has adhered to
its commitments. The sixth round of talks commencing on March 19,
2007, discussed the future of the North Korean nuclear weapons
program.
In early June 2008 the United States agreed to start lifting
restrictions after North Korea began the disarming process.
President Bush announced he would remove North Korea from the list
of
state sponsors of
terrorism after North Korea released a 60 page declaration of
its nuclear activities. Shortly thereafter North Korean officials
released video of the demolition of the nuclear reactor at
Yongbyon, considered a symbol of North Korea's nuclear program. The
Bush Administration praised the progress, but was criticized by
many, including some within the administration, for settling for
too little. The document released said nothing about alleged
uranium enrichment programs or nuclear proliferation to other
countries.
U.S. Navy rescue of North Korean ship: the Mogadishu
encounter
On November 4, 2007, a North Korean merchant vessel was attacked by
Somali pirates off the coast of Mogadishu who forced their way
aboard, posing as guards. As U.S. Navy ships patrolling the waters
moved to respond, the 22 North Korean seamen fought the eight
Somali pirates in hand-to-hand combat. With aid from the crew of
the U.S.S. James E. Williams and a helicopter, the ship was freed,
and permission was given to the U.S. crew to treat the medically
wounded crew and pirates. This resulted in favorable comments from
U.S. envoy in Beijing, Christopher Hill, as well as an exceedingly
rare pro-U.S. statement in the
North Korean press. The favorable
result of the incident occurred at an important moment, as the
North Koreans moved to implement the February 13 agreement with the
acquiescence of the Bush Administration, and the
2007 South Korean
presidential election loomed, with the North Koreans taking
pains to emphasize a more moderate policy.
Resurgence of hostilities
Starting
in late August, 2008, North Korea allegedly resumed its nuclear
activities at the Yongbyon nuclear facility
, apparently moving equipment and nuclear supplies
back onto the facility grounds. Since then, North Korean
activity at the facility has steadily increased, with North Korea
threatening Yongbyon's possible reactivation.
North Korea has argued that the U.S. has failed to fulfill its
promises in the disarmament process, having not removed the country
from its
Sponsors of Terror list or sent the
promised aid to the country. The U.S. has recently stated that it
will not remove the North from its list until it has affirmed that
North Korea will push forward with its continued disarmament.
North
Korea has since barred IAEA
inspectors from the Yongbyon site, and the South
has claimed that the North is pushing for the manufacture of a
nuclear warhead. The North has recently conducted tests on
short-range missiles. The U.S. is encouraging the resumption of
six-party talks.
Removal from terror list
On October 11, 2008, the U.S. and North Korea secured an agreement
in which North Korea agreed to resume disarmament of its nuclear
program and once again allowed inspectors to conduct forensic tests
of its available nuclear materials. The North also agreed to
provide full details on its long-rumored uranium program. These
latest developments culminated in North Korea's long-awaited
removal from America's
State Sponsors of
Terrorism list on the same day.
2009 nuclear test
On
May 25, 2009,
American-North Korean relations further deteriorated when North
Korea conducted yet another nuclear test
, the first since the 2006 test. The test was once
again conducted underground and exploded with a yield comparable to
the Little
Boy
and Fat
Man
bombs that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
respectively. The United States was also pleased with
China
and Russia
's move, who
condemned North Korea's actions even though they are both strong
allies of North Korea. The U.S., along with all other
members of the stalled six-party talks, strongly condemned the test
and said that North Korea would "pay a price for its actions." The
U.S. also strongly condemned the subsequent series of short-range
missile tests that have followed thedetonation.
North Korean detainment of American journalists
American-North Korean relations have further been strained by the
arrest of two American journalists on
March
17, 2009.
The two journalists, Euna Lee and Laura Ling
of Current TV, were arrested on the North
Korean border with China
while
supposedly filming a documentary on the trafficking of women and allegedly
crossing into North Korea in the process. North Korea
subsequently tried the two journalists amid international protests
and found them guilty of the charges, and sentenced them to twelve
years of hard labor. The U.S. criticized the act as a "
sham trial" and has since worked towards the
release of the two journalists.
The ordeal was finally resolved on
August
4, when former
U.S. President Bill
Clinton arrived in Pyongyang
in what he described as a "solely private mission"
to secure the release of the two American journalists. He
reportedly forwarded a message to North Korean leader
Kim Jong-il from current U.S. President
Barack Obama, but White House Press Secretary
Robert Gibbs denied this claim.
Clinton's discussions with Kim were reportedly on various issues
regarding American-North Korean relations.
On August 5, Kim issued a formal pardon to the two
American journalists, who subsequently returned to Los Angeles
with Clinton. The unannounced visit by
Clinton was the first by a high-profile American official since
2000, and is reported to have drawn praise and
understanding by the parties involved.
See also
References
External links
- Kim's Nuclear Gamble - PBS Frontline
Documentary (Video & Transcript)
- Timeline of North Korea talks - BBC
- Diplomacy: Weighing 'Deterrence' vs.
'Aggression' - The New York Times, October 18,
2002
- National Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass
Destruction - December 2002 White House release
- Sanctions and War on the Korean Peninsula - Martin
Hart-Landsberg and John Feffer, Foreign Policy in Focus,
January 17, 2007
- Hardliners Target Détente with North Korea - Suzy Kim
and John Feffer, Foreign Policy in Focus, February 11,
2008.
- Far-Reaching U.S. Plan Impaired N. Korea Deal, Glenn Kessler, Washington Post, September 26, 2008.
- “Normalization and Nuclear Issue Are Two Separate
Matters” - A spokesman for the DPRK Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Tongil Korea Net, January 17, 2009.
Major Dating Error Needs Resolution
"North Korea agreed to accept the decisions of KEDO, the financier
and supplier of the LWRs, with respect to provision of the
reactors. International funding for the LWR replacement power
plants had to be sought. Formal invitations to bid were not issued
until 1998, by which time the delays were infuriating North Korea.
[5] In May 1998, North Korea warned it would restart nuclear
research if the U.S. could not install the LWR.[14] KEDO
subsequently identified Sinpo as the LWR project site, and a formal
ground breaking was held on the site on August 21, 1997.[15]"````