China-Korea
Relations:
Crying Uncle No More: Stark Choices for
Relations
Scott Snyder, Council on Foreign
Relations/Pacific Forum CSIS
See-won Byun, George Washington
University
Council on Foreign Relations, January, 2014
New strategic challenges have emerged in recent months that will influence China’s relations with both Koreas into the New Year. China’s declaration of an air defense identification zone (ADIZ) that overlaps South Korean jurisdictional claims and developments inside North Korea emerged in November as two priority concerns in Sino-South Korean relations, obscuring more mundane areas of progress in implementing the June 2013 Park-Xi summit statement. The ADIZ issue dominated the third China-ROK vice defense ministerial-level strategic talks in Seoul and became the centerpiece for diplomatic discussions during US Vice President Biden’s visit to China, South Korea, and Japan in early December.
Sino-DPRK relations appeared to suffer a
setback following the Dec. 13 execution of Jang Song Thaek, who was vice
chairman of the National Defense Commission and secretary of the Workers’ Party
of Korea (WPK) Administration Department. The execution has raised concern about
policy changes that might result. Pyongyang’s unpredictability and seeming
internal instability have frustrated months of Chinese diplomatic efforts on
resuming multilateral denuclearization talks. Kim Jong Un’s strategy of
simultaneous nuclear and economic development remains in conflict with Beijing’s
priorities, reinforcing widespread pessimism over prospects for the renewal of
talks on Korean denuclearization.
Chinese nuclear diplomacy, DPRK
resistance, and ROK pessimism
China convened an international workshop on the 10th anniversary of the Six-Party Talks in mid-September that featured presentations by DPRK nuclear envoy Kim Kye Gwan and PRC Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Beijing stepped up calls for the resumption of Six-Party Talks through a series of exchanges between Wu Dawei and US counterpart Glyn Davies in Beijing and Washington from September through November, noting North Korea’s activities at its Yongbyon nuclear facility. Following three months of intensive diplomatic consultations between Wu and US, DPRK, and ROK counterparts, DPRK envoy to the United Nations Sin Son Ho in an interview with Yonhap on Nov. 12 suggested that prospects were good for multilateral denuclearization talks. Conversely, at an Asan Institute forum in Beijing on Nov. 14, South Korea’s former national security advisor and nuclear envoy Chun Yung-woo argued that the possibility of DPRK denuclearization is “close to zero even under the best of circumstances,” illustrating a sizable difference in perception regarding the likelihood and potential outcome of multilateral diplomacy with North Korea. The Obama administration has also shown skepticism over the potential for such talks in the absence of actions by North Korea regarded as necessary to provide evidence that it is prepared to change course and pursue “credible” and “authentic” denuclearization negotiations.
Without a
more forthcoming attitude from North Korea, South Korea and the US have renewed
their calls for decisive action by Beijing. According to ROK Ambassador to China
Kwon Young-se, “China’s constructive role is more important than ever” as “the
only country that can exert its influence on North Korea.” At a conference
hosted by the Korea National Diplomatic Academy in Seoul on Nov. 14, former US
Secretary of State Madeline Albright similarly stated that “the Chinese in many
ways have more leverage against North Koreans.… Powers that have influence
should use them in a particular time.” Chair of China’s National People’s
Congress Foreign Affairs Committee Fu Ying challenged such claims, arguing that
“when parties have a particular demand, there is no use disagreeing or rejecting
it.” on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York on Sept. 27, PRC
Foreign Minister Wang Yi told ROK counterpart Yun Byung-se that managing the
nuclear issue also requires addressing Pyongyang’s security concerns, a position
that was also stated by Chairman of China’s Atomic Energy Authority Ma Xingrui
at the IAEA General Conference in Vienna on Sept. 16.
