Session

Reconsidering Arms Control with Nuclear North Korea

Time
22:00 ~ 23:20
Organization
Jeju Peace Institute, Wilson Center, Brussels School of Governance
Room
Diamond Hall B / Youtube
North Korea Conducted its first nuclear test in 2006. Fifteen years later, Pyongyang is in possession of an estimated 30 to 60 nuclear warheads, which its missiles can potentially carry all the way to the White House. The Biden Administration is the fourth in a row in the US that has to contend with a nuclear North Korea. Both sanctions and negotiations have failed to solve the North Korean nuclear conundrum. And as long as North Korea's nuclear weapons program continues to be a problem to solve, peace on the Korean Peninsula will be but a dream. Could an arms control deal be the key to the resolution of North Korea's nuclear issue and unlock peace between the two Koreas?
In this session, panelists critically assess the prospects, benefits, and drawbacks of a nuclear arms control deal with North Korea. In Particular, they assess the stakes for nuclear negotiations with North Korea as the Biden Administration seeks to implement its policy review and reconsider the utility of arms control as a way to improve relations between the US and North Korea and between the two Koreas.