Getting to Yes in KoreaPresident George W. Bush had pinned North Korea to an "axis of evil" but then neglected Pyongyang until it tested a nuclear device. Would the new administration make similar mistakes? When the Clinton White House prepared to bomb North Korea's nuclear facilities, private citizen Jimmy Carter mediated to avert war and set the stage for a deal freezing North Korea's plutonium production. The 1994 Agreed Framework collapsed after eight years, but when Pyongyang went critical, the negotiations got serious. Each time the parties advanced one or two steps, however, their advance seemed to spawn one or two steps backward. Clemens distils lessons from U.S. negotiations with North Korea, Russia, China, and Libya and analyses how they do-and do not-apply to six-party and bilateral talks with North Korea in a new political era. |
Contents
1 | |
2 How Korea Became Korea | 14 |
3 How Korea Became Japan | 36 |
4 How One Korea Became Two | 51 |
5 How North Korea Got the Bomb | 70 |
6 How Kissinger and Zhou Enlai Got to Yes | 88 |
7 How to Get to Yes across Cultures | 103 |
8 How Carter and Clinton Got Closer to Yes with Pyongyang | 113 |
9 How Bush and Kim Jong Il Got to Deadlock | 132 |
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accessed June Acheson administration Agreed Framework agreement Albright ambassador American April arms control Asian assistance authoritarian became Beijing Bush Bush’s Chapter China Chinese Clemens Jr Clinton communist Confucian cooperation culture deal declared delegation demanded denuclearization détente diplomacy diplomats Document DPRK East economic Embassy of Hungary February FRUS global Gorbachev hard-liners Hungarian Foreign Ministry IAEA Iraq issues Japan Japanese juche July Kim Il Sung Kim Jong Kim Jong Il Kissinger Korean peninsula Kremlin Libya Manchuria Mao Zedong military missile Moscow mutual gain Nations negotiations North Korea Northeast Asia nuclear power nuclear weapons Obama October other’s parties peace People’s plutonium political Pyongyang reactor regime relations reported Russia secretary Security Council Seoul side six-party talks South Soviet Stalin Strategic Taiwan Tokyo treaty troops U.S. forces U.S. policy U.S. president United University Press uranium USSR wanted Washington White House Yongbyon York Zhou Enlai