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ID092931
Title ProperNew North Korean policy under the Obama administration
LanguageENG
AuthorCooper, Joanna C
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)For over half a century, the Korean Peninsula has posed a foreign-policy dilemma for every American president. During this time, continuity, rather than change, has been the prevailing characteristic of U.S. foreign policy. The recent Bush administration, in relation to its policy towards North Korea, was characterized by its dualism - believing in the same goal, but divided over goal achievement actions. Unfortunately, the internal division of policy at home has resulted in the North Korean nuclear issue being in a worse shape today than it was eight years ago after the Clinton-Bush regime change. After President Bush refused to follow Clinton's engagement path, North Korea significantly increased its plutonium stockpile, tested nuclear bombs and announced itself a "nuclear weapons state." President Barack Obama has inherited difficult issues and initiatives not only on the home front but also internationally. The new Obama administration is inundated with a plethora of policy issues ranging from economics to foreign policy. In the past few years, many experts in North Korean policy have juxtaposed various strategies that have been used and should be included with relation to North Korea. This paper will underline motives for North Korea's actions, updates of previously communicated policy options with real-time information, and offer a unique twist, with truths that are often overlooked, on how they should be implemented in the new Obama era, moving forward.
`In' analytical NoteNorth Korean Review Vol. 5, No. 2; Fall 2009: p.72 - 80
Journal SourceNorth Korean Review Vol. 5, No. 2; Fall 2009: p.72 - 80
Key WordsPresident George Bush ;  President Barack Obama ;  North Korea ;  Six - Party Talks ;  Nuclear Weapon State ;  Limited Withdrawal


 
 
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