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ID162446
Title ProperBalance of Dependence
Other Title Informationthe Making of North Korean Foreign Policy under Kim Jong Il
LanguageENG
AuthorWoo, Seongji
Summary / Abstract (Note)The foreign policy behavior of North Korea remains puzzling to many observers
to date. This article aims to explain Pyongyang’s foreign behavior between 1995
and 2011 with a concept called the balance of dependence. Although it stood on
the brink of collapse in the 1990s, the North Korean regime defied the odds and
survived with the help of neighboring countries, namely South Korea, Japan, China,
Russia, and the United States. This article intends to explain Pyongyang’s foreign
policy under Kim Jong Il by focusing on how it deliberately built a portfolio of
dependence on its neighbors. I argue that North Korea’s foreign behavior had been
attuned to the rise and fall of assistance from other nations. It sought to disperse its
dependence among a host of potential sponsors in order not to be exclusively reliant
on a single donor state, fearing restrictions on its political autonomy. As long as its
neighbors are willing to help out, Pyongyang will continue to play one sponsor off
the others while making progress with its nuclear and missile programs.
`In' analytical NoteKorean Journal of Defence Analysis Vol. 30, No.4; Dec 2018: p.475-492
Journal SourceKorean Journal of Defence Analysis Vol: 30 No 4
Key WordsNorth Korea ;  Kim Jong Il ;  North Korean ;  Foreign Policy ;  Balance of Dependence


 
 
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