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Roads, trains may be key to bringing peace to Korean Peninsula

By Hussein Dia, Swinburne University of Technology
South Korean President Moon Jae-in (R) and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un announce the joint Panmunjom Declaration at the Peace House in the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea, on April 27. Photo by Inter-Korean Summit Press Corps/UPI
South Korean President Moon Jae-in (R) and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un announce the joint Panmunjom Declaration at the Peace House in the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea, on April 27. Photo by Inter-Korean Summit Press Corps/UPI | License Photo

July 6 (UPI) -- North Korean leader Kim Jong Un left his historic Singapore summit with U.S. President Donald Trump last month with a massive political victory in hand, but questions remain how this will help his isolated country in pragmatic terms.

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A Japanese newspaper reported Sunday that Kim has asked Chinese President Xi Jinping for his help in lifting the sanctions that have crippled the North Korean economy. But even if sanctions are lifted, will this be enough to improve the standard of living for North Korea's impoverished citizens?

In recent years, Pyongyang has focused on twin policy objectives: achieving global political legitimacy, and embarking on a program of economic modernization. The Singapore summit has arguably helped in reaching the first objective. North Korea will now be looking to achieve the second.

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A possible high-speed future

Compared to neighboring China and South Korea, North Korea's infrastructure is crumbling and in dire need of expansion and modernization. For decades, the government emphasized investment in heavy industry and weapons programs, allowing its roads, ports, rail lines and airports to fall into disrepair. North Korea's energy, water and communications systems lag behind the rest of the world, as well.

When Kim met with South Korean President Moon Jae-in in April, Moon said he would like to travel through North Korea to climb Mount Paektu -- a site of great importance in Korean folklore. Kim responded with a revealing admission that he would be "embarrassed" by his country's railways.

Kim also told Moon how the North Korean athletes who took part in the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang were impressed by the South's high-speed rail network. This was seen by many as a likely signal that North Korea was motivated to bring its own rail network -- and the rest of its infrastructure -- into the 21st century.

And South Korea evidently wants to help. At the summit between the two leaders, Moon gave Kim a USB drive that laid out a vision for connecting the two Koreas through new infrastructure projects and special economic zones.

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At the heart of Moon's plan would be a $35 billion upgrade of North Korea's rail network, including high-speed rail lines connecting Seoul, Pyongyang and other industrial zones and a retrofit of other rail lines in the North.

Moon's proposal is shrewd. The rail lines would also connect North Korea to its northern neighbors, China and Russia, and ultimately serve as a vital link between the entire Korean Peninsula and the rest of Asia and Europe.

The promise of mineral wealth

More importantly, the South Korean proposal goes well beyond infrastructure. It would be a catalyst for unlocking the potential of the North's untapped mineral reserves, which have been valued at $6 trillion to $10 trillion.

These reserves consist of iron, gold, copper and graphite, as well as large amounts of rare earth deposits needed for production of smartphones and other high-tech gadgets made in the South. There are also unconfirmed reports of oil and gas deposits in North Korean waters.

However, modernizing North Korea's neglected infrastructure won't come cheaply. The cost is estimated at several trillion dollars, similar to what West Germany spent to develop the East after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

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The technical know-how and capacities of North Korea's labor forces will also pose huge challenges.

Already, Samsung, Hyundai, Daewoo and other corporations provide training for the North Koreans they've employed in special economic zones along the border. These giants are well-placed to rebuild the North's deteriorating infrastructure, but would need to invest much more time and money to train the local workforce.

Whether the North accepts the South's help remains to be seen. This could prove to be a major stumbling block.

Of course, China could step in and play a major role. The country has built the world's longest high-speed rail network, extending some 14,000 miles, in a remarkably short span of time.

Beijing has strategic interests in developing the North's rail network, as well. A future inter-Korean railway could serve as an extension of its ambitious "One Belt, One Road" infrastructure development initiative linking China with key markets in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

Baby steps

Before any progress can be made on grand plans like these, North and South Korea need to take an important first step and reopen the rail links and roads between the countries. The two neighbors agreed in June to work toward that goal, but any material progress will need to wait until international sanctions against North Korea are lifted.

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The two Koreas agreed to start limited cross-border rail service to an industrial zone just over the North Korean border in 2007, but the fraught relationship between the two countries soon brought the initiative to a halt.

The ConversationThis time around, progress will depend on the cooperation of the North Korean leader, who has been reluctant to accept help in the past, but might be persuaded to do so now with his country's future in the balance.

Hussein Dia is chairman of the Department of Civil and Construction Engineering at Swinburne University of Technology.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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