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On North Korea's nuclear and missile tests
By Stephen M. Walt
North Korea's nuclear and missile tests are hardly good news, but they don’t justify going into full panic mode. We already knew that North Korea had a nuclear weapons capability, and though this latest test seems to have been slightly more powerful than the initial one, it doesn’t imply a qualitative shift in the strategic environment. North Korea's defiance is annoying, perhaps, but it’s not like the act of testing a nuclear weapon tells us something new about their regime. And let's not forget that the United States has tested a nuclear weapons 1030 times (plus another 24 joint tests with Great Britain), while Pyongyang has tested exactly twice.
The other reason not to get too bent out of shape is that there is little we can do about it. We've been worried about North Korea’s nuclear program for decades, and the Clinton adminstration seriously considered a preventive strike against North Korea’s nuclear facilities back in 1993-1994. But they ultimately refrained, because our allies in the region were opposed to it and because the risks of an attack were deemed too great. The Bush administration was critical of Clinton’s emphasis on diplomacy and took a tougher line at first, but that approach didn't stop North Korea from testing in 2006 and may even have encouraged them. In the end, the Bush team also recognized that it had no good coercive options and ended up going the diplomatic route too.
There are two reasons why our hands are largely tied. First, we don’t have extensive economic ties with North Korea, so we can't pressure them by threatening to cut off aid, trade, or investment. Second, using military force to disarm or topple Kim Jong Il's regime or to impose a full economic blockade could unleash an all-out war on the Korean peninsula. All-out war could do considerable damage to Seoul, which lies within artillery range of the border, and the sudden collapse of the North Korean state could create a massive humanitarian problem and make it more likely that some of its nuclear materials would escape reliable custody. These considerations explain why China and South Korea generally oppose stronger sanctions on North Korea, even when they are upset by Pyongyang's actions.
So the best response is to remain calm, and stop talking as if this event is a test of Obama's resolve or a fundamental challenge to U.S. policy. In fact, the tests are just "business as usual" for North Korea, and it would better if the United States "under-reacts" rather than overreacts. Instead of giving Pyongyang the attention it wants, the United States should use this incident as an opportunity to build consensus among the main interested parties (China, Russia, South Korea, Japan) and let China take the lead in addressing it. Above all, the Obama administration should avoid making a lot of sweeping statements about how it will not "tolerate" a North Korean nuclear capability. The fact is that we've tolerated it for some time now, and since we don't have good options for dealing with it, that's precisely what we will continue to do.









And let's not forget that the
What is the point of this sentence? That N. Korea setting off a nuke isn't so bad because we have done it too? That we shouldn't criticize because it is being hypocritical?
What does past testing by the US have to do with the strategic implications of N. Korea's test for us?
Is this Realist, or anti-Realist?
It's leftist false moral
It's leftist false moral equivalence.
You don't think Prof. Walt is actually a realist, do you?
On North Korea's nuclear and missile tests
Ignoring North Korean provocations would be a best solution for the time being but everyone knows that North Korea’s lifeline passes through Beijing. Only way to stop this continuing North Korean blackmail is for Obama administration to encourage Japan to go nuclear. If and when China hollers against it, US has to demand that China reign in on its client state if China wants non-nuclