No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2025
Regardless of rhetoric, there is little doubt that North Korea is not prepared to give up its nuclear capability any time soon. Although it might simply be a bargaining position, Pyongyang has even made it clear that there can be no such outcome until the whole world becomes free of nuclear weapons. That creates a new strategic reality – even if we do not recognize North Korea as a nuclear power, we will have to live side by side with it as a defacto nuclear possessing state for a considerable period of time. While the United States is separated from it by an ocean, for Russia, China and South Korea there is just a river or a border. How are all the parties concerned going to deal with this country?
1 The Pyongyang media stated in October 2009, “In order to make the Korean Peninsula nuclear-free, it is necessary to make a comprehensive and total elimination of all the nuclear weapons on earth, to say nothing of those in and around south Korea. A prerequisite for global denuclearization is for the U.S., which tops the world's list of nuclear weapons, to cut down and dismantle them, to begin with.” Link
2 DPRK Foreign Ministry Vehemently Refutes UNSC's “Presidential Statement”, KCNA, 14 April 2009.
3 For details see Georgy Toloraya, ‘The Economic Future of North Korea: Will the Market Rule? ‘KEI Academic Paper Series on Korea Vol.2, (Washington, 2007).