Tuesday, November 30, 2010

China Responds

I was on the same page with Drezner and Farley enjoying the humor in how various Wikileak cables are being treated as gospel instead of with a healthy dose of skepticism. The leak that specifically discusses Chinese views of Korean unification is interesting, but the reaction online has been a bit overblown considering there is not any evidence outside of Wikileaks this attitude actually exists... or so I thought.

I am always open to new information influencing my thinking.

China supports the "independent and peaceful reunification of the Korean peninsula" and cannot afford to give the North Korean regime the impression it has a blank cheque to act any way it wants, Chinese officials based in Europe said today.

The officials, who asked not to be identified, spoke after the Guardian revealed that senior figures in Beijing, exasperated with North Korea behaving like a "spoiled child", had told their South Korean counterparts that China was leaning towards acceptance of reunification under Seoul's control.

China's moves to distance itself from the North Korean regime were revealed in the latest tranche of leaked US embassy cables obtained by WikiLeaks and published yesterday by the Guardian and four international newspapers.

One Chinese official said today reunification was not going to happen overnight and China's first priority was to calm down the situation, restart a dialogue, and maintain stability in the region. But Beijing had always backed peaceful reunification as a longer term goal.
Today? Hmm. Read the article, it goes well with the Wikileak - which I would link but the Wikileaks site has *unfortunately* being driven offline by hackers.

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