North Korea and the N. Y.
Philharmonic: The "Why?" Question Gets Answered
26 July 2008
When we
accompanied the New York Philharmonic on its historic
trip to North Korea for its February 26 concert, the
question that we were asked most often was, “Why?”
Why was an American classical music organization
invited to perform in the capital of a country with
whom we’ve technically been at war since 1950? Was it
simply to hear the Western classical music canon that
is largely absent from North Korea? Was it a PR stunt
orchestrated (so to speak) to burnish the
international profile of the cruel, despotic ruler
Kim Jong Il? Or did it have subtler implications?
Remember, North Korea is one of the three countries,
along with Iraq and Iran, that President Bush
characterized in his 2002 State of the Union address
as members of the “axis of evil.” And we know what he
chose to do subsequently with one member – Iraq. And
today, sabers can be heard rattling regarding Iran.
But North Korea? That most repressive, most Stalinist
of governments, and the only axis member with a
demonstrated nuclear capability?
In mypost
of February 27,
written and filed from Pyongyang, I asked
questions of my own: “Will history remember this
night? Can a musical event have any influence on
bringing together two nations that have no
diplomatic relations? Can a concert conceivably
have any impact on the six-party talks that are
attempting to get North Korea to give up its
nuclear weapons?”
I also related a conversation I had there with Bill
Perry, a former secretary of defense during the
Clinton administration (and former acquaintance of
mine during our Stanford engineering-school days
during the 1950s). Perry suggested – against the
conventional wisdom -- that the parties are beginning
to realize that they are “likelier to reach an
agreement in this final year of the Bush
administration than to wait for a new president in
2009.”
I wrote further that "the talks were at a tipping
point, one that will be brought about by the opposing
parties’ reducing their distrust of each other. The
concert tonight could help bring about that
reduction. The goodwill demonstrated by the North
Korean government – they really pulled out all the
stops – and the support of our State Department could
be meaningful harbingers."
I concluded my post with questions of my own: “North
Korea giving up arms? The US and North Korea resuming
diplomatic relations? Can it happen? Yes. Will it
happen? To be continued.”
Well, believe it or not, the Bush administration has
chosen, at least in the case of North Korea,
diplomacy over war. Condy Rice has won, and the
anti-diplomacy Dick Cheney-John Bolton faction has
lost (The Tragic End of Bush’s North
Korea Policy, WSJ, June 30). After
years of zero progress in the three-party talks,
here are three major developments since the February
concert.
(1)
Diplomacy Is Working on North Korea
By
Condoleezza Rice
Wall Street Journal, June 26,
2008
Op-ed
piece by Rice that laid the groundwork and rationale
for diplomacy.
(2)
Deal Reached in North Korea Talks
Associated Press, July 12,
2008 “North
Korea agreed to disable its main reactorby
the end of October and allow international
inspections to verify its nuclear disarmament in a
deal reached Saturday at the end of six-nation talks.
“In response to North Korea’s nuclear
declarationthe
United States announced it wouldremove the country from its list of state
sponsors of terrorism and relax some economic
sanctions against it.”
“The United States and Russia pledged to provide the
outstanding amount of heavy fuel
[500,000
tons of fuel oil] by
the end of October.”
“US
Secretary of StateCondoleezza Rice met North Korea’s top
diplomatWednesday
in Singapore, ending a four-year hiatus in Cabinet
level contacts between the Bush administration and
Pyongyang over its nuclear
program.”
Finally,
Progress
In just a few months' time, the State Department has
made more progress than in the preceding seven and a
half years of the Bush administration. We're not yet
at the point of North Korea's becoming a golf resort
destination (as is Vietnam), but we have moved off
the dime. We’re engaged in diplomacy, we’re talking
to people who are not our friends, and we’re making
headway.
So, once again, why was the New York Philharmonic
invited to perform in Pyongyang? My answer: It
initiated a dialog between the people of two
adversaries, the first dialog in 58 years. Maybe this
musical event was not the only factor in
jump-starting the resumption of discussions between
the two countries, but I like to think that it was.
Paraphrasing the mantra of the 60s, “Make music, not
war.”