The second phase of the fourth-round six-party talks kicked-off
in Beijing Tuesday.
Trapped in a chicken-and-egg debate, will the upcoming talks
face insurmountable difficulties and uncertainties?
War, sanctions, conflicts, "rogue state," "axis of evil,"
"outpost of tyranny" and anti-US parades have nailed the US and
North Korea on opposite sides of the same coin.
The mistrust has lead to a chicken-and-egg debate with two major
gaps unbridged in the first phase of the fourth-round of six-party
talks.
First, Washington demands Pyongyang give up the right to a
civilian nuclear program for fears of transformation to military
use. Pyongyang, with only one card in hand, insists on its right
for fears of "rubber check."
The US and North Korea are also grappling over whether North
Korea should dismantle its nuclear program before receiving aid,
guarantees and recognition, or whether the US concessions should
come first, or even at the same time.
"Lacking trust, the two parties are trapped in the vicious cycle
of a chicken-and-egg debate," Ruan Zongze, deputy director of the
China Institute of International Studies, said, "No one wants to
take the initiative."
During the one-month recess, Pyongyang's insistence on a
civilian nuclear program has been enhanced. South Korea seemed
willing to recognize North Korea's right with certain conditions.
Meanwhile, the US softened its attitude in a double negative way in
its agreement with Japan -- the US will not accept North Korea's
right unless it fulfills three conditions.
"Even if they reach a certain agreement," Ruan said, "the
implementation process is still full of difficulties due to the
mistrust."
The second phase might bring some fruits. However, since issues
concerning the core interests of six parties have been unveiled,
the talks still face enormous uncertainties, analysts said.
"I'm cautiously optimistic," said Wang Yizhou, deputy director
of the Institute of World Economics and Politics of the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences.
"My guess is an agreement has 60 percent chance."
Nevertheless, a communiqué or agreement is not the proper
standard by which to judge the talks, Ruan acknowledged.
"The half-a-century conflicts have made the problem too
complicated and the talks made the worsening situation a little
better," Ruan said, "That's the most valuable part of the six-party
talks."
"Two years ago, North Korea and the US were at swords' points,"
Ruan said, now they sit down and have a talk.
This model, which is widely acclaimed, is likely to become a new
mechanism for the solution of security issues in Northeast Asia, he
added.
(Xinhua News Agency September 13, 2005)