It
is clear from this data that China
recognizes that North Korea
is no longer advancing any interest of China
and that a united Korea
under Seoul control would be beneficial to China , let alone the slaves of North Korea .
The
press has not really picked up on this, but it clearly explains South Korea ’s
recent actions that are deliberately confrontational, whatever they are
saying. What must be under way is a
strategic move to topple the North Korean government. With China
onside and the USA
sitting fat and happy under Obama, every trigger can be field tested.
The
idea is to make the North Koreans provide a pretext for war. They appear to be cooperating.
The
obvious strategy is to land a task force north of the boundary line which is
heavily fortified and force North Korean units to leave dug in defenses to
oppose the landing force. This allows
air power to be well used. In the end
the boundary line can be out flanked and partially seized opening the door for
a swift northward thrust to the North Korean industrial region while the bulk
of the North Korean Army is immobilized.
It
is also possible that the North Korean military is even now preparing to
surrender to avoid bloodshed. Depending
on communication, it would be an easy option to put in place for the leadership
who know the score and have run out of hope.
Wikileaks cables reveal China 'ready to abandon North Korea '
Leaked dispatches show Beijing
is frustrated with military actions of 'spoiled child' and increasingly favours
reunified Korea
South Korean war veterans protest after North
Korea attacked Yeonpyeong
Island . The WikiLeaks
cables reveal Beijing
believes such actions are those of a 'spoiled child'. Photograph: Kim
Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
China has
signalled its readiness to accept Korean reunification and is privately
distancing itself from the North Korean regime, according to leaked US embassy cables that reveal senior Beijing figures regard
their official ally as a "spoiled child".
News of the Chinese shift comes at a crucial
juncture after the North's artillery bombardment of a South Korean island last
week that killed four people and led both sides to threaten war. China has
refused to condemn the North Korean action. But today Beijing
appeared to bow to US pressure to help bring about a diplomatic solution,
calling for "emergency consultations" and inviting a senior North
Korean official to Beijing .
The leaked North Korea dispatches detail how:
• South
Korea's vice-foreign minister said he was told by two named senior
Chinese officials that they believed Korea
should be reunified under Seoul 's control, and
that this view was gaining ground with the leadership in Beijing .
• China 's
vice-foreign minister told US officials that Pyongyang
was behaving like a "spoiled child" to get Washington 's attention in April 2009 by
carrying out missile tests.
• A Chinese ambassador warned that North
Korean nuclear activity was "a threat to the whole world's security".
• Chinese officials assessed that it could
cope with an influx of 300,000 North Koreans in the event of serious
instability, according to a representative of an international agency, but
might need to use the military to seal the border.
In highly sensitive discussions in February this year, the-then South
Korean vice-foreign minister, Chun Yung-woo, told a US ambassador, Kathleen
Stephens, that younger generation Chinese Communist party leaders no longer regarded North Korea as a useful
or reliable ally and would not risk renewed armed conflict on
the peninsula, according to a secret cable to Washington.
Chun, who has since been appointed national
security adviser to South Korea's president, said North Korea had already collapsed
economically.
Political collapse would ensue once Kim
Jong-il died, despite the dictator's efforts to obtain Chinese help and to
secure the succession for his son, Kim Jong-un.
"Citing private conversations during
previous sessions of the six-party talks , Chun claimed [the two high-level
officials] believed Korea
should be unified under ROK [South
Korea ] control," Stephens reported.
"The two officials, Chun said, were ready
to 'face the new reality' that the DPRK [North Korea] now had little value to
China as a buffer state – a view that, since North Korea's first nuclear test
in 2006, had reportedly gained traction among senior PRC [People's Republic of
China] leaders. Chun argued that in the event of a North Korean collapse, China would clearly 'not welcome' any US military
presence north of the DMZ [demilitarised zone]. Again citing his conversations
with [the officials], Chun said the PRC would be comfortable with a reunified
Korea controlled by Seoul and anchored to the US in a 'benign alliance' – as
long as Korea was not hostile towards China. Tremendous trade and labour-export
opportunities for Chinese companies, Chun said, would also help 'salve' PRC
concerns about … a reunified Korea .
"Chun dismissed the prospect of a possible PRC military
intervention in the event of a DPRK collapse, noting that China's strategic
economic interests now lie with the United
States, Japan and South Korea – not North Korea."
Chun told Stephens China was unable to
persuade Pyongyang to change its self-defeating
policies – Beijing
had "much less influence than most people believe" – and lacked the
will to enforce its views.
A senior Chinese official, speaking off the
record, also said China 's
influence with the North was frequently overestimated. But Chinese public
opinion was increasingly critical of the North's behaviour, the official said,
and that was reflected in changed government thinking.
Previously hidden tensions between Pyongyang and its only ally were also exposed by China 's then vice-foreign minister in a meeting
in April 2009 with a US
embassy official after North Korea
blasted a three-stage rocket over Japan into the Pacific. Pyongyang
said its purpose was to send a satellite into orbit but the US, South Korea and Japan saw the launch as a test of
long-range missile technology.
Discussing how to tackle the issue with the charge d'affaires at the Beijing embassy, He Yafei observed that "North Korea wanted to engage directly with the United States
and was therefore acting like a 'spoiled child' in
order to get the attention of the 'adult'. China encouraged the United States,
'after some time', to start to re-engage the DPRK," according to the
diplomatic cable sent to Washington .
A second dispatch from September last year described He downplaying the
Chinese premier's trip to Pyongyang , telling the
US
deputy secretary of state, James Steinberg: "We may not like them ... [but] they [the
DPRK] are a neighbour."
He said the premier, Wen Jiabao, would push
for denuclearisation and a return to the six-party talks. The official also
complained that North Korea
"often tried to play China
off [against] the United
States , refusing to convey information about
US-DPRK bilateral conversations".
Further evidence of China 's
increasing dismay with Pyongyang comes in a
cable in June 2009 from the US
ambassador to Kazakhstan ,
Richard Hoagland. He reported that his Chinese counterpart, Cheng Guoping. was "genuinely concerned by North Korea's
recent nuclear missile tests. 'We need to solve this problem. It is
very troublesome,' he said, calling Korea 's nuclear activity a 'threat
to the whole world's security'."
Cheng said Beijing "hopes for peaceful
reunification in the long term, but he expects the two countries to remain
separate in the short term", Hoagland reported. China 's objectives were "to
ensure they [North Korean leaders] honour their commitments on non-proliferation,
maintain stability, and 'don't drive [Kim Jong-il] mad'."
While some Chinese officials are reported to
have dismissed suggestions that North Korea
would implode after Kim's death, another cable offers evidence that Beijing has considered
the risk of instability.
It quoted a representative from an
international agency saying Chinese officials believed they could absorb
300,000 North Koreans without outside help. If they arrived "all at
once" it might use the military to seal the border, create a holding area
and meet humanitarian needs. It might also ask other countries for help.
The context of the discussions was not made
explicit, although an influx of that scale would only be likely in the event of
regime failure. The representative said he was not aware of any contingency
planning to deal with large numbers of refugees.
A Seoul embassy
cable from January 2009 said China 's
leader, Hu Jintao, deliberately ducked the issue when the South Korean
president, Lee Myung-bak, raised it at a summit.
"We understand Lee asked Hu what China
thought about the North Korean domestic political situation and whether Beijing had any
contingency plans. This time, Hu apparently pretended not to hear Lee,"
it said. The cable does not indicate the source of the reports, although
elsewhere it talks about contacts at the presidential "blue house" in
South Korea .
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