The US wants China to curb North Korea. But can it? And would Beijing even want to?
- Washington thinks ‘Beijing has a role to play’ in curbing Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions by using its influence over the hermit state
- Yet observers are doubtful that China has the power – or inclination – to rein in an old ally it has long seen as a useful buffer to the US
But with tension simmering between the US and China, especially over Taiwan, the issue may not only be if China has the ability to influence North Korea’s behaviour, but to what extent it is in Beijing’s interests to tame a neighbour it has long seen as a useful buffer to the US.
“From China’s … perspective, North Korea can serve as a force multiplier to challenge America’s position in the Pacific,” said Craig Singleton, a former US government official now with the Foundation for Defence of Democracies. “Simply put, the more countries willing to challenge or complicate the US-led security order in the Indo-Pacific, the better.”
Even before Friday’s missile launch, Biden raised the stakes when he told Xi at last week’s G20 gathering in Indonesia that North Korea’s development of weapons would lead to an enhanced US military presence in the region.
China does not want to see a nuclear-armed North Korea, nor does it want to see US nuclear weapons in the region, but the prospect of an expanding US military footprint raises other priorities for China, said Jenny Town of 38 North, a Washington-based North Korea project.
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“They see the United States, South Korea and Japan forming as a security bloc, creating a need for a counter bloc, which would include North Korea,” Town said, referring to China.
“So any decision to be tough on North Korea has to be weighed against what they see as a growing incentive to deepen relations with security partners.”
China fought beside the North in the 1950-53 Korean war and has backed it economically and diplomatically ever since but its influence over the resourceful regime is limited.
“Americans have perennially overestimated China’s influence over North Korea,” said John Delury, professor of Chinese studies at Yonsei University in Seoul.
“What is China going to do?” Delury asked. “Sanction North Korea, which cut itself off from the world for three years because of Covid and continued testing missiles? The whole point is China doesn’t control North Korea.”
Nevertheless, a senior US administration official said Washington was in regular contact with Beijing in the hope it can help persuade Pyongyang to stop alarming the region with displays of its nuclear ambitions.
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“We do think that Beijing has a role to play,” the US official said. “It will definitely be part of our diplomacy to try to get China to … use its influence.”
China’s foreign ministry has referred to North Korea’s “reasonable concerns” and called for a “balanced solution” in accordance with what it calls a “two-track approach” of promoting denuclearisation and establishing a peace mechanism on the Korean peninsula.
“China has always been committed to maintaining peace and stability on the peninsula … It is willing to work with all parties,” it said this week in response to a question about its policy.
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Tong Zhao, a visiting research scholar at Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs, said if North Korean leader Kim Jong-un feels compelled to conduct a nuclear test to develop his prized deterrent he is unlikely to be put off.
“If North Korea has an inherent technical need to do the test, then I don’t think China has real leverage to stop those activities. The most China may be able to do is to delay those tests,” he said.
“I don’t think China has leverage to fundamentally change Kim Jong-un’s decision-making.”