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19 August, 2016 00:00 00 AM
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Cold War echoes as inter-Korean diplomacy goes back to basics

AFP
Cold War echoes as inter-Korean diplomacy goes back to basics
This file photo shows North Korean soldiers keeping watch toward the South side as it rains at the truce village of Panmunjom, along the Demilitarized Zone. AFP PHOTO

AFP, SEOUL: One year after North and South Korea vowed to resume a constructive dialogue, they have instead resurrected a spirit of Cold War-era antagonism, complete with cross-border propaganda shouting matches, spy messaging and defection dramas.
Official contact between the two Koreas has never been easy, but the current situation, with all official lines of communication severed and a host of flash-point issues raising tensions, appears to be particularly volatile and fraught with risk.
“The relations between North and South Korea have never been as tense as they are now since the Cold War period of the 1970s”, said professor Kim Yong-Hyun, a North Korean expert at Dongguk University.
High-profile defections are suddenly back in vogue, with the North Korean deputy ambassador to Britain, Thae Yong-Ho, handing Seoul a propaganda coup this week by defecting to South Korea with his family.
Although Thae’s motives were probably as much personal as ideological—he has two children, one of school age—South Korean officials attributed his decision to a straightforward choice between good and evil.
On his reasons for defecting, Thae “cited disgust with (North Korean leader) Kim Jong-Un’s regime and admiration for South Korea’s free, democratic system,” said Unification Ministry spokesman Jeong Joon-Hee.
This sort of old-school diplomatic baiting has become increasingly common at a time of almost zero cross-border contact.
As tensions rose in the wake of North Korea’s fourth nuclear test in January, Pyongyang shut down the two existing hotlines with South Korea—one used by the military and one for government-to-government communications.
And last month it severed its only direct communications link with the United States when it shut down the so-called “New York channel” which had previously served as a key point of contact between North Korean and US diplomats at the United Nations. 
“The total absence of channels for dialogue between the two Koreas as well as between Pyongyang and Washington is a real cause for concern,” Kim Yong-Hyun said.
Inter-Korean communication has now gone back to the basics, with both sides effectively reduced to shouting across the heavily militarised border. Banks of loudspeakers have been dusted off and brought up to the frontlines, blasting music and propaganda messages into each other’s territory.
In another nod to Cold War methodology, North Korea appears to have resumed the transmission of coded messages over state radio—presumably meant for spies operating in the South.
The short-wave transmissions—the first of their type for around 20 years—were picked up by the South’s intelligence agency in mid-June and comprised a female announcer reading long lists of numbers for several minutes. It wasn’t meant to be this way.
In August last year, a top North Korean negotiator was trumpeting a “dramatic turning point” for inter-Korean relations after the two sides agreed to defuse a crisis that had pushed them to the brink of an armed conflict.
The accord, which the lead South Korean negotiator also hailed as providing a “new momentum” for cross-border cooperation, included a commitment to resuming a regular, high-level dialogue.
But just two weeks later, the two sides were back in familiar territory, trading insults and accusations of insincerity.
They did finally manage to hold vice-ministerial talks in December, but the discussions went nowhere and the prospect of further dialogue was then wiped out for good by the North’s nuclear test the following month.
The strong international reaction to the test emboldened the South to take a hard line and match the North’s brinkmanship, instead of turning the other cheek as it had often done in the past
The diplomatic fallout was toxic enough to kill off the sole remaining North-South cooperation project—the Kaesong joint industrial zone, which had managed to ride out pretty much every inter-Korean crisis thrown up since it opened for business in 2004

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Editor : M. Shamsur Rahman

Published by the Editor on behalf of Independent Publications Limited at Media Printers, 446/H, Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1215.
Editorial, News & Commercial Offices : Beximco Media Complex, 149-150 Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1208, Bangladesh. GPO Box No. 934, Dhaka-1000.

Editor : M. Shamsur Rahman
Published by the Editor on behalf of Independent Publications Limited at Media Printers, 446/H, Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1215.
Editorial, News & Commercial Offices : Beximco Media Complex, 149-150 Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1208, Bangladesh. GPO Box No. 934, Dhaka-1000.

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