Daily News Brief March 7, 2013 |
Top of the Agenda: North Korea Threatens U.S. With Preemptive Nuclear Strike
North Korea threatened the United States on Thursday with a preemptive nuclear strike (Reuters)
in an acute escalation of rhetoric as the UN Security Council considers
new sanctions against the country for its third nuclear test in
February. The Security Council is preparing to add three North Korean
weapons dealers and two entities to the sanctions (Yonhap),
and is set to vote on the draft on Thursday in New York. After weeks of
bilateral talks, the United States and China agreed this week to draft a
resolution (BBC),
which also calls for mandatory inspections of North Korean ships and
planes suspected of carrying banned items, including luxury goods.
Analysis
"North
Korea's development of nuclear weapons is, in part, based on the
illusion that it can achieve an equal negotiating position with the
U.S., and thereby force Washington to compromise. But it is entirely
possible that a nuclear-armed North Korea could try to twist China's arm if Beijing were to fail to meet its demands or if the U.S. were to signal goodwill towards it," writes Deng Yuwen for the Financial Times.
"It's
too soon to tell whether China's support of the sanctions resolution
means that it has made strategic decision to radically change its policy toward North Korea.
Some influential figures in the Chinese elite have soured on the
D.P.R.K. and are speaking out publicly to urge a tougher approach or
even abandoning China's troublesome ally," writes Susan Shirk for ChinaFile.
"Due to the North's development of nuclear power and stagnant talks, the window for denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula is closing.
The room for future discussion has shrunk. In the short term, small
conflicts could break out between the North and South. However, a
large-scale conflict is less likely, unless Pyongyang makes a serious
misjudgment," writes Chen Qin for Caixin.
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