2010 comes to an end with tensions high on the Korean peninsula
December 23, 2010The normally busy streets of Seoul came to a halt during recent air raid drills.
The practice occurs every month, but after North Korea's deadly shelling of Yeonpyeong Island, the threat of war seems much more serious now for many Koreans.
The tension this year began with the sinking in March of the South Korean navy vessel, the Cheonan, which killed 46 sailors.
As a result, conservative South Korean President Lee Myung Bak took an even harder line on North Korea's Kim Jong-il regime, cutting off business ties and pushing for international condemnation at the UN.
Clear motivation for shelling of Yeonpyeong
But just as relations seemed to be improving this fall, artillery fell on Yeonpyeong Island.
Andrei Lankov, a North Korea analyst at Seoul’s Kookmin University, thinks Pyongyang’s motivations for launching these attacks were clear.
"North Korea is not receiving aid from South Korea and the United States, and it makes them increasingly dependent on China. They are not desperate but they are dependent on China and don’t want this, so they are trying to create tensions," he explained.
Lankov added that if Pyongyang, which is currently in the midst of a power transition, thought Washington and Seoul felt threatened enough, they would have no choice but to resume engagement and start handing out material support.
"Need to engage in dialogue"
Chung Dong Young, a former South Korean minister of unification and a lawmaker in the main opposition party, said that the attacks this year had only been made possible because of President Lee’s stance on the North.
"If we really want to prevent war, we need the courage to engage in dialogue." he said. "With a dialogue, there would be no sound of gunfire. The Yeonpyeong shelling broke out during an absence of dialogue and in a heightened state of tension. For the stability of the Korean Peninsula, we should immediately resume talks."
But Chung added that it was not only South Korea's responsibility to engage the North. He said the US has also failed to recognize Pyongyang’s overtures.
Earlier this week, North Korea reportedly told a visiting US politician that it would allow inspections of its nuclear facilities, a move seen as a way to jumpstart the stalled six-party denuclearization talks.
But for now, both Washington and Seoul seem reluctant to re-engage. South Korea has vowed it will not tolerate any further provocations from the North.
Lankov predicted that there would be more such provocations. "Maybe in late spring. This time, maybe for the first time in decades, there are good reasons to be afraid, just slightly afraid, of a real Korean War, because the public mood in South Korea is extremely tense."
He thought that this tension could push Seoul into striking back harder than ever before.
Author: Jason Strother (Seoul)
Editor: Anne Thomas