China and South Korea mark air defense
identification zones
Concerns over North Korea have mounted alongside new tensions in China-ROK security relations over air defense identification zones. China’s unilateral Nov. 23 declaration occurred days after State Councilor Yang Jiechi’s Nov. 17-19 visit to South Korea, partially obscuring the establishment of a new high-level strategic dialogue channel between Beijing and Seoul. Following up on the Xi-Park summit in June, Yang drew attention to enhanced prospects for bilateral cooperation given Beijing’s new national reform plans, an outcome of the Third Plenary Session of the 18th Chinese Communist Party Central Committee on Nov. 9-12. President Park Geun-hye thanked Yang for China’s cooperation to build a memorial in honor of Ahn Jung-geun, a Korean patriot who assassinated then Japanese Governor-general Ito Hirobumi in 1909 in Harbin. Although China has sought a much wider and more public joint stance with South Korea opposing Japanese Prime Minister Abe Shinzo’s approach to history or pursuit of collective self-defense, South Korea has thus far limited policy coordination against Japan to this single project. At the same time, following ROK Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Sung Il-hwan’s visit to Beijing on Nov. 19-21 to meet counterpart Ma Xiaotian, Defense Minister Chang Wanquan, and other military officials, both sides expressed hopes for improving the bilateral military relationship.
The Nov. 23 ADIZ declaration
covering much of the East China Sea ignited strong reactions from South Korea,
Japan, and the US. South Korea’s Foreign Ministry expressed its immediate
disappointment to Beijing, and South Korea immediately prepared to announce the
southward expansion of its ADIZ (KADIZ). This announcement was delayed to
consult closely with the US and Japan given Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to
Tokyo, Beijing, and Seoul. When it was finally announced, the KADIZ expansion
drew criticism from Chinese counterparts but was not criticized by Japan. The
expansion, the first such change since the Korean War, includes the disputed
submerged rock Ieodo/Suyan located in China’s and South Korea’s overlapping
exclusive economic zones (EEZs). The Chinese ADIZ announcement muted a strong
South Korean response to Japan’s pursuit of collective self-defense, which South
Korea and China jointly oppose.
The ADIZ
issue dominated the third China-ROK strategic dialogue in Seoul on Nov. 28, led
by ROK Vice Defense Minister Baek Seung-joo and Deputy Chief of the PLA General
Staff Wang Guanzhong, who also held talks with Defense Minister Kim Kwan-jin
during his five-day visit to South Korea. During these consultations, South
Korea reportedly requested that China revise the scope of its declared zone so
as not to infringe on South Korean interests, but that request was summarily
rejected. At a defense forum in Seoul on Nov. 27, ROK Foreign Minister Yun
cautioned that the ADIZ controversy would heighten nationalism among Northeast
Asian neighbors and exacerbate regional territorial and historical disputes. In
response to the southward expansion of KADIZ, a Dec. 10 Xinhua editorial called
the decision “grounded more on emotional impulse than on strategic thinking.”
However, the Chinese commentator also called for closer China-ROK coordination
given South Korea’s role as both “a strategic cooperative partner of China and a
traditional ally of the United States,” highlighting instead Japan’s “rapid
slide to the right” and the “so-called rebalancing” by the US as the primary
sources of Chinese concern.
Jang Song Thaek’s execution fuels
concern over DPRK direction
Beijing responded to Jang Song Thaek’s ouster by calling for North Korea’s “national stability and economic development,” while referring to the incident as an “internal affair” of the DPRK. ROK Defense Minister Kim Kwan-jin, on the other hand, drew attention to Kim Jong Un’s leadership restructuring based on National Intelligence Service (NIS) reports, issuing public warnings on a potential new round of military provocations from the North. on Dec. 13, the Unification Ministry expressed “deep concerns” over the North’s internal political developments after emergency meetings between chief national security advisor Kim Jang-soo, defense and unification ministers, and the NIS.
In response to new threats from Pyongyang, Beijing has
reasserted its firm position on denuclearization while sending clear messages
opposing provocation. A Dec. 17 Rodong Sinmun editorial on North Korea’s rise as
a “full-fledged nuclear weapons state” led China’s Foreign Ministry to reaffirm
its policy of denuclearization, stability, and dialogue. Pyongyang’s threats to
attack the South two days later prompted the PRC Foreign Ministry to reassert
its opposition to any acts undermining peninsular stability. Beijing has called
for inter-Korean reconciliation since September, when Pyongyang withdrew its
agreement on the resumption of family reunions. Following US Assistant Secretary
of State Daniel Russel’s visit to China on Sept. 13-14, the Chinese Foreign
Ministry also pledged that denuclearization and stability of the Korean
Peninsula serve US and Chinese common interests. Chinese leaders extended their
calls for resolving the DPRK nuclear issue at international venues in September,
including the IAEA General Conference in Vienna and UN General Assembly in New
York.
