For North Korea, US defectors can be a propaganda win, but a logistical
pain
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[July 19, 2023]
By Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea is likely to milk the border crossing by a
U.S. soldier for propaganda purposes but will probably not be able to
gain political leverage, analysts and a former North Korean diplomat
said.
Pyongyang may even end up paying a lot to keep U.S. Army Private Travis
King in a gilded cage, they said.
King's fate was unclear on Wednesday, a day after he dashed into North
Korea during a tour of the tightly controlled Joint Security Area (JSA)
on the border between the two Koreas.
U.S. officials said they believe King crossed the border intentionally
and was detained by the North Koreans.
Whether a prisoner or a defector, King is likely to become a pawn in a
struggle dating back to the Cold War and the years of the 1950-1953
Korean War, analysts said.
Analysts said discussions over the soldier's fate could see some of the
first diplomatic engagement between North Korea and the United States in
years. But they see little chance the incident will affect stalled
denuclearisation talks or crack the North's lingering isolation
following the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pyongyang has never really been able to use such cases for geopolitical
leverage, said Andrei Lankov, director of the Seoul-based Korea Risk
Group.
"I cannot recall a case when they managed to use it as leverage to
extract serious concessions, but domestically they have some gains
because their propaganda presents it as another failure of another
American provocation, with the American imperialists on their knees
begging for forgiveness," he said.
Much will depend on whether North Korea views it as a good propaganda
opportunity, or whether it wants to focus on the "illegal" nature of the
crossing and treat him as a criminal with bad intentions, said Rachel
Minyoung Lee of the U.S.-based Stimson Center.
"I do not think North Korea views the latest incident as strong leverage
or an opportunity to engage the U.S.," she said.
"North Korea knows that the U.S. government is unlikely to change its
North Korea policy or its commitment to U.S. extended deterrence because
of one U.S. soldier who reportedly faced disciplinary action and
wilfully crossed into North Korea."
EXPENSIVE TREATMENT
Former North Korean diplomat Tae Yong-ho, who is a now a member of South
Korea's parliament, said holding an American soldier is probably not
very cost-effective and can be a headache for the North in the long run.
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A traffic sign is seen on the Grand
Unification Bridge which leads to the truce village Panmunjom, just
south of the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas, in Paju,
July 19, 2023. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
When a U.S. soldier defects, North Korea has to create a security
and surveillance team for them, and arrange an interpreter, a
private vehicle, driver and lodging, he said.
"In their daily lives, they couldn't go out for shopping in downtown
Pyongyang by themselves, let alone travel abroad," Tae said of other
U.S. soldiers who defected decades ago.
King might have some military intelligence but not much value given
his low rank, he added.
Pyongyang has a standard playbook for treating American and other
Western detainees or defectors well to avoid political blowback,
Lankov said, with the notable exception of U.S. college student Otto
Warmbier, who died in 2017 shortly after being released from a North
Korea prison.
He said the chances are low that King would face the same kind of
fatal treatment as Warmbier because that was a one-off event that
only led to problems for North Korea's leaders.
"They treat Western citizens dramatically different from how they
treat their own citizens," Lankov said.
Detainees are often housed in the North Korean equivalent of a
four-star hotel, he said.
"Their conditions are better not only than the average North Korean
prisoner, but of the average North Korean citizen."
From the government's point of view it makes perfect sense to
torture and kill, or at least make life as unpleasant as possible,
for domestic opposition or criminals, "because people should be
terrified," he added. "But if they treat the foreigners in the same
way, it almost definitely backfires."
Still, North Korea's lingering paranoia over the pandemic makes it
hard to predict how they may act now, he added.
North Korean border guards fatally shot and burned the body of a
South Korean fisheries official in 2020, and later leader Kim Jong
Un ordered an entire city into lockdown when a North Korean crossed
back into the country from the South.
(Reporting by Josh Smith in Seoul; Additional reporting by David
Brunnstrom in Washington and Hyonhee Shin in Seoul, Editing by Angus
MacSwan)
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