Obama, S. Korea to show united front on N. Korea

5/7/2013
ASSOCIATED PRESS
  • US-South-Korea

    Visiting South Korea President Park Geun-hye, lays a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., Monday, May 6, 2013. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

  • South Korean President Park Geun-hye, left, accomapnied by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, addresses South Korean nationals at United Nations headquarters,  Monday.
    South Korean President Park Geun-hye, left, accomapnied by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, addresses South Korean nationals at United Nations headquarters, Monday.

    WASHINGTON — President Obama and South Korea’s new leader Park Geun-hye hope to present a strong front against North Korea’s nuclear threats during their high-profile meeting today at the White House. But they also want to leave the door open to talks with Pyongyang.

    Park has had something of a baptism of fire since she took office in February, two weeks after North Korea’s latest atomic test ratcheted up tensions on the divided Korean Peninsula and undermined her hopes of forging a more trusting relationship with a difficult neighbor.

    In Washington, Park is assured of a warm reception on a visit that also marks the 60th anniversary of the U.S.-South Korean alliance. Her Oval Office meeting, working lunch and joint news conference with Obama will be followed Wednesday by an address to a joint meeting of Congress.

    Daniel Russel, White House senior director for Asian affairs, said Obama would reaffirm the U.S. commitment to the defense of South Korea. He said the joint appearance of the two leaders at the White House would make it crystal clear to Pyongyang that the allies stand shoulder to shoulder.

    “In dealing with North Korea, it’s vital we show unity,” Russel told reporters.

    Park touched down in New York on Monday, meeting first with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, a former South Korean foreign minister who praised her “firm but measured” response to North Korean provocations and determination to resolve their differences though dialogue.

    However, Park made clear in an interview on the eve of her visit that she was willing to get tough on North Korea. She told CBS News that if South Korea came under attack, “We will make them pay.”

    Park, the first democratically elected female leader in Northeast Asia, is no stranger to Seoul’s Blue House, as the residence of the chief executive is known. She’s the daughter of the late South Korean dictator Park Chung-hee, and in her 20s she took over the duties of first lady for five years after a gunman claiming orders from North Korea killed her mother in a botched attack targeting her father.

    While focused squarely on the North Korean threat, Park’s visit will be a chance to build a rapport with Obama, who enjoyed an unusually close bond with the previous South Korean leader, Lee Myung-bak. The two presided over the adoption of a U.S.-South Korean free trade pact in 2012 that expanded the scope of an alliance largely built on security ties and deterring an attack from the North. Some 28,500 U.S. troops are still based in South Korea for that purpose.

    Lee took a hard line on relations with Pyongyang, cutting aid to the impoverished nation. While his approach had Obama’s firm backing, public frustration in the South has mounted over the North’s continued weapons tests and provocations — including attacks in 2010 that left dozens of South Koreans dead.

    In a change of tone, Park, although a conservative, has advocated trying to build trust with Pyongyang through aid shipments and large-scale economic initiatives if there’s progress on the nuclear issue, even as she and South Korea’s military promise to respond forcefully to any possible attack from the North.

    But to date, relations have only gotten worse. After the North’s nuclear test in February — its third since 2006 — it responded to the U.S.-backed tightening of U.N. Security Council sanctions by unleashing a torrent of belligerent rhetoric. It claims to have scrapped the 1953 Korean War armistice and has threatened nuclear strikes on the U.S., prompting Washington to bolster missile defenses.

    Most recently, North Korea has withdrawn its 53,000 workers from an industrial park on its territory run by South Korean companies. After Pyongyang rejected Seoul’s offer of talks, the South last week withdrew its last staff from the facility, closing the last remaining symbol of inter-Korean cooperation that began during the “sunshine” engagement policy championed by Lee’s more liberal predecessors.

    Today, North Korea threatened the U.S. and South Korea over joint naval drills taking place this week in the Yellow Sea. The section of the Korean People’s Army responsible for operations in North Korea’s southwest said it will strike back if any shells fall in its territory during the drills. Should the allies respond to that, the statement said, Pyongyang’s military would then strike five South Korean islands that stand along the aquatic frontline between the countries.

    U.S. officials say they will be listening closely and with a sympathetic ear to what Park has to say both behind closed doors and to Congress about trying to find a way forward with the North under these very difficult conditions.

    Dealing with Pyongyang’s secretive regime, never easy, has become increasingly tough under the unpredictable young leader Kim Jong Un, who came to power after the death of his father Kim Jong Il in December 2011.

    The North has eased up its belligerent rhetoric in recent weeks and has yet to conduct a test launch of an intermediate-range ballistic missile that South Korean officials have been warning for weeks was being prepared.

    But Russel cautioned it was premature to judge whether North Korea’s cycle of provocation “is going up, down or zigzagging.” He said both the U.S. and South Korea support “incremental engagement” with Pyongyang, but it has to take “irreversible steps” signaling a commitment to end its nuclear program.

    The past year has already seen disconcerting progress in the North’s weapons development, including its first successful launch of a three-stage, long-range rocket, although it is not yet believed to have to have the means to fire a nuclear-tipped missile at mainland America.

    The Obama administration has put increasing emphasis on the role the North’s main ally and benefactor, China, can play to press Pyongyang to honor its previous commitments on denuclearization. But the U.S. has long viewed dialogue between South and North Korea as a prerequisite for moving forward with multination aid-for-disarmament negotiations with the North, stalled since 2009.