Recent actions from Pyongyang, however, pose a direct challenge to
China’s core objectives of denuclearization, stability, and reconvening
multilateral dialogue. At an international conference in Tianjin hosted by the
China Foundation for International Studies and China International Institute for
Strategic Studies on Nov. 12, a senior DPRK official from the Disarmament and
Peace Institute threatened a “nuclear catastrophe” against the United States,
South Korea, and Japan, reiterating that “the DPRK insists on resuming the
Six-Party Talks without any preconditions.”
China-DPRK economic engagement under Xi
Jinping and Kim Jong Un
The Dec. 13 execution of Jang Song Thaek has created grave doubts among Chinese analysts about North Korea’s willingness to adopt the Chinese model since he had been the main face of reform and a primary interlocutor in the DPRK’s economic relationship with China. Cheng Xiaohe of Renmin University said that “Jang has been one of China’s best friends ... I perceive his downfall as a loss to the [China-DPRK] relationship.” China’s state media on Dec. 16 conveyed hopes for continued economic engagement, quoting affirmations by a senior DPRK official of the State Economic Development Committee, Yun Yong Sok, on Pyongyang’s commitment to reform and opening “in accordance with our national conditions.” The PRC Foreign Ministry in the immediate aftermath of Jang’s execution similarly reaffirmed China’s policy of pragmatic cooperation with the North.
Trade statistics indicate improved
trade ties between China and North Korea this year despite tensions since the
February nuclear test. According to the Korea Institute for National Unification
(KINU), China-DPRK trade reached $4.69 billion in January-September 2013,
reflecting a 4.4 percent increase year-on-year and a notable 9.4 percent
increase in DPRK exports to China, mainly in raw minerals. In mid-October,
Dandong Mayor Shi Guang announced that a new bridge and border trade facility
costing 2 billion RMB ($325.8 million) will begin operations by 2014. Launched
under a bilateral agreement in early 2010, the new trade complex is projected to
account for 60 percent of China-DPRK trade according to Dandong officials. The
border city also hosted the second China-DPRK Economic, Trade, Culture, and
Tourism Expo on Oct. 10-14, reportedly bringing in a 500-member DPRK delegation
representing more than 90 percent of the North’s foreign trade companies, and
generating cooperation agreements worth $1.6 billion.
Another focal point for
China-DPRK economic cooperation is the Rajin-Sonbong (Rason) free trade zone. It
was included as part of Kim Jong Un’s national development strategy of creating
14 special economic zones nationwide, which was announced in October. At a
conference in Tianjin on Nov. 13, Hwang Ik Hwan of the DPRK Institute for
Disarmament and Peace reported on significant progress in the joint development
of Rason, where China has reportedly agreed to invest $3 billion. Pyongyang
introduced several measures this year to promote foreign investment in the
zones, including a revamping of its National Economic Development Committee,
creation of the independent Chosun Economic Development Federation, legal and
regulatory reforms, and investment protection safeguards. Despite the expansion
in Sino-DPRK economic ties from 2009, however, Chinese analysts recognize that
differences over the nuclear issue, approaches to bilateral trade and
investment, and North Korea’s lack of understanding of the market economy
impeded progress in 2013. Fudan University’s Shen Dingli has argued that China
refuses to respond to most of North Korea’s economic demands until it shows
greater restraint in its nuclear development. Piao Dongxun of Yanbian University
notes a divergence in goals for economic cooperation – North Korea is seeking
investment in primarily infrastructure and industrial zones and Chinese
companies are focused more on natural resources and immediate, high
returns.
