The leaders of North and South Korea are meeting in Pyongyang this week to discuss the possibility of a peace treaty to end the decades-long conflict dividing the Korean Peninsula. This marks the third meeting between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in since April, when the leaders famously shook hands across the Demilitarized Zone, or DMZ, separating the two countries.
After a swell of global optimism at warming relations between Kim and Moon, attention shifted to Donald Trumpās June meeting with Kim in Singapore. Despite the peace communityās hope for increased diplomacy following the summitās vague yet optimistic outcome, many voices on both sides of the aisle in Congress, as well as within Trumpās own administration, have since disparaged the possibility for peace.
Contrary to the frequent inflammatory rhetoric from leaders in Washington and the media, North Korea has made modest concessions since June, such as the dismantling of certain missile launch sites. In this weekās meeting, Kim has agreed to allow international experts to observe a permanent dismantling of a missile test site and nuclear facility.
Despite these steps toward diplomacy, many government leaders are still demanding the immediate and complete denuclearization of North Korea ā and they are doing so without offering any assurance that the United States wonāt invade. At the same time, they are also refusing to announce the end of the Korean War, mostly due to fears that it could lead to a withdrawal of the 28,500 American troops stationed on the peninsula ā even though Moon has dispelled such concerns.
Amid the clamor and saber-rattling, however, a steady, persistent grassroots peace movement is working hard to counter the negativity. By influencing stakeholders behind the scenes, building new coalitions and reframing the narrative to promote negotiation as a difficult but worthwhile process, this movement has risen above āfire and furyā to chart the way toward lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula.
Building coalitions
Among the most important developments for the peace movement in the last year is the formation of broad coalitions. According to international scholar-activist Simone Chun, 2018 marked āthe first time we saw a formidable, sustaining coalition with major American peace activists and the Korean activist communities.ā
These coalitions have allowed actors to coordinate strategically in pushing for clear goals, like a formal declaration ending the Korean War and sustained diplomacy on a path to peace. These coalitions have also been key in elevating a range of voices, particularly those of Koreans, women and people of color, who have often been marginalized from the mainstream policy debates in Washington D.C.
Korea Peace Network, or KPN, is one of the key U.S.-based coalitions promoting peace on the Korean Peninsula. Spearheaded by the American Friends Service Committee, Peace Action and Korean-American peace activist Christine Ahn, KPN works to educate and organize Korean peace activists around the country, from birddogging congressional candidates to hosting webinars and strategizing sessions. In June, the network organized an action called KPN Advocacy Days, which saw a group of advocates from KPN visit Capitol Hill to meet with key legislators, like members of the Armed Services Committee, to promote negotiations with North Korea.
āWe cannot afford any kind of war,ā he added. āMy aunt lives near the DMZ. My older brother lives in Seoul. So when I see the possibility of war growing, I get really scared.ā
Kwan mobilized around 20 Korean organizations throughout the United States into a network called One Korea Now, so that they could better support each otherās efforts to advocate for peace. This mobilization became even more effective once they partnered with larger, more established organizations like Peace Action, which formed during the anti-nuclear movement of the 1950s and has a wider national network of its own.
āItās important to try to lift up those people who have much more expertise and more at stake for their families [if there were a war on the Korean Peninsula],ā said Peace Action president Kevin Martin.
At the same time, however, Kwan has found it uniquely challenging to incorporate some parts of the Korean-American community into this peace work.
āKorean-speaking Korean Americans are somewhat isolated people in the Korean-American community,ā he said. āWe are working with some of the largest peace organizations in the United States, but a lot of Korean-Americans have never heard the names of these groups. My role is to get the Korean-speaking Korean-Americans more engaged with the general peace movement in the United States, and to think of Korean peace in terms of the global peace movement.ā
Recent organizing for peace on the Korean Peninsula has also underscored the importance of women-led organizations in mobilizing public support for peace.
Women Cross DMZ is one of the leading groups in this movement, along with partners like the women-led activist group Code Pink. Headed by Korean-American peace activist Christine Ahn, Women Cross DMZ launched its efforts in 2015 by leading an international delegation of 30 women in a walk across the DMZ, followed by international peace symposiums in Pyongyang and Seoul. In May 2018, the group sent another womenās delegation to Korea, in partnership with the Nobel Womenās Initiative and Womenās Peace Walk. While there, the organizers convened an all-womenās symposium, met with key stakeholders and called for a peace treaty in an historic crossing of the Reunification Bridge.
