Had that test missile worked, it would have headed towards the Sea of Japan and my expectation was that the US Navy Carl Vinson Strike Group, which we had been told had been despatched to the waters off the Korean peninsula, would have shot it down. Then what? Emperor Kim III had ranted and raved about nuking the US should “a single bullet be fired”. Would that have qualified?
They look impressive, but they’ve
got a bad habit of blowing up shortly after launching. As for nuclear warheads,
they probably don’t have any – YET
The threat to use nuclear weapons against
the US was repeated by North Korean Vice-Foreign Minister Han Song-ryol in a
rare BBC interview a couple of days after the failed launch. Shivers ran up and
down my spine when he used the term “pre-emptive nuclear strike”. A North
Korean propaganda video (available at https://youtu.be/Alszb3bLhPw)
shows a US city being obliterated by an H-bomb. Australia too has been directly
threatened with a nuclear strike should it continue to “toe the US line”.
Saddam Hussein’s WMDs and his alleged designs for them
were mostly fabrications. Kim Jong-un’s WMDs and his plans for them are not.
The time for negotiation is over.
To return to my opening line, my relief was
dampened by my wife’s erudite take on the failed test of 15 April. Better known
for championing the cause of the burgeoning campus feline population than for
her geopolitical perspicacity, she simply said, “Oh well, next time.”
For a “next time” there was sure to be. As
Steve Evans of the BBC put it, Emperor Kim has learned from the experience of
others – naming Saddam Hussein and Muammar Khaddafi – that giving up one’s
nuclear ambitions is a self-defeating exercise. To survive, he needs nukes, and
by hook or by crook he’s going to have them, and have them atop of missiles
capable of delivering them far away from home. Han Song-ryol told the BBC that
his country would conduct tests on a weekly, monthly or yearly basis as it saw
fit, and the hell to what anyone else thinks about it.
And a “next time” there was, on the 28th.
Again, the thing exploded shortly after lift-off. But there is always the
possibility that it will work the next “next time”. What happens then?
Could the North Koreans carry out their threats of massive nuclear
strikes?
Probably not, for two reasons. There is
some doubt as to whether they have mastered H-bomb technology – a test
explosion early last year didn’t work very well*. Furthermore, North Korea does
not yet have functioning ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles) that they
would need to be able to attack mainland USA (or Australia). The threat to
destroy the US using thermonuclear weapons (i.e. H-bombs delivered by ICBMs)
made by Kim In-ryong, the North Korean deputy ambassador to the UN, is
blustering bravado. At worst, they might have managed to attach a small nuke
(Hiroshima-magnitude) to a short- or medium-range missile – nobody is sure.
There are other ways of delivering a nuke.
One is dropping the thing from a plane (WW2 style), another is using heavy
artillery to send the bomb on its way (trialled by the US military in the
1950s). The first is not feasible given the clapped-out North Korean Soviet-era
air force which would be lucky to make it off the ground should hostilities
break out. The second severely limits the attack in terms of scope, although
Seoul, which is staring down the barrels of some 500 (BBC source; estimates
vary wildly) pieces of heavy artillery on the far side of the DMZ, could be
within range. But plastering Seoul would not be ‘nuking the US’.
Hitting a US target does not necessarily
mean dropping a nuke on mainland USA. There are regional alternatives, such as
US bases in South Korea, Japan or Guam, all reachable by short- or medium-range
missiles. And they wouldn’t need nukes on those to cause immense carnage. We
know from the assassination in Malaysia of the Dear Leader’s half-brother that
North Korea produces VX, alongside which Sarin is pretty tame stuff. A hit on
US bases with missiles loaded with this nerve gas is technically feasible and
just as horrible as a low-level nuclear strike.
Only regime change in North Korea is going
to avert the looming catastrophe. I have been scathing in these annals on
previous occasions about external meddling in countries’ affairs with a view to
effecting regime change, but this is different. Saddam Hussein’s WMDs and his
alleged designs for them were mostly fabrications. Kim Jong-un’s WMDs and his
plans for them are not.
