BFF-26 China hosts Japan, South Korea with eyes on nuclear North

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BFF-26

CHINA-JAPAN-SKOREA-US-POLITICS-DIPLOMACY

China hosts Japan, South Korea with eyes on nuclear North

CHENGDU, China, Dec 24, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – China hosted the leaders of
squabbling neighbours South Korea and Japan for their first meeting in over a
year on Tuesday, flexing its diplomatic muscle with America’s two key
military allies in Asia and seeking regional unity on how to deal with a
belligerent North Korea.

The gathering in the southwestern city of Chengdu was held with the clock
ticking on a threatened “Christmas gift” from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
that could reignite global tensions over its nuclear programme.

Kim has promised the unidentified “gift” — which analysts and American
officials believe could be a provocative missile test — if the United States
does not make concessions in their nuclear talks by the end of the year.

The gathering also featured the first bilateral meeting between South
Korea’s Moon Jae-in and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in 15 months.

Ties between their two nations have hit rock bottom in recent months over
trade issues and other disputes related to decades of bitter wrangling over
Japan’s 1910-1945 occupation of the Korean peninsula.

The United States has frequently urged its two allies to bury the hatchet –
– worried that their poor relations were complicating diplomacy in Asia —
although it has held off on direct mediation.

China is appearing to fill that void with the Chengdu event.

“As the region’s major power, China hopes to show its diplomatic presence
to the world by bringing the Japanese and South Korean leaders to the same
table,” Haruko Satoh, professor and expert on Chinese politics at Osaka
University, told AFP.

At separate lead-up meetings in Beijing on Monday with Chinese President Xi
Jinping, Moon and Abe both spoke of China’s diplomatic heft in the region.

Before leaving for China, Abe told reporters that links with Seoul
remained “severe”, but said the Chengdu meeting was important given the
regional issues at stake.

Abe and Moon were photographed smiling and shaking hands during the
meeting.

The relationship between Japan and South Korea is overshadowed by the 35
years of brutal colonisation by the Japanese — including the use of sex
slaves and forced labour — that is still bitterly resented today.

– Reversed course –

Ties began a downward spiral in recent months after a series of South
Korean court rulings ordering Japanese firms to compensate wartime forced
labour victims.

These infuriated Tokyo, who insisted the matter had been settled by a 1965
treaty between the two countries.

Seoul then threatened to withdraw from a key military intelligence-sharing
pact, although it reversed course in November and agreed to extend it
“conditionally”.

After the trilateral meeting, both Japan and South Korea urged the
resumption of talks between Pyongyang and Washington, which have been largely
deadlocked since a second summit between President Donald Trump and North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un Kim in Hanoi collapsed at the start of this year.

“It is important that we give our utmost support to the US-North Korea
process toward complete denuclearisation of North Korea,” said Abe.

The leaders of the three countries also promised to help promote dialogue
over the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told a press conference they had “reaffirmed
that denuclearization of the peninsula and the lasting peace in East Asia are
the common goal of the three countries”.

In an effort to pressure the United States, the North has conducted a
series of short-range missile tests and threatened to go further with its
“Christmas gift”.

If the North fired an intercontinental ballistic missile in defiance of UN
sanctions, it would destroy Trump’s argument that he had succeeded in
reducing risks from North Korea.

Former US national security adviser John Bolton, who was dismissed in
September, on Monday criticised Trump’s strategy and warned the North posed
an “imminent” threat.

“The risk to US forces & our allies is imminent & more effective policy is
required before NK has the technology to threaten the American homeland,”
tweeted Bolton.

BSS/AFP/RY/1415 hrs