Not only have these coalition-building efforts raised attention and public awareness ā theyāve also raised much-needed funding. Women Cross DMZ, Nobel Womenās Initiative and PeaceWomen were the recipients of a $2 million grant supporting women-led campaigns pushing for a viable peace process by 2020. Part of this funding will be allocated to a network of South Korean women working for peace, elevating their voices in the ongoing public debate about the Korean peace process.
āIn a moment when we all felt stuck, the fact that womenās groups began the process to break through this deadlock really shows the power of what peace movements can do, especially what womenās peace groups can do,ā Ahn said. She also emphasized the important role womenās organizations have played in challenging those demanding total and immediate disarmament by stating clearly that there should be as much attention on diplomacy and steps toward signing a formal peace treaty, as there is on denuclearization.
Still, despite the breadth of this coalition-building work, Women Cross DMZ has faced challenges, particularly when it comes to gaining proper attention within the broader peace community, which has focused much of its attention on the Middle East ā even after President Barack Obamaās so-called āAsia Pivot.ā
āIn some ways, I feel the peace movement has really failed to look at the shift in U.S. military war policy,ā Ahn explained, pointing to the often overlooked South Korean protests of U.S. military bases. āThe Korean peninsula has provided a way to shift our attention, but weāre so far behind where we need to be as a global anti-war and peace movement.ā
Peace Action president Kevin Martin echoed this concern, but suggested that the problem is even more widespread. āWeāre in denial about the militarism of our society,ā he said. āThere are conferences bringing together all progressive movements, but they leave out peace.ā
Influencing key stakeholders
For 40 years, popular movements have demanded peace, democracy and human rights on the Korean Peninsula, including the 1979 student-worker demonstrations in Pusan, the Gwangju Uprising in 1980, and the campaign for direct presidential elections in 1987.
In many ways, these uprisings culminated in 2016 with the South Korean Candlelight Revolution. This movement, which drew over 16 million people, denounced the corruption of then-President Park Geun-hye and paved the way to elect Moon Jae-in, a president determined to prioritize peace on the Korean Peninsula.
Moon has made a marked departure from previous South Korean leadersā provocative rhetoric over North Koreaās nuclear and missile-testing programs, returning to the āSunshine Policyā of South Koreaās last two progressive presidents. In doing so, he has emphasized economic projects and cultural exchanges between the two countries, like building railways to connect the peninsula, arranging family reunions, and hosting joint sports matches with North and South Koreans. There have been numerous public events promoting reconciliation, like the Pyeongchang Olympic games in February, when both teams marched under a single flag and played a unified womenās hockey team.
Since his election, Moonās efforts to promote peace with North Korea have extended far beyond the two countriesā bilateral relationship. Trump has asked Moon to serve as āchief negotiatorā for the third inter-Korea summit in September. This role is not only a testament to Moonās diplomatic skills, but highlights the credibility he has built as a key actor in the negotiating process.
As with Moonās election, the peace movement has an important role to play in influencing key stakeholders within the Korean peace process, including members of Congress.
āNorth Korea is a long-term marathon issue,ā said Charissa Zehr of the Mennonite Central Committee, a Christian organization which advocates for peace and humanitarian relief around the world, including in North Korea. āThere was very little we could advocate for within [the Obama administrationās policy of] strategic patience. Now there is more space and more possibility, but itās still so volatile.ā
The involvement of faith-based organizations like the Mennonite Central Committee and the Friends Committee on National Legislation, or FCNL, has been influential in pressuring stakeholders by finding common ground with legislators in Washington. FCNL has mobilized a network of over 1,500 people across the country in grassroots advocacy teams to lobby their congressional representatives. [Full disclosure: The author of this piece works for FCNLās Advocacy Teams program]. These teams are promoting legislation that would require congressional authorization for any war with North Korea, as opposed to a unilateral decision by the president. According to FCNL North Korea specialist Anthony Wier, a congressional vote for war would make war less likely, as it would be a huge gamble for anyone running for reelection.
Pursuing this goal of grassroots legislative pressure, advocacy teams have incorporated creative tactics, like giving out homemade bubble bath, or ābath bombs,ā at their local farmerās market. An accompanying sign reads āBath Bombs Not Atomic Bombs,ā seeking signatures on a petition for their members of Congress to support the legislation.