Prospects for China-ROK economic
cooperation on North Korea
Kim Jong Un’s pursuit of both nuclear and economic development raises questions about prospects for Sino-South Korean cooperation on North Korea’s reform and opening. First, South Korean experts point to Kim Jong Un’s SEZ initiatives and related reform measures as a major departure from policy under Kim Jong Il, whose priority on political stability in his later years cast much doubt on North Korea’s willingness to open the economy. According to Unification Ministry officials, the solidification of Kim Jong Un’s internal power base remained a priority in 2013, but his second year in power saw an increase in economic outreach to not just traditional partners China and Russia but also ASEAN members. Some Chinese observers have drawn parallels with China in not just Pyongyang’s opening of SEZs but also the recent strengthening of sports and cultural exchanges suggestive of China’s “ping-pong diplomacy” with the United States in the early 1970s.
North Korea’s SEZ
efforts may rekindle longstanding visions of a new economic bloc that would
integrate the Korean Peninsula and parts of China and Russia while easing
security tensions on the peninsula. South Korea’s Nov. 13 agreement with Russia
to join a $340 million Rajin-Khasan rail and port development project under
President Park’s “Eurasian Initiative” was one of the major announcements at
Park’s summit with President Putin that gained some traction in light of the
reopening of the Rajin-Khasan rail link in September. Jin Jingyi of Peking
University argues that North Korea’s economic development through cross-border
cooperation is a key to the success of Park’s policy of trust-building and
peaceful unification. The possible opening of Kaesong to foreign investment was
also included in the inter-Korean agreement to reopen the zone on Sept. 16,
raising debate on the prospects for cooperation with China based on common goals
of reform and opening.
Others emphasize the nuclear issue, international
sanctions, North Korea’s inconsistent approach to market liberalization, and
past record of failed foreign investment as hurdles to economic engagement. Most
importantly, as Unification Minister Ryoo Kihl-jae stated at a Seoul forum on
Nov. 20, South Korean support for North Korea’s international economic
integration remains premised on Pyongyang’s “right choice” toward
denuclearization. According to KINU, there are no clear indications of
Pyongyang’s channeling public resources into economic development despite its
rhetoric, which has also emphasized self-reliance and the consolidation of North
Korea’s status as a nuclear power. Piao Dongxun of Yanbian University further
asserts that the joint economic engagement of the North will first require
Sino-South Korean agreement on common goals, principles, and approaches given
the risk that Pyongyang will exploit competition between Chinese and South
Korean investors.
China-ROK FTA negotiations and the
regional economic order
China-ROK free trade agreement (FTA) talks have reportedly advanced to a new stage with the holding of the eighth round of negotiations in Incheon on Nov. 18-22. The first phase of talks was completed in early September, with a tentative agreement to remove tariffs on 90 percent of items or 85 percent of the value of imports. Although trade officials in Seoul acknowledged substantial challenges since the onset of the talks, Assistant ROK Trade Minister and lead negotiator Woo Tae-hee refers to the China-ROK FTA as the highest-level among China’s
existing free trade deals, if realized. China
and South Korea also held their third round of trilateral FTA talks with Japan
on Nov. 26-29 in Tokyo, marking a year since the formal launch of talks. Despite
heightened political tensions, the three sides have maintained other exchanges
between foreign ministry, culture, and environment officials, although the
higher-level trilateral summit has yet to resume.
China’s economic
restructuring plans under Xi Jinping have forced attention on the long-term
implications for the China-ROK FTA. The Global Times on Nov. 20 warned of
“fierce competition” in major export markets as China moves closer to high-end
manufacturing, urging South Korea to further open its market to Chinese
agricultural and textile products. During a November visit to Seoul, China’s
Vice Commerce Minister Gao Yan identified service outsourcing as a new driver of
Chinese growth and key potential area for expanding Sino-South Korean trade. on
the South Korean side, the Fair Trade Commission (FTC) is pushing for Chinese
reforms to prevent discrimination against Korean firms, which have complained
about regulatory uncertainty as the primary challenge to foreign businesses in
China. According to a Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) survey on
Nov. 19, increasing labor costs have further undermined the competitiveness of
South Korean companies. The slowing growth of Chinese GDP – 7.7 percent in 2012,
the lowest in 13 years – is also a source of concern over a potential stagnation
in ROK exports. South Korea’s central bank policymaker Chung Soon-won projects a
dampening of ROK export growth following Xi Jinping’s reforms, which emphasize
domestic demand and balanced development among provinces rather than state
investment and export-led growth. Advisor to the Chinese central bank Song
Guoqing, however, maintains that China’s economic growth is likely to remain
dependent on investment despite Beijing’s recent plans for restructuring. on
Dec. 30, in their first meeting since Xi and Park took office, ROK Finance
Minister Hyun Oh-seok and PRC counterpart Xu Shaoshi, head of the National
Development and Reform Commission, agreed to broaden bilateral cooperation on
macro-economic issues and the service sector in particular.
