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October 20, 2006 Friday Ramazan 26, 1427


N. Korean bomb ‘not bad news for US’



By Simon Tisdall


LONDON: North Korea’s nuclear test and its rumoured preparations for a sequel have set a chill wind blowing across Asia that shows no sign of abating. Pyongyang has taken no notice of the storm of international condemnation. It characterised the UN’s “gangster” sanctions resolution yesterday as a declaration of war. And if the US or Japanese navies begin boarding and searching North Korean ships for proscribed cargoes, Kim Jong-il’s pugilistic regime can be expected to retaliate.

But for the Bush administration at least, North Korea’s so-called “happy bomb” is not all bad news. The test has dramatised its warnings about “rogue states” and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, even if US policies have exacerbated the problem. And in Washington’s view, it has created opportunities to reshape the regional strategic balance.

Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, has set off in hot pursuit of this apparent opening to Japan, South Korea, China and Russia. “For the major powers of north-east Asia, North Korea’s behaviour has clarified the strategic interests that we share,” she said. “Every country in the region must share the burdens as well as the benefits of our common security.” Ms Rice’s message was aimed specifically at China, which the US says must assume the responsibilities its emerging superpower status entails. From Washington’s standpoint, that means China ending its traditional adherence to non-interventionism and non-alignment. And in North Korea’s case, where Beijing has unmatched leverage, it means China taking the lead.

The US also sees a chance to bolster its defensive alliances with Japan and South Korea, whose windows were badly rattled by the North Korean explosion. While it opposes current suggestions in Tokyo that Japan should build its own nuclear deterrent, Washington will not discourage the new government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe from expanding Japan’s military capabilities.

The US will also use this moment to advance its view that South Korea’s “sunshine policy” towards the North has been overdone. Despite increased anti-Americanism, the North’s bellicosity has prompted South Koreans to take a fresh look at the US alliance and their own actions. “It is true that it [the test] has created a situation where we have to reconsider our engagement policy,” President Roh Moo-hyun said last week.—Dawn/ The Guardian News Service






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