There has been a lot of talk about a
pre-emptive US strike on North Korean military targets by various commentators.
I do not believe this is the way forward. It would result in a devastating war
that would involve chemical and/or nuclear weapons and quite possibly cost the
lives of millions in both Koreas and quite possibly elsewhere, such as Japan.
As I said in my earlier article “How
long until someone does something about North Korea?” (Breaking Views 3 December last year), the key to resolving
the issue lies with the Beijing leadership. Donald Trump is increasingly
inclined towards this view as well. But the Chinese have been downplaying their
capacity to influence Pyongyang and are calling for dialogue.
This is nonsense. The North Korean economy,
and indeed its war machine, are entirely dependent on the PRC. Without Chinese
energy imports, there would be no fuel and no electricity. The Chinese have
already been turning North Korean coal exports back, much to the ire of the
Pyongyang leadership who have been making some caustic references to their
northern ‘ally’ of late.
As for diplomacy. we’re beyond that now. We
had a deal with Pyongyang in the 1990s which they reneged on. And there’s no
point in negotiating with a regime that is evidently hell-bent on developing
offensive nuclear weaponry with a view to obliterating countries they don’t
like.
That the Chinese take the threat of war
between North Korea and the US deadly seriously was shown by their moving
150,000 troops into the border area between the two countries once tensions
ratcheted up, which according to Western analysts was to deal with an
anticipated influx of hordes of North Korean refugees. The Chinese appear to be
getting close to regarding their upstart neighbour as a strategic liability and
are open to suggestions.
The sticking point is Beijing’s angst about
having a border with a reunified Korea, especially one that has a military pact
with the US. Get around that and I think we’d see developments resulting in the
removal of the Kim Dynasty and the avoidance of what would be a truly
calamitous war.
Korean reunification is a pipedream. North
Korea is no East Germany. Other than Pyongyang, it is a backwater barely out of
the Dark Ages. The place needs to be gently ushered into the modern world. This
will take time – generations, even – given a people who never throughout their
history have known anything but despotic rule be it in the guise of feudalism,
heavy-handed foreign domination, or just as heavy-handed communism.
Rural North Korea: into a time tunnel
The answer lies, I suggest, in the UN
Security Council placing post-Kim North Korea under Chinese administration (under
the auspices of the UN) for the next half century or so – rather like the old
UN Trust Territory system. This would provide all the assurances Beijing needs
by effectively maintaining North Korea’s status as a buffer between the PRC and
the South.
I do not envisage any major objections to
this plan being raised at the Security Council. Russia takes a dim view of
Emperor Kim III and his merry men.
But we have to get rid of the Socialist
Fairyland Emperor first. I do not believe that a military option is the one to
pursue. Economic besiegement is the way forward, and that is where the PRC
comes in. All the Chinese have to do is pull the plug on the North Korean
economy completely. A naval embargo would ensure that nothing moves in or out
of the place from elsewhere.
There have been rumblings of dissent in the
corridors of power in Pyongyang – defectors in 2015 spoke of plots and purges.
Should push come to shove, Emperor Kim could go the way of Caligula. The
Chinese, or a third party, could offer him asylum as an enticement to leave
before meeting that fate.
With His Imperial Highness gone, the house
of cards that is the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea would collapse very
quickly. North Korea would go the way of Somalia and Libya, but it would be too
dangerous to let it stew in its own juice, and the Chinese could go in and
restore order with UN authority.
The Emperor may, of course, liquidate his
foes within, and try to fight it out.
Once he starts a war, it would need to be a
swift one involving large-scale airstrikes on military and military-industrial
units aiming for the total paralysis of the regime’s capacity to wage war.
