After giving the Biden administration the silent treatment for two months, North Korea this week marshalled two powerful women to warn Washington over combined military exercises with South Korea and the diplomatic consequences of its “hostile” policies toward Pyongyang.

The frustration and belligerence, however, may actually be an overture.

North Korea’s first comments toward the new US government, while filled with angry rhetoric, can be seen as the start of a diplomatic back-and-forth as the North angles to get back into stalled talks aimed at leveraging its nuclear weapons for badly needed economic benefits.

Kim Yo-jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, waits with North Korea’s nominal head of state, Kim Yong Nam, for the start of the preliminary round of the women’s hockey game between Switzerland and the combined Koreas at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Gangneung, South Korea in 2018. (AP)

The timing of the North Korean statements was carefully chosen, with the comments landing on front pages and newscasts as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin traveled to Asia for talks with US allies Tokyo and Seoul about the North Korean threat and other regional challenges.

Whether any negotiations happen may depend on the Biden administration’s policy review on North Korea, which is expected to be completed in coming weeks.

What North Korea is saying

On Tuesday, Kim Jong-un’s powerful sister berated the latest US-South Korean military exercises, which were scheduled to end a nine-day run overnight.

North Korean First Vice Foreign Minister Choe Sun Hui said in a statement that the North will continue to ignore US offers for talks unless it abandons what the North describes as hostile policies.

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin (right) and South Korean Defence Minister Suh Wook (second from left) walk during their visit to the National Cemetery in Seoul, South Korea. (AP)

Ms Choe was responding to Mr Blinken’s comments this week that Washington reached out to the North through several channels starting in mid-February but hasn’t received any response.

“What has been heard from the U.S. since the emergence of the new regime is only a lunatic theory of ‘threat from North Korea’ and groundless rhetoric about ‘complete denuclearisation,'” Ms Choe said, calling the American offers for talks a “time-delaying trick.”

Ms Choe’s statement could be an attempt by the North to create an environment to reenter nuclear negotiations from a position of strength, according to Shin Beomchul, an analyst with the Seoul-based Korea Research Institute for National Strategy.

Negotiations between Washington and Seoul have stalled for more than two years since the collapse of nuclear summitry between Kim Jong-un and former US President Donald Trump in 2019.

The two sides disagreed over the details of a plan to exchange sanctions relief for disarmament.

Pyongyang has repeatedly claimed it won’t engage in meaningful talks while Washington persists with sanctions and pressure.

“It’s clear the North is trying to strengthen its bargaining power,” Mr Shin said.

A South Korean army’s K1A2 tank moves during an exercise in Paju, South Korea, near the border with North Korea. (AP)

But North Korea could also be gearing up for harsher words for the Biden administration over Mr Blinken’s repeated condemnation in Seoul of the North’s human rights record, something Mr Trump largely ignored while pursuing media-friendly summits with Mr Kim.

That could complicate any future negotiations

The North is extremely sensitive to outside criticism over its abysmal human rights conditions, which it sees as an attack on its leadership, and Ms Choe’s statement appeared to be crafted before the North could decide on a response to Mr Blinken’s remarks.

“There’s probably going to be serious opposition from the North” over Mr Blinken’s human rights comments, said Park Won Gon, a professor of North Korea studies at Seoul’s Ewha Womans University.

Most experts agree that the North will eventually attempt to return to negotiations to try to win aid, but they differ over when — and what it would take for talks to resume.

Mr Kim has recently been defiant about advancing a nuclear arsenal he sees as his strongest guarantee of survival.

He has also urged his people to be resilient in the struggle for economic self-reliance while launching a new multiyear plan to salvage his broken economy.

In this June 12, 2018 file photo, U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un at the Capella resort on Sentosa Island in Singapore. (AP)

Mr Kim’s focus on his domestic economic drive could mean that the North stays away from talks for another year and comes back only after it becomes clear that Mr Kim’s new policies are failing, Shin said.

“If North Korea is really desperate for a quick resumption of talks, they would test-fire an intercontinental ballistic missile around April 15,” the birthday of Mr Kim’s state-founding grandfather Kim Il-sung, to pressure Washington into talks, Mr Shin said.

But he said it’s more likely that the North will avoid provoking the Biden administration — and inviting more pressure — because Mr Kim’s priority is to quietly cement his country as a nuclear power, which is also a key purpose of his domestic economic drive.

The North might still try to conduct short-range test launches that threaten South Korea but not the American homeland.

But, Mr Shin said, “they will keep any dramatic action on hold at least until the Biden administration’s North Korea policy review is out.”

Mr Kim must navigate the tricky relationship with Washington while his nation faces sanctions, pandemic border closures and crop-killing natural disasters that may be pushing the North toward worse economic instability.

Whatever moves the North makes, its recent messages signal that it won’t return to talks unless the United States offers at least some level of sanctions relief.

That, however, is unlikely to happen without a meaningful cutback in Mr Kim’s nuclear capabilities.



This content first appear on 9news

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