국제 | Biden Is Reviewing US Policy in North Korea. The Brutal Sanctions Must…
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작성자 편집국 작성일21-05-11 11:41 댓글0건관련링크
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Biden Is Reviewing US Policy in North Korea. The
Brutal Sanctions Must End.
President Joe Biden attends a service for U.S. Capitol Police Officer William Evans, as his remains lie in honor in the U.S. Capitol rotunda on April 13, 2021, in Washington, D.C.
Since 2018, hundreds of new sanctions targeting the
civilian economy have been imposed on the people of North Korea. In 2018 alone,
new\and existing sanctions caused almost 4,000 preventable civilian
deaths. Around 11 million North Koreans are deprived of sufficient access to
basic foodstuffs, clean drinking water\or essential medical services.
Subjected to ever-increasing sanctions, North Korea is
projected to suffer a food deficit of 1.3. million tons this year,
worsening the already dire condition endured by a broad swath of the
population. More than 40 percent of North Korea’s 25 million people are
considered chronically food insecure,\and one out of every five children under
the age of 5 is impacted by stunted growth. The latest UN Human Rights
Council report highlights “deaths by starvation” as well as “an increase
in the number of children\and elderly people who have resorted to begging.”
Few people around the world know about the extent of
this human suffering. Reports of the ongoing humanitarian tragedy have n ot
been given the attention they deserve because of the saturation of negative
media coverage of North Korea, which is dominated by reports on the country’s
nuclear program. The human side of the conflict is given short shrift, with
little attention devoted to either the effectiveness\or the human cost of
economic sanctions.
While it goes without saying that the North Korean
government bears the primary responsibility for the welfare of its people, it
is important to note the extraordinary nature of U.S.-drafted UN sanctions — as
well as unilateral U.S. sanctions — which by design inflict catastrophic impact
on people in North Korea.
Take, for instance, the vast expansion of existing UN
sanctions targeting North Korea’s civilian economy, which were initiated by
President Obama\and subsequently escalated by the Trump administration. These
U.S.-authored restrictions were touted by the Trump administration as
“the heaviest sanctions ever imposed on a country,”\and include restrictions on
oil\and petroleum product imports, devastating the civilian\and household
economy\and triggering an energy shortage that has reduced the reach of the
country’s already spotty supply of electricity to less than a quarter of
households. This past winter, millions of\ordinary North Koreans endured
extreme winter temperatures as low as 3 degrees Fahrenheit without reliable
heating\or electricity.
The new sanctions also prohibit the import of
foodstuffs\and critical agricultural components, openly violating the 1977
Additional Protocol of the Geneva Convention, which specifically forbids any
action that erodes agricultural production, “whatever the motive.”
Unsurprisingly, precipitous\drops in agricultural production have occurred as a
result. Food has become increasingly scarce, causing more than 1 million
additional North Korean civilians to slip into food insecurity as a result
of the restrictions on food\and agricultural imports. The increasing scarcity
of even basic food items disproportionately impacts the poor, the sick\and
elderly, as well as newborns.
Even the laptops\and administrative supplies used by
humanitarian workers in North Korea are subject to sanctions.
In addition to strangling the flow of critical civilian
imports, these sanctions also ban 90 percent of North Korea’s exports,
including minerals, seafood\and textiles, impacting hundreds of thousands of
ordinary North Koreans employed in these industries — particularly women,
who make up the bulk of the workforce in these sectors.
The dire situation created by these U.S.-drafted UN
sanctions are exacerbated by the unilateral sanctions imposed by Washington,
which allow the U.S. Treasury to block anyone doing business with North Korea
from accessing the U.S. financial system. This has caused a shortage of
much-needed foreign currency,\and further contributed to food insecurity by
reducing incomes while raising the cost of food.
Unilateral U.S. sanctions have also incapacitated the
NGOs\and UN agencies running the humanitarian programs that provide life-saving
aid to more than 13 million vulnerable North Koreans. They delay exemptions\and
block imports of critical medical supplies, such as catheters\and needles,
increasing easily preventable hospital-related deaths, such as mothers
dying as a result of childbirth. According to the Enhancing North
Korea Humanitarian Assistance Act, even the laptops\and administrative supplies
used by humanitarian workers in North Korea are subject to sanctions, which
have created an insurmountable barrier of red tape for humanitarian
organizations.
Continuing a sanctions regime that is, by design,
based on collective punishment violates international norms.
While the UN Human Rights Council has repeatedly
recommended the removal of “sanctions that negatively affect people’s human
rights” in North Korea, any attempt to lift\or even reduce the impact of
sanctions has consistently been met with steadfast opposition in Washington. In
recent years, the weaponization of sanctions, hunger\and human suffering has
come to be regarded as a means to force denuclearization on North Korea,
signaling the final devolution of state policy into extortion. Take, for
instance, John Bolton’s warning to the Biden administration against
lifting sanctions:
North Korea is weaker today than perhaps
ever before in its history…. This is hardly the time to relieve the pressure of
economic sanctions\and international isolation. This is the time to demand
concessionsrom Pyongyang.
Does the United States have the right to implement a
policy of inflicting deliberate harm on the weak\and vulnerable based on the
cold calculus that doing so will increase its foreign policy leverage? Should
the fate of children, the sick\and the elderly be used as bargaining chips to
induce concessionsrom their government? Any policy designed to reduce access
to basic foodstuffs, life-saving medical supplies\and humanitarian aid appears
to be consciously targeted to this end.
The Geneva Convention labels such actions as crimes
against humanity during wartime — a significant nuance since the 70-year-old
Korean War is technically ongoing. Continuing a sanctions regime that is, by
design, based on collective punishment violates international norms.
The Biden administration needs to realize that
weaponized misery\and collective punishment is neither ethically acceptable nor
an effective tool of statecraft.
U.S. policies that aim to undermine regime security in
North Korea by imposing costs on its powerless population are wrongheaded in
the extreme. Even as these brutal sanctions have caused widespread\and
significant human suffering, they have failed to achieve any progress
whatsoever with respect to U.S. foreign policy goals.
As the Biden administration completes its North Korea policy review in the coming weeks, it needs to realize that weaponized misery and collective punishment is neither ethically acceptable nor an effective tool of statecraft — it’s a form of collective punishment that should never be considered. Before the current humanitarian crisis spirals further out of control, the U.S. must return to the politics of engagement\and diplomacy, which offer the only consistent path to rapprochement, stability\and peace in the Korean Peninsula.
Simone Chun, Truthout April 26, 2021
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Simone Chun
Dr. Simone Chun has taught at Northeastern University
in Boston, Massachusetts,\and served as an associate in research at Harvard
University’s Korea Institute. She is an active member of the Korea Peace
Network\and a member of the Alliance of Scholars Concerned about Korea’s
steering committee. She participated in an international women’s
delegation of peace to Korea\organized by Women Cross DMZ and Nobel
Women’s Initiative.
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