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New Opening to North Korea?

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Former President Bill Clinton’s trip to North Korea has provided a foreign policy spectacle that has everyone talking. Of course, it wasn’t supposed to be about foreign policy, it was billed as a strictly humanitarian mission to gain the release of the two American reporters, still the foreign policy implications are hard to deny. Clinton’s mission may have opened a new channel of communication with the North Korean government and forged new opportunities to resolve the long-standing nuclear crisis. In this analysis from The Council on Foreign Relations, Scott Snyder examines the implications of Clinton’s visit for U.S. relations with North Korea.

 

Author

Joel Davis

Joel Davis is the Director of Online Services at the International Studies Association in Tucson, Arizona. He is a graduate of the University of Arizona, where he received his B.A. in Political Science and Master's degree in International Relations. He has lived in the UK, Italy and Eritrea, and his travels have taken him to Canada, Brazil, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, and Greece.

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Areas of Focus:
State Department; Diplomacy; US Aid; and Alliances.

Contact Joel by e-mail at [email protected].