Efforts to influence stakeholders in Washington has faced the predictable challenges of political partisanship ā the force driving many leaders in the Democratic Party to decry negotiations and the drawdown of U.S. troops in South Korea. Despite misgivings about the Trump administrationās commitment to follow through on peace negotiations, leaders advocating a peace treaty with North Korea say it makes more strategic sense to acknowledge when the administration is ostensibly taking steps in the direction of peace.
āThe partisan bitterness, particularly of Democrats who youād think would support diplomacy, is a real and ongoing challenge,ā Martin said. āSave your energy to fight Trump on any other issue. Itās right to be skeptical. The [Singapore] Summit didnāt produce a lot of specifics, but compared to last fall when we were threatening nuclear war, weāre in a much better place.ā
Nam echoed these sentiments, adding, āWe have to take the peace whenever we can. We always talk about āGive peace a chance.ā Now the liberals and progressives, who have been promoting peace for the last 100 years, should give peace a chance ā for real this time ā even if it comes from Trump.ā
Ahn shared the same frustration, recounting how two leading members of Congress ā both advocates of āthe resistanceā ā introduced legislation intended to hamper the presidentās ability to reduce U.S. troops in South Korea. āHow is that resistance, when it just maintains militarization of South Korea and a foreign occupation of another country?ā
Comparing the situation to Richard Nixonās talks with China, Ahn described refusals to engage the Trump administration on matters of peace as āhugeā missed opportunities. āHeās wrong on everything else, but this is a sweet spot,ā she said. āGive them the credit to do what no other president has done: to hopefully end the Korean War.ā
While many dismiss this view as wishful thinking or simply naive, the peace community believes incremental, tangible concessions from North Korea in exchange for economic and diplomatic incentives is a far more realistic pathway to peace than demanding a full dismantling of their nuclear program before they see any benefits.
According to Martin, this is where the voices of Korean-Americans can be quite impactful. āItās very important for Korean-Americans to say, āHey Dems, we understand that you hate Trump and are opposed to everything [he does], but this is about what Koreans want.āā
Ultimately, Martinās point underscores the necessity of building a peace movement ā and a peace process ā that centers Koreans, the most direct stakeholders on this issue.
āIāve never seen so much unity among Korean-Americans around this peace process,ā Chun said. āWhen I meet young people, I realize this is a very different generation. Their participation is very important, because theyāre the ones who will lead the future.ā
The re-centering of Koreansā role and voices in the peace process could create friction between South Korea and the United States, as exemplified by Moonās Liberation Day speech. Delivered last month, the speech laid out a plan for greater economic integration between North and South Korea, declaring, āWe are the protagonists in Korean Peninsula-related issues.ā
Ahn celebrated this statement, saying, āFor me, that feels like we are in a moment. This is a process that is moving irrespective of the United States. Now we have to put in the time and the sweat to really make it happen.ā
Reframing the narrative
As evidenced by Moonās Liberation Day speech, language is helping to shape public opinion in favor of the peace process ā with 90 percent of South Koreans supporting dialogue. Leaders of the peace movement are trying to do the same in United States, where a smaller majority ā around 70 percent ā support talks with North Korea. Such support is hampered by Trumpās low approval ratings and a distrust of Kim Jong Un.
āWe need to shift who talks about foreign policy away from a Cold War, white man framework,ā Ahn said.
One way of doing this is by giving a human face to the issue. Already, family reunifications and joint North-South soccer matches are taking place on the Korean Peninsula ā something most Americans donāt even know about.
āThe peace movement should be helping to amplify these messages,ā Ahn said.
Ultimately, according to Chun, itās about forging a narrative that is less about denuclearization and more about Koreans determining their own path towards peace.
āEverything is centered around whether North Korea will give up its nuclear weapons,ā Chun said. āFor Koreans, this is about the ability to shape the future of [their] country.ā
Many Korean-Americans are seizing the opportunity to make this known, while ā at the same time ā also providing a model for the rest of America on how to shift the narrative.
āBefore the North and South Korean leaders met on April 27, reunification was a taboo issue,ā Kwan said. āIt took a lot of courage to discuss North and South Korean reunification in the Korean-American community. If you talked about it, you would be labeled a communist and pro-North Korean sympathizer. Now itās something everybody talks about!ā
This widening of citizen engagement and action can only be a good thing for advocates of the peace process. The more people come together in support of peace on the Korean Peninsula, the harder it becomes for world leaders to deny it to them.
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