Given the reliance of the military on a crippled economy and hopelessly
impoverished resource base, that should not take long. The cordon of heavy
artillery threatening Seoul would have to be carpet-bombed into oblivion right
at the outset – a few of those MOABs (the massive bomb used on ISIS last month)
would come in handy.
Ready to roll: these tank crews, and another 4,000
like them, are ready to respond to the Dear Leader’s command to invade the
South at a moment’s notice. They won’t be able to keep it up for long without [Chinese]
fuel, though.
The nightmarish possibility that arises
from this scenario is that Kim III brings his nerve gas and nukes into play –
he could get a nuke into South Korea on the back of a truck among those
thousands of tanks. Would he, though, if warned beforehand that any such move
would bring about retaliation in the form of multi-Megaton strategic nuclear
weapons? If survival is his main priority, he would surely desist, especially
if there was an offer of sanctuary on the table and he could bolt. Again, the
prospect of a revolt against him arises – there are sure to be members of even his
inner circle who don’t want to end their days as wisps of vapour in a
thermonuclear mushroom cloud.
This is certainly the stuff of high-risk
strategies. But not as high-risk as doing nothing. The longer we leave it, the
more damage Emperor Kim III will be able to do, and the more ghastly the
inevitable outcome will be. Perhaps the prospect of a pile of glowing
radioactive ash on their doorstep will convince the leadership in Beijing that
it is time for them to grasp the nettle, failing which Trump may well be true
to his word and “go it alone”, with dire consequences for all.
Come on, fellas, just DO IT!
* An H-bomb needs a little A-bomb to raise it to the temperature
at which nuclear fusion will occur. The 2016 explosion was of A-bomb magnitude.
Barend Vlaardingerbroek BA, BSc, BEdSt,
PGDipLaws, MAppSc, PhD is associate professor of education at the American
University of Beirut and is a regular commentator on social and political
issues. Feedback welcome at bv00@aub.edu.lb
2 comments:
No, all those ideas have been tried by the despotic empires of Britain & the USA, and failed.
They have interfered in the the internal affairs of most of the 100+ countries of the world, the latest examples are pbviously Ukraine, Libya, Iraq and Syria. All a disaster!
They have tried isolating countries to destroy them, and it has only made them stronger and more polarised. Sanctions on South Africa and now Russia spring to mind..
They have tried bombing North Korea to stones, the "If one brick was left on top of another we bombed it again" policy. It didn't 'solve' North Korea then and it won't again. Why do countries who have been bombed like this hate the USA and generate terrorists you might ask yourself.
The solution is trade, to open up the people's eyes to what they can have as a lifestyle and give them something to lose. The USA will no longer go to war with China as it cannot afford to lose the trade it has now, the semi-conductors it uses in it war machines and its toys, and China still has far too much money in American bonds to burn it all. Trump is delusional if he thinks those jobs are going back to America.
To attain safety and peace in the world today the USA should be handed over to the Swiss to run (NOT the corrupt, useless body called the UN) and de-militarised.
Then we won't be living under the flood of propaganda & military scare-tactics about how bad Russia is when the USA has THEIR bases jammed on Russian border, or how bad North Korea is when they haven't a chance of getting the ICBMs that America uses to cower the rest of the world.!
North Korean nuclear program must be seen as an deterrent. The belligerent rhetoric is part of the deterrent. US does the same. Kim has been watching Americas 'regime changes and does not want to suffer the same fate. NK had seversl times since 1953 asked the US to sign a Peace a Treaty, US has turned that down every time. All the US has to do is to ignore NK, stop provocations. Kim knows very well that he can never survive an American attack, the country would be totally obliterated, same as during the Korean War when NK was so devastately carpet bombed that there were no targets left. Kim wants to make it clear that if the US ever tries to attack his country they will leave it at least a bloody nose by levelling South Korea. Why would Americs seek regime change in NK? Because it's not about NK, it's all about China and Russia. If NK comes under American influence, there will be American troops right on the borders of China and Russia, exactly the same as is happening in Europe right now.
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