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The UN’s relief efforts in NK are well-intentioned but misguided

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In a plaintive appeal that gives chutzpah a bad name, the United Nations (I’m not making this up) has issued an appeal for $111 million in humanitarian aid for North Korea, as aid agencies say 41 percent of the population is undernourished.

Yes, that Korea, the one that has enough money to conduct almost weekly ballistic missile tests, build ICBMs, test nuclear weapons and provide Kim Jong Un with endless supplies of lobsters and snow crab. And did I mention Kim’s ski resort, luxury waterparks and dolphinariums?

{mosads}I don’t mean to make light of, or suggest indifference to, the tragic plight of some 23 million North Koreans outside of political elite circles. The horrendous policies of the Kim family dynasty’s distorted economy have caused mass starvation before: Estimates are as many as 2 million died as a result of a protracted famine from 1995-98.

 

That 41 percent of North Koreans may be undernourished, some 60,000 facing starvation and medicines lacking as U.N. agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) contend may well be true. But this is a calculated policy of the terror-controlled state in Pyongyang.

We have seen in previous humanitarian aid efforts how the regime in Pyongyang exploits such good intentions. They charge exorbitant taxes and fees to aid-providing NGOs. They refuse to allow aid providers full access to confirm that aid reaches its intended recipients. We know that in the past, wheat, rice and other foodstuffs ended up in the stockpiles of the North Korean military.

The appeal will undoubtedly lead well-intentioned donors to help. But unless the regime allows full monitoring from unloading at port to end use, the regime will take credit for the “tribute, redirect some portion of the aid to loyal supporters and reinforce the regime writ large.

Full transparency should be an iron-clad condition for any food or medical assistance.

Though U.N. officials implore us not to let dastardly politics get in the way of responding to dire needs, I fear the opposite may occur. I would not be surprised if the U.N. appeal will be used to help rationalize South Korean aid to the North as a “deliverable” when they hold their North-South Summit on April 27.

There is no satisfying solution to this dilemma of how to help the innocent victims of an insidious regime. But the repugnant idea of helping Pyongyang — strengthening the status quo — as it beavers away, building more nuclear weapons and building an ICBM that could reach American shores, has its own moral dilemma.

So let me offer a modest proposal that could help reduce the missile and nuclear threat from Pyongyang.

As the South Korea government of Moon Jae In prepares for its summit with the North and as the Trump administration ramps up planning for the Trump-Kim summit, add an item to the agenda of each: Offer Kim $10 million for each nuclear weapon and ballistic missile launcher he turns over to the U.S. and/or South Korea.

He can then buy all the food and medicine he needs. Simply ask him to tell what ports to send ships or airports to send planes to collect these weapons of mass destruction.

I offer this part in jest to underscore the absurdity of the situation. But if Kim is serious about denuclearization — and we have seen this movie one too many times before — any negotiated deal would have to be front-loaded to pass the laugh test.

Nukes for food would not be a bad demonstration of both North Korean and U.S. intent. And it would get us away from the current situation which in effect is: Feed me or I’ll kill you.

Robert Manning is a senior fellow of the Brent Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security at the Atlantic Council and its Foresight, Strategy and Risks Initiative. He served as a senior counselor to the undersecretary of State for Global Affairs from 2001 to 2004, as a member of the U.S. Department of State Policy Planning Staff from 2004 to 2008, and on the National Intelligence Council (NIC) Strategic Futures Group, 2008-12. Tweet: @Rmanning4 

Tags Aftermath of the Korean War Foreign relations of North Korea International relations Kim Jong-un Korean People's Army North Korea North Korea–South Korea relations North Korea–United States relations United Nations

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