- The Washington Times - Thursday, January 25, 2024

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea’s artillery salvo off the flashpoint Yeonpyeong Island in the Yellow Sea this month preempted a South Korean gunnery drill, a South Korean academic said Thursday, accusing Seoul of engaging Pyongyang in a high-risk “chicken game.”

Mounting media reports say the nuclear-armed North has given up on diplomacy and is preparing for a new war on the divided, heavily armed Korean Peninsula.

In recent days, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has announced that South Korea is his primary national enemy, scrapped several government bodies that promoted reconciliation and reunification with Seoul, demolished a high-profile “unification arch” in Pyongyang and further upgraded ties with Russia.

Mr. Kim’s forces continue artillery, missile and maritime drills, including strategic cruise missile firings over the weekend. Meanwhile, Pyongyang’s state media spray a fire hose of bellicose rhetoric.

South Korea is responding with tough talk of its own while upgrading its security ties with Japan. Both are engaged in military exercises with the United States, deploying nuclear-capable bombers, submarines and carrier groups to the peninsula in shows of “extended deterrence.”

Visitors to downtown Seoul, 35 miles south of the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Koreas, are unlikely to sense war fears.

Coffee shops and barbecue restaurants are packed, and traffic is frenetic. The stock market and won-dollar exchange rates are recovering from early January downturns. Residents seem more concerned about the current cold snap than the peninsula’s deepening cold war.

Elsewhere, the geopolitical tensions are clear even if Mr. Kim’s motives are not.

Opinion is divided over whether the North is responding to the moves by the U.S. and its allies. Some analysts say Mr. Kim is raising his country’s threat profile ahead of elections in the South and the U.S. Others speculate that Mr. Kim is acting for domestic reasons.

Veteran North Korea watchers Robert L. Carlin and Siegfried S. Hecker, writing this month in the widely read blog 38 North, ramped up the uneasy mood with a long analysis called “Is Kim Jong-un Preparing for War?”

“The situation on the Korean Peninsula is more dangerous than it has been at any time since early June 1950,” they wrote.

They cited in part Pyongyang’s frustration in the aftermath of the breakdown in talks with the Trump administration in 2019.

“That may sound overly dramatic, but we believe that, like his grandfather in 1950, Kim Jong-un has made a strategic decision to go to war,” Mr. Carlin and Mr. Hecker wrote. “We do not know when or how Kim plans to pull the trigger, but the danger is already far beyond the routine warnings in Washington, Seoul and Tokyo about Pyongyang’s ‘provocations.’”

As the tit-for-tat cycle accelerates, cleavages are opening within politically polarized South Korea over who is to blame.

Blaming Seoul

North Korea conducted surprise coastal artillery drills near Yeonpyeong Island on Jan. 5. No damage was reported on the South Korean-populated island, which lies off the North Korean coast, but residents were ordered into shelters and ferry services were suspended as South Korean forces subsequently conducted their own drill.

The island is a tinderbox. In 2010, North Korea, in apparent response to a South Korean artillery drill, bombarded the island with live rounds, killing four people.

The question of who fired first on Jan. 5 is misguided, said Kim Dong-yup, a professor specializing in military and security studies at Seoul’s University of North Korean Studies. He noted that the North Koreans preempted drills planned by Seoul.

“If you see the record … the South Korean government had planned artillery fire,” said Mr. Kim, citing public navigation warnings for the area posted by Seoul’s Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries on Jan. 2. “We questioned the Defense Ministry about what happened during that time, but we have not been given an answer.”

He was briefing foreign reporters in Seoul on Thursday.

“It is questionable whether the government should so casually execute a game of chicken, a power-to-power game like the current one when there is nobody to back down,” Mr. Kim said.

A newly formed civic group, Network of Borders Residents, Civil Society, Religions Groups for Peace and Solidarity, sharply criticized Seoul’s hard-line defense minister, Shin Won-sik.

On a recent visit to a South Korean air force unit, Mr. Shin remarked that the unit should plan to take out the North’s leadership. Such plans were assumed to be long in place but never publicly mentioned.

Mr. Shin’s vows to “immediately and forcefully retaliate to the end” is a “declaration of war, not a crisis-management strategy,” the group said. “We want a government that does its best to prevent war, not win it.”

A representative called on the conservative government of President Yoon Suk Yeol to “immediately halt military exercises” and “stop blaming North Korea.”

Farmers working close to the DMZ expressed similar concerns.

“Inter-Korean relations have reached their worst point,” said Lee Jae-hee, who farms in Paju, the border county north of Seoul. “Many people are worried that a local war will break out.”

Paju citizens are gathering to prevent South Korean activists from sending anti-regime leaflets over the DMZ. The previous pro-engagement administration banned that practice but the Yoon administration allowed it to resume, Mr. Lee said.

“The people of Paju … have consistently opposed inter-Korean confrontation by preventing the spread of anti-NK leaflets,” he said.

After the November collapse of a 2018 inter-Korean military agreement, “all channels of dialogue, both civilian and government,” have been closed, said Kim Yong-bin, a farmer from Cheorwon, another border county known for its wartime ruins. “Nowadays, when we see military vehicles or troops traveling the region, we look at them with a sense of unease, wondering what kind of military operation is about to begin.”

Seoul unilaterally withdrew from two clauses of the 2018 de-confliction agreement after the North launched a spy satellite last year. Pyongyang subsequently exited the entire agreement.

Blaming Pyongyang

The border farmers struggled to explain how today’s tensions differ from the past. The issues they raised — drone and helicopter flights near the DMZ and rollouts of mobile artillery from bases — were commonplace before the 2018 agreement.

Some say North Korea is raising the tensions, moving to its internal rhythms.

“They are testing like there is no tomorrow, but they have a lot of things to test,” said Andrei Lankov, a North Korea expert at Seoul’s Kookmin University. “I would not describe these launches as provocations as they are not done for political purposes. They are done to make sure everything works.”

For the North, the South’s parliamentary elections in April are unimportant, Mr. Lankov said. The results will not affect inter-Korean relations, which are conducted via the Defense, Foreign and Unification ministries, not the legislature.

Go Myong-hyun, a North Korea watcher at Seoul’s Asan Institute, told The Washington Times last week, “I think North Korea is going to return to the pattern of provocations and more provocations, then negotiations with the U.S.”

Mr. Lankov agreed that this U.S. election season “matters a lot” to North Korea. He warned that significant provocations will start later this year.

“To have any impact, they should start in summer or autumn,” he said.

Another analyst offered a novel reason for the North’s new belligerence.

Writing in The Conversation, Nusta Carranza Ko, a professor of global affairs and human security at the University of Baltimore, suggested Mr. Kim is raising tensions to deflect from local issues.

Sources with contacts in the isolated country said a passenger train derailed because of a power shortage on Dec. 23. Elites in the first two cars survived, but ordinary citizens in the other seven cars died. The news spread.

Mr. Kim is “aware that the train incident comes amid discontent and protest over policies that have seen increased government surveillance and people’s homes raided over suspicion of anti-socialist tendencies,” Ms. Ko wrote. “As such, Kim appears to be deflecting domestic anger by signaling war.”

• Andrew Salmon can be reached at asalmon@washingtontimes.com.

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