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Jeong is not pessimistic. Many critics have pointed to the recent meeting in Washington between Presidents Bush and Roh as merely papering over the fractures in the relationship, but Jeong thinks more may have been accomplished than meets the eye. He also believes the U.S.' North Korea policy can get back on track with a few simple steps. Currently, the administration views North Korea primarily as a rogue state. It hopes to isolate the DPRK-shown most recently by the sanctions it imposed on banks doing business with North Korea-and wait for its collapse. South Korea, on the other hand, sees North Korea less as a security threat and more as a weak, distrustful neighbor in need of aid and integration into the regional economy. U.S. officials resent South Korea's aid and support for the North, believing it props up a regime best left to collapse. Jeong exhorted the Bush administration to recognize and accept that South Korea's view of the DPRK won't fall into line with its own. He added that all parties' interests would best be served by a resumption of the Six-Party Talks in Beijing, which the North has been boycotting in response to the financial sanctions. Those sanctions have effectively communicated the U.S. position to the DPRK, Jeong said, and should now be dropped to facilitate talks. He then laid out several additional steps the U.S. should take to begin a successful policy of broad engagement with the North:
If it can accomplish all of the above, U.S. policymakers will be able to spend much less time worrying about he future of Northeast Asia. About the Speaker Envisioning an Alternative U.S. Policy on North Korea with Jeong Se-Hyun Prior to assuming his current position in January 2002, Minister Jeong Se-hyun held many other high-level positions. He has served as director of the Northeast Asian Research Institute, vice president and president of the Korea Institute of National Unification and presidential secretary for unification affairs at the Blue House. In recent years, he also has been a visiting professor at Myungji and Kyunghee universities and a special advisor for unification affairs for the director of the National Intelligence Service (NIS). Minister Jeong is the author of Perspective of Unification of Two Koreas (1982, Seoul) and A Comparison of the Two Koreas (1990, Seoul). He holds a B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. in international relations from Seoul National University. |



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