After
repeatedly rejecting
South Korea's offer to hold dialogue with the North, on June 6th
2013, the North Korean government proposed to begin ministerial-level
talks with South Korea to discuss topics that cover topics that
include the Kaesong Industrial Park, the resumption of South Korean
tourists’ visit to Mount Kumgang, and the reunion of families
separated since the Korean War.
I
understand why the North Korean government would want South Korean
businesses to reopen shop in Kaesong. The joint-venture employed
about 53,000 North Korean workers, which meant that for a country
that is as cash-strapped as North Korea, the revenues that Kaesong
generated was vital.
Dior handbags don't just grow on trees Source: http://static1.businessinsider.com/image/502273af6bb3f71e07000009/ri-sol-ju-handbag.jpg |
What
I do not understand is why the South Korean government agreed to the
North’s offer. It was the North Korean government that refused
to allow South Korean workers into Kaesong. It was the North Korean
government that pulled
out its 53,000 workers from the complex in the first place. In order
to make sure that every South Korean was forced to leave, it was the
North Korean government that prevented
a group of South Korean businessmen from delivering food and supplies
to the South Korean workers who remained in the industrial complex
after it had been effectively closed by orders of the North Korean
government.
North
Korea was the reason that the Kaesong Industrial Park failed. Now
that the North Korean leadership is feeling the effects of beefed-up
international sanctions
and desperately needs money to prop up its regime, it is the North
Koreans who are now coming to the negotiating table hat in hand.
Reopening
the industrial park is of vital importance to the North Korean
government. That’s obvious. But what does South Korea have to
gain through reopening Kaesong?
Just
as the closing of the Kaesong Industrial Park was the fault of the
North Koreans, so was the closing of the Mount Kumgang Tourist
Resort. That joint-venture failed in 2008 when a North Korean
soldier shot and killed
a South Korean tourist who was visiting the mountain. Instead of
apologizing or showing remorse for the incident, the North Korean
government shifted the blame to the South, claiming
that it was a “product of a deliberate scheme” set up by the
South Korean government.
Source: http://data.whicdn.com/images/26170637/delusional-unicorn_large.jpg |
Again,
it is easy to understand why the North Koreans would want the tourist
resort to reopen. It is estimated that more than a million South
Korean tourists have visited the resort from when it was opened in
1998 until when it was shut down in 2008. But what does South Korea
have to gain from reopening it?
Over
the years, the North Koreans have time and again violated both
inter-Korean agreements and international treaties whenever such
actions benefited them regardless of the economic or political
fallout that resulted anywhere else. There is no reason to believe
that North Korea is going to stop that kind of behavior any time
soon.
No comments:
Post a Comment