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IKS/Mershon Center Lecture: Robert Kelly, “The Trump Administration’s Nuclear Negotiations with North Korea”

Image of a North Korean missile on a truck
February 3, 2021
3:30PM - 5:00PM
Online (Registration Required)

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Add to Calendar 2021-02-03 15:30:00 2021-02-03 17:00:00 IKS/Mershon Center Lecture: Robert Kelly, “The Trump Administration’s Nuclear Negotiations with North Korea” The Institute for Korean Studies presents: The Trump Administration’s Nuclear Negotiations with North Korea Robert Kelly Pusan National University Flyer: Kelly Flyer [PDF] Abstract: The years 2017–2020 have been remarkable in the long stand-off with North Korea, as much for the drama of war-threats and then summits, as for the durability of the inter-Korean status quo. Indeed, given all the excitement of both hawkish and then dovish approaches to North Korea since 2017, the greatest surprise is how little both alternatives have accomplished ‘on the ground.’ Much of the failure to change anything is laid at the feet of US President Trump – his poor grasp of the issues, his curious personalism with dictator Kim Jong Un, his focus on media attention – but there are likely other reasons: weak domestic coalitions in both the US and South Korea for major policy change regarding the North, and the enormous structural utility of nuclear weapons to a small, loathed state like North Korea. This talk will cover North Korea’s acquisition of nuclear weapons, the course of the negotiations conducted by both Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-In, what the two sides seek from the negotiations, why these concessions were almost certainly too great for either side to make, and what a future course of smaller, more workable deals might look like. Online (Registration Required) East Asian Studies Center easc@osu.edu America/New_York public

The Institute for Korean Studies presents:

The Trump Administration’s Nuclear Negotiations with North Korea

Robert Kelly
Pusan National University

Flyer: Kelly Flyer [PDF]

Abstract: The years 2017–2020 have been remarkable in the long stand-off with North Korea, as much for the drama of war-threats and then summits, as for the durability of the inter-Korean status quo. Indeed, given all the excitement of both hawkish and then dovish approaches to North Korea since 2017, the greatest surprise is how little both alternatives have accomplished ‘on the ground.’ Much of the failure to change anything is laid at the feet of US President Trump – his poor grasp of the issues, his curious personalism with dictator Kim Jong Un, his focus on media attention – but there are likely other reasons: weak domestic coalitions in both the US and South Korea for major policy change regarding the North, and the enormous structural utility of nuclear weapons to a small, loathed state like North Korea. This talk will cover North Korea’s acquisition of nuclear weapons, the course of the negotiations conducted by both Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-In, what the two sides seek from the negotiations, why these concessions were almost certainly too great for either side to make, and what a future course of smaller, more workable deals might look like.

 

Robert E. Kelly (@Robert_E_Kelly) is a Professor in the Department of Political Science and Diplomacy at the Pusan National University in South Korea. His interests focus on security and political economy in Northeast Asia, especially the Koreas, US foreign policy, and international financial institutions. He has published in multiple academic journals, as well as popular outlets such as Foreign Affairs, The New York Times, and the New York Review of Books. His complete writing may be found at his webpage: www.AsianSecurityBlog.wordpress.com.

Free and Open to the Public

If you require an accommodation, such as live captioning, to participate in this event, please contact Stephanie Metzger at metzger.235@osu.edu or 614-247-4725. Requests made at least two weeks in advance of the event will generally allow us to provide seamless access, but the university will make every effort to meet requests made after this date. 

This event is cosponsored by the Mershon Center for International Security Studies. The IKS Lecture Series is supported by a U.S. Department of Education Title VI grant to The Ohio State University East Asian Studies Center.