China and South
Korea reaffirmed their commitment to realization of an FTA in high-level talks
on the sidelines of regional meetings in October, including between Presidents
Xi and Park ahead of the 21st APEC Economic Leaders Meeting in Bali on Oct. 7,
and between Park and Premier Li Keqiang during the 16th ASEAN+3 Summit and 8th
East Asia Summit in Brunei on Oct. 10. Both sides’ participation in the
ASEAN-centered Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership talks has continued
amid rising speculation over the possibility that South Korea will join the
US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), especially since ROK Finance Minister
Hyun’s Nov. 29 Wall Street Journal interview expressing Seoul’s interest in
joining. A significant factor enabling South Korea to move forward has been a
shift in China’s attitude toward the TPP from skepticism to possible interest in
joining the multilateral trade regime. A Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy
report on Nov. 15 projected that South Korea’s TPP entry would raise economic
growth by up to 2.6 percent within 10 years after implementation.
China-ROK strategic cooperative
partnership under the June 2013 Xi-Park agreement
China and South Korea are moving forward in
implementing the June 2013 Xi-Park joint statement, in particular the expansion
of dialogue mechanisms to enhance political trust and coordination. To this end,
the two foreign and defense ministries launched a working-level
bilateral
dialogue on regional and international security issues in Beijing on Dec. 24.
ROK National Assembly Speaker Kang Chang-hee visited China on Dec. 4-7, holding
talks with President Xi and top Chinese legislator Zhang Dejiang. Vice Foreign
Ministers Liu Zhenmin and Kim Kyou-hyun on Nov. 19 established a new joint
committee on academic, youth, sports, and media exchanges tasked with promoting
non-governmental and people-to-people exchanges, after which the ROK Foreign
Ministry on Dec. 24 released Seoul’s proposal on new academic and youth programs
with China for 2014. PRC and ROK culture ministries also signed a memorandum of
understanding on Nov. 15 on strengthening cooperation on marketing cultural
products abroad, and launched a new forum between cultural content industry
experts. Beijing and Seoul celebrated their 20
th anniversary of sister city
ties in October, for which Beijing Vice Mayor Yang Xiaochao led a 300-member
delegation to Seoul.
On the other hand, South Korea’s Justice Ministry from
Nov. 11 tightened its screening of Chinese cruise ship tourists amid concerns
over the rising number of illegal immigrants entering South Korea through
Seoul’s visa-free system introduced in May. The number of Chinese cruise
tourists visiting South Korea has almost tripled since 2012, while the total
number of Chinese visitors to South Korea reached 3 million in January-September
this year. Two ongoing areas of political friction are EEZ-related fishing
disputes and the handling of North Korean refugees. A clash between two Chinese
fishing boats suspected of illegal fishing and the ROK Coast Guard on Oct. 7 led
to a series of consultations by the PRC Foreign Ministry and Consulate General
in Kwangju. on Nov. 18, a DPRK human rights group reported that Chinese
authorities in Kunming, Yunnan, had arrested a dozen North Korean refugees,
another incident requiring Seoul’s diplomatic intervention according to
Unification Ministry officials. China (as well as Russia, Cuba, Iran, and
Venezuela) did not endorse the UN’s 9th annual resolution on DPRK human rights
violations adopted on Nov. 19. South Korea’s Foreign Ministry has referred to
the EU and Japanese-led resolution as an indication of growing international
consensus on the North Korean human rights issue.
Conclusion: prospects for
2014
The domestic and foreign policy priorities of Xi Jinping, Park Geun-hye, and Kim Jong Un present a mix of challenges and opportunities. Kim’s current strategy of simultaneous nuclear and economic development directly undermines Sino-South Korean goals of denuclearization and stability on the peninsula, and reinforces the current deadlock in multilateral talks. Underlying Kim’s recent pledges to build a “prosperous socialist country” is a continued commitment to the DPRK’s military-first policy rather than to market-oriented reforms. Kim’s first public appearance since Jang Song Thaek’s execution according to the state media was a visit to a military institute, where he reasserted the WPK’s goal of building “Songun Korea.” His pursuit of nuclear and economic development has raised doubts even in China, where Cao Shigong of the Chinese Association of Asia-Pacific Studies appears to represent a growing consensus that “North Korea must give up its nuclear ambition in order to enhance economic development.” Meanwhile, South Korean figures such as former Foreign Minister Han Sung-joo continue to push China further to “make a decision as to whether it wishes to tolerate North Korea” regarding its nuclear ambitions.
The logical consequence of North Korean nuclear recalcitrance and
open evidence of internal divisions may be a deepening convergence of aims among
the US, South Korea, and China, but there remains a stark difference over
preferred outcomes. Moreover, to the extent that Kim’s decision to execute his
own uncle further diminishes perceptions of North Korea’s legitimacy, China’s
support for North Korea will have higher international political costs in at
least two areas. First, China’s policy justification that North Korean refugees
are economic migrants can no longer stand: if Kim Jong Un’s uncle can be
executed for political crimes, what North Korean traveling in China does not
risk political retribution upon return to his homeland? Second, as North Korea’s
internal political divisions become more apparent, the ability of the PRC to
legitimize economic or political intervention into North Korea’s internal
affairs becomes more remote. As a result, China’s policy toward the North is
increasingly paralyzed and its remaining strategic options will play out in the
context of the China-South Korea relationship.
While the CPC seeks to loosen
the state’s grip over the economy, the creation of a new National Security
Commission was another outcome of the November Plenary Session that is expected
to strengthen President Xi’s power over international security affairs. Foreign
Minister Wang Yi identified Korean Peninsula denuclearization and territorial
issues as the two most important regional concerns among Beijing’s diplomatic
priorities for 2014, which included three areas: major power relations, regional
relations, and trade. Although the recent ADIZ controversy exposed Sino-South
Korean strategic differences, it also revealed that China’s regional concerns
remain heavily focused on Japanese policy and the US response; on this issue,
China continues to seek convergence with South Korea. While Park Geun-hye’s
trust-building initiative has drawn Chinese support, domestic criticism has
emerged in South Korea over the extent to which Park’s policy has reverted to a
hardline policy consistent with the previous Lee Myung-bak administration.
Finally, on the economic front, tensions appear to have been reduced, as
progress in Sino-ROK FTA negotiations and South Korea’s membership in the TPP
are no longer perceived as diametrically opposed strategic and economic
choices.
Chronology of China-Korea Relations
September – December 2013
Sept. 3-5, 2013: China
and South Korea hold the seventh round of free trade agreement (FTA) talks in
Beijing, completing the first phase of talks.
Sept. 12, 2013: PRC Foreign
Ministry spokesperson calls for resumption of Six-Party Talks after talks
between PRC Special Representative for Korean Peninsula Affairs Wu Dawei and US
counterpart Glyn Davies.
Sept. 13, 2013: Jeju court detains a Chinese cruise
ship with over 2,000 passengers based on legal claims against the Beijing-based
operator by a Chinese subsidiary of Jiangsu Shagang Group.
Sept. 15-16, 2013:
Chinese cruise ship passengers return to China after Jeju court releases the
ship with a deposit of 3 billion won ($2.8 million) from Beijing-based operator
HNA Tourism.
China-Korea Relations January 2014
Sept. 16, 2013: Ma
Xingrui, head of the Chinese delegation to the IAEA General Conference in
Vienna, calls for peaceful settlement of the Korean and Iranian nuclear
issues.
Sept. 16, 2013: PRC Foreign Ministry affirms that DPRK
denuclearization serves Chinese and US interests after Assistant Secretary of
State Daniel Russel’s visit to China on Sept. 13-14.
Sept. 17, 2013: DPRK
First Vice Foreign Minister and nuclear envoy Kim Kye Gwan meets PRC State
Councilor Yang Jiechi in Beijing.
Sept. 23, 2013: PRC Foreign Ministry
spokesperson calls for improved ROK-DPRK relations in response to North Korea’s
Sept. 21 decision to postpone inter-Korean family reunions and working-level
talks on the resumption of Mt. Kumgang tours.
Sept. 24, 2013: China and South
Korea launch a joint forum on public diplomacy in Seoul.
Sept. 27, 2013: PRC
and ROK Foreign Ministers Wang Yi and Yun Byung-se meet on the sidelines of the
UN General Assembly in New York.
Sep. 27, 2013: PRC Foreign Minister Wang Yi
at the general debate of the UN General Assembly calls for peaceful solutions to
the Korean and Iranian nuclear issues.
Sept. 27-28, 2013: The 5th
China-ROK-Japan ministerial meeting on culture is held in Gwangju.
Oct. 7,
2013: Presidents Xi Jinping and Park Geun-hye hold talks on the sidelines of the
21st APEC Economic Leaders Meeting in Bali.
Oct. 7, 2013: ROK authorities in
Mokpo detain two Chinese fishing boats suspected of illegal fishing in ROK
waters after violent clashes with ROK Coast Guard.
Oct. 10, 2013: President
Park and PRC Premier Li Keqiang hold talks on the sidelines of regional meetings
in Brunei.
Oct. 10-15, 2013: Second China-DPRK economic, trade, culture, and
tourism expo is held in Dandong, Liaoning.
Oct. 11, 2013: PRC Foreign
Ministry and PRC Consulate General in Kwangju call on ROK counterparts for a
fair investigation of the Oct. 7 fishing dispute.
Oct. 14, 2013: Dandong
Mayor Shi Guang announces that a new China-DPRK border trade complex will begin
operations by 2014.
Oct. 17-18, 2013: China, US, Japan, South Korea, and
Russia hold cyber security talks in Seoul.
Oct. 18, 2013: PRC Vice President
Li Yuanchao meets Jon Yong Nam, chairman of the Kim Il Sung Socialist Youth
League Central Committee, who leads a DPRK youth delegation to
China.
China-Korea Relations January 2014
Oct. 23, 2013: PRC Foreign
Ministry spokesperson states that reasonable DPRK concerns should be addressed
after Pyongyang releases a statement on conditions for denuclearization.
Oct.
27, 2013: PRC delegation led by Wu Dawei, special representative for Korean
Peninsula affairs, arrives in the US for working-level talks with US
counterparts.
Oct. 30, 2013: Beijing Vice Mayor Yang Xiaochao leads a
300-member delegation to Seoul for 20th anniversary celebrations of sister city
ties.
Nov. 1, 2013: Liu Qibao, head of the CPC Publicity Department and
member of the CPC Central Committee Political Bureau, meets a Rodong Sinmun
delegation in Beijing led by Deputy Editor-in-Chief Kim Won Sok.
Nov. 2,
2013: Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon and PRC Ambassador to South Korea Zhang Xinsen
open “China Day” in Seoul marking the 20th anniversary of sister city
ties.
Nov. 5, 2013: PRC Special Representative for Korean Peninsula Affairs
Wu Dawei arrives in North Korea for talks on the resumption of Six Party
Talks.
Nov. 7, 2013: PRC-ROK-Japan vice foreign ministerial trilateral talks
are held in Seoul.
Nov. 11, 2013: ROK Justice Ministry tightens its no-visa
regulations on Chinese cruise tourists in an effort to curb recent increases in
illegal Chinese immigrants.
Nov. 13, 2013: ROK nuclear envoy Cho Tae-yong
arrives in Beijing for talks with PRC counterpart Wu Dawei and other Chinese
officials.
Nov. 14, 2013: President Park at a conference marking the 50th
anniversary of the Korea National Diplomatic Academy proposes the creation of a
joint history textbook between China, Japan, and South Korea.
Nov. 15, 2013:
Chinese authorities detain 11 DPRK defectors and 2 ethnic Korean guides in
Kunming, Yunnan.
