Skip to content
AuthorAuthor
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

North Korea may have gained bragging rights on Monday as the world’s newest nuclear power, but the pivotal question now is whether the secretive communist government can survive the political fallout.

While the United States and Japan have long pushed for a hard line against North Korea, there were early indications Monday that South Korea and China, the North’s chief benefactors, might be reconsidering their support for the government of Kim Jong Il.

There were also concerns that Pyongyang’s claims of a nuclear test could touch off an arms race in Northeast Asia.

China and South Korea have poured billions of dollars in aid and investment into North Korea, propping up Kim’s government under the assumption that a collapse there would send millions of desperate refugees pouring across the country’s borders. The risk of such an economic calamity, they have gambled, has outweighed the risk of a nuclear-armed North Korea.

But the announcement of a test, analysts said, might have represented a tipping point. In a telephone call with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, China’s foreign minister condemned North Korea for having “ignored universal opposition of the international community,” the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The minister, Li Zhaoxing, also emphasized that the Chinese government was “resolutely opposed” to the nuclear test.

South Korea immediately halted delivery of an emergency assistance package to help the North deal with recent floods. President Roh Moo Hyun suggested his country’s “sunshine policy” of engagement, of which he was a vocal supporter, had failed.

“The South Korean government at this point cannot continue to say that this engagement policy is effective,” Roh said in a nationally televised speech.

“Ultimately, it is not something we should give up on, but objectively speaking, the situation has changed. Being patient and accepting whatever North Korea does is no longer acceptable,” Roh said.

Any shift in policy by China or South Korea would be at least partly based on the anticipated reaction of Japan, the nation that feels most threatened by North Korea’s ballistic missiles. Analysts have assumed that a nuclear-armed North Korea would lead Tokyo to accelerate plans to redraft its pacifist constitution and rearm itself with a more aggressive military.

Last week, a U.S. congressional report went as far as to suggest that a test by the North could set in motion a domino effect in which Japan, South Korea and perhaps Taiwan pursue nuclear weapons, touching off an arms race that would dramatically escalate the consequences of regional disputes.

Although some observers were quick to caution that China’s criticism of North Korea might not necessarily translate into action, there was little question that the reported test had deeply embarrassed China.

The Chinese government has taken the lead in the diplomatic effort to denuclearize North Korea at long-stalled six-party talks in Beijing, bringing to the table the United States, Japan, Russia, and South Korea and North Korea.