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The Obama Administration and the Korean Peninsula

Ms. Lim Yun-suk, President of the Seoul Foreign Correspondents Club, members of the SFCC, distinguished guests!

Thank you for giving me this opportunity to stand before you. This is my 11th speaking engagement at this prestigious club. Thank you again for all the support you have given me to this day.

Respected guests!

Today, I wish to share a few words with you regarding ¡°The Obama Administration and the Korean peninsula.¡± The inauguration of the Obama administration can be understood in a global context. With the Obama administration in office, the world will move more closely towards an era of multilateral cooperation, leaving the era of US unilateralism behind. The election of Obama offers hope and excitement for countries and people around the world including those that have been marginalized in Africa. Brimming with newly found hope, the world can now dream of bringing an era of peace and full-fledged cooperation to reality.

Unlike the hard line policy of the Bush administration, the Obama administration is expected to take a different approach in dealing with North Korea. Rather, the new administration is highly likely to move down the path of direct dialogue and package deals that former US President Clinton had taken. During the campaign, President-elect Obama already expressed his willingness to discuss Korean peninsula issues including nuclear weapons with North Korean leaders, if he is elected.

Distinguished guests!

Now I would like to turn to my main message for American President-elect Obama, Chairman of National Defense Commission of North Korea Kim Jong-il, President Lee Myung-bak, and Korean citizens.

First, I recommend that President Obama attach priority to resolving the North Korean nuclear issue upon being sworn in. North Korea issues have made significant progress through the Six-Party Process, making them less intractable than the Iranian nuclear issue. The resolution of the North Korean issue is likely to strengthen momentum for bringing about the eventual denuclearization of Iran. When addressing the North Korean nuclear issue, I would suggest that President Obama boldly pursue a ¡°wholesale package deal.¡± This means simultaneously giving what you can give and taking what you can take, in cooperation with the Six-Party Process. An approach of this kind will work better when negotiating with countries run by one man, like North Korea.

The United States should assure North Korea of its security and its integration into the world economy, and also promise normalized diplomatic ties with North Korea. In return, the United States should secure North Korea¡¯s agreement on the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula including the complete abandonment of its nuclear program, abandonment of long-range missiles, and establishment of a durable peace structure on the Korean peninsula, which will take shape through a declaration of the end of the Korean War, arms control, and a peace treaty. Let¡¯s give North Korea what they need and take what we need.

Chairman Kim Jong-il aspires to improve North Korea¡¯s relationship with the United States. I assure you that this is an indisputable fact. Chairman Kim prefers a broadly inclusive negotiation. Therefore, if the US conducts give-and-take negotiations and builds mutual trust, the North Korean nuclear issue and related matters would be brought to a successful end. Our goal is to encourage North Korea to pursue openness and reform and become a second China or a second Vietnam.

I hope my second point is heeded by Chairman Kim Jong-il. North Korea should stop speaking ill of the South Korean government, especially President Lee Myung-bak. North Korea denounces the South Korean government and its leaders, all the while emphasizing the importance of respecting the June 15th Joint Declaration and October 4th Declaration, which enshrine the spirit of reconciliation and cooperation. The behavior is self-contradicting and has gone too far. And they have to understand that the South Korean people do not condone such reckless criticism. I hope that if the South Korean government initiates basic measures to open inter-Korean talks, Chairman Kim will respond positively to the initiative and come forward to resume long-overdue inter-Korean dialogue. The South and the North should try to speak in harmony at the Six-Party talks as well as during the process of establishing a peace and security structure in Northeast Asia farther down the road. Only then can Korea preserve the identity of its people and embark on the road to peace, prosperity and unification.

We should reflect on painful and tragic moments in Korean history, when Koreans divided into pro-China, pro-Russia, and pro-Japan factions at the end of the Chosun dynasty. We should learn hard lessons from the experience of having failed to act in unison as one people in dealing with big neighboring countries. Some speak of the North¡¯s intention of ¡°making friends with America, while leaving South Korea out in the cold.¡± This neither should nor can happen. Instead, a better and smarter choice for North Korea is to gain South Korean support through reconciliation and cooperation when dealing with the United States at the negotiating table.

The third is for President Lee Myung-bak. During the campaign, he visited me and we discussed issues concerning the Korean Peninsula. At the time, he stated several times that he fully agreed with my Sunshine policy and concomitant reconciliation and cooperation policies towards North Korea. I would like to believe that President Lee¡¯s thinking remains unchanged.

President Lee should not ignore the possibility of a rapid improvement in the relationship between Pyongyang and Washington after the Obama administration takes office. We need only recall the Clinton administration years when North Korea-US relations progressed rapidly. If we remain mired in today¡¯s confrontation, we will be left with no role and end up in isolation. Back in 1994 when the Geneva agreement was signed, Seoul declared that it would ¡°not shake hands with parties holding nuclear weapons,¡± bringing upon itself complete isolation and the bitter experience of being driven apart from Washington by Pyongyang. We should also draw lessons from the fact that America carried through with the removal of North Korea from the list of terrorism-sponsoring states despite fierce opposition from Japan.

I believe President Lee should address two things first in order to open dialogue with North Korea. First, he should takes measure to stop balloons from ping anti-North Korea leaflets. There is no knowing how seriously it gets on the North¡¯s nerves and consequently aggravates inter-Korean relations. Second, President Lee should acknowledge the legitimacy of the June 15th Joint Declaration and the October 4th Declaration. It is the obligation of an incumbent President to carry out and respect official international agreements signed by his or her predecessors. Unless these two important declarations are respected, it will not be easy to resuscitate inter-Korean dialogue. If President Lee finds problems, for example, with certain economic projects as he seeks to implement the two declarations after acknowledging them, he can hold a 3rd inter-Korean Summit to remedy those problems and refine the declarations. I take note of the fact that President Lee has never officially denied the validity of the two declarations.

Lastly, I would like to appeal to my respected and beloved Korean citizens. The South and North have never been free from mutual fear and animosity over the past half-century. Not even for a single day. But since the June 15th inter-Korean summit in 2000, we put an end to the era of distrust and confrontation and opened a new road of reconciliation and cooperation. How relaxed and comfortable we have been over the past decade! We were able to witness how North Koreans whom we had treated as enemies and as being of a different kind were actually our brethren sharing the same blood, the same language and the same culture. Thus far, the people to people relationship between the two Koreas has improved very quickly.

When we cooperate, both Koreas will enjoy peace and economic prosperity. The identity of Koreans will be firmly embedded in the larger political arena of Northeast Asia. However, should we fail to cooperate we will be consigning ourselves to a tragic situation. We have to get back on the right track before it is too late. The prolonged deadlock in inter-Korean relations works in nobody¡¯s favor and makes everyone worse off.

My fellow citizens!

Please give your support to President Lee Myung-bak as you did for me in the past. Please watch, support, and encourage him to lead the Korean government in the direction I have so far envisioned.

I wish every one of you a very happy new year.

Thank you.
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