Nov. 15, 2013: PRC and ROK culture ministries sign a
memorandum of understanding on cooperation on cultural goods marketing abroad
and launch a joint forum between cultural content industry experts.
Nov.
17-19, 2013: PRC State Councilor Yang Jiechi visits South Korea and meets
President Park, Chief National Security Advisor Kim Jang-soo, and Foreign
Minister Yun.
Nov. 18-21, 2013: South Korea’s Air Force Chief of Staff Gen.
Sung Il-hwan visits China and meets PRC counterpart Gen. Ma Xiaotian and Defense
Minister Chang Wanquan.
Nov. 18-22, 2013: Eighth round of China-ROK FTA talks
are held in Incheon.
China-Korea Relations January 2014
Nov. 19, 2013: PRC
Vice Foreign Affairs Minister Liu Zhenmin and ROK counterpart Kim Kyou-hyun
attend a ceremony in Seoul launching a joint committee on academic, youth,
sports, and media exchanges.
Nov. 19, 2013: PRC Foreign Ministry hails ROK
independence fighter Ahn Jung-geun, who assassinated Japanese governor-general
Hirobumi Ito in Harbin in 1909.
Nov. 19-25, 2013: US Special Representative
for North Korea Policy Glyn Davies leads a delegation to China, South Korea, and
Japan.
Nov. 20, 2013: PRC Foreign Ministry renews call for the early
resumption of Six Party Talks.
Nov. 20, 2013: South Korea’s Lotte Tour
Development Co. and China’s Greenland Holding Group announce a $1 billion joint
skyscraper project on Jeju Island.
Nov. 23, 2013: China announces the
establishment of its East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone
(ADIZ).
Nov. 26-29, 2013: Third round of China-ROK-Japan FTA talks is held in
Tokyo.
Nov. 27, 2013: Foreign Minister Yun at a defense forum in Seoul warns
that China’s ADIZ may worsen regional tensions.
Nov. 28, 2013: Deputy Chief
of the PLA General Staff Wang Guanzhong holds the third China-ROK strategic
dialogue in Seoul with ROK Vice Defense Minister Baek Seung-joo, and meets
Defense Minister Kim Kwan-jin.
Dec. 4-7, 2013: ROK National Assembly Speaker
Kang Chang-hee leads a delegation to China, meeting Chairman of the National
People’s Congress Standing Committee Zhang Dejiang on Dec. 4, and President Xi
Jinping on Dec. 6.
Dec. 8, 2013: South Korea announces the southward
expansion of its ADIZ.
Dec. 9, 2013: PRC Foreign Ministry spokesperson
expresses regret over South Korea’s decision to expand its ADIZ.
Dec. 9,
2013: PRC Foreign Ministry spokesperson calls the removal of Jang Song Thaek
from all posts an “internal affair” of the DPRK.
Dec. 13, 2013: PRC Foreign
Ministry spokesperson expresses hopes for national stability in North Korea
after the execution of Jang Song Thaek.
Dec. 16, 2013: Senior DPRK official
in the State Economic Development Committee tells Xinhua that DPRK economic
policy remains unchanged since the execution of Jang Song Thaek
China-Korea
Relations January 2014
Dec. 17, 2013: PRC ambassador to the DPRK attends
activities commemorating the second anniversary of Kim Jong Il’s death.
Dec.
18, 2013: PRC Foreign Ministry spokesperson reiterates China’s position on
Korean Peninsula denuclearization in response to a Rodong Sinmun editorial
praising North Korea’s status as a “full-fledged nuclear weapons state.”
Dec.
19, 2013: ROK Defense Ministry and PRC Ministry of Civil Affairs announce return
of the remains of Chinese People’s Volunteers soldiers killed in the Korean War
to China.
Dec. 30, 2013: Head of China’s National Development and Reform
Commission Xu Shaoshi and ROK Finance Minister Hyun Oh-seok, hold bilateral
talks in Seoul.
Dec. 31, 2013: PRC Foreign Ministry spokesperson expresses
Chinese agreement with South Korea’s position on Japanese Prime Minister Abe’s
Yasukuni Shrine visit.
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