Whither North Korea? Competing Historical Analogies and the
Lessons of the Soviet Case
Taesuh Cha
*
Sungkyunkwan University, Seoul, Republic of Korea
Two years ago, the relationship between Pyongyang and Washington remarkably
changed from hair-triggering military tension to unprecedented rounds of summits.
However, those diplomatic overtures suddenly fell away again over the course of
2019–2020. How can we understand this spectacular shift in the geopolitics of
the Korean Peninsula? What kinds of solutions can we (re-)try amid a long post–
Hanoi impasse in nuclear talk? With the Trump presidency coming to an end, it
is high time to look back on what really happened in this turbulent international
drama, in an attempt to explain the serpentine trajectory of the Korean conundrum.
In this context, I ask if mapping competing historical analogies can shed light on
our understanding of the potential U.S.–DPRK rapprochement. Each mainstream
political force in the Republic of Korea has mobilized contrasting historical
reference points as heuristics to analyze the changing relations between America
and North Korea, as well as to construct policy options to respond to them. There
are competing discourses related to specifc historical events, such as the Munich
Agreement of 1938, the Paris Peace Accords of 1973, and Gorbachev’s “New
Thinking.” In the near future, we will see if the North Korean supreme leader is
a Gorbachev initiating fundamental reforms or a Hitler who exploits idealistic
appeasement moves. Thus, the series of summit conferences between Washington,
Seoul, and Pyongyang in 2018–2019 will be remembered as a crucial watershed
in the long history of the East Asian Cold War, similar to the Gorbachev–Reagan
period during the Cold War in Europe.
Keywords: United States, North Korea, Donald Trump, Kim Jong Un, Mikhail
Gorbachev, Joe Biden, historical analogy
*
E-mail: tcha1@skku.edu
The Korean Journal of Defense Analysis
Vol. 32, No. 4, December 2020, 561-582
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22883/kjda.2020.32.4.004
ISSN 1016-3271 print, ISSN 1941-4641 online
© 2020 Korea Institute for Defense Analyses
http://www.kida.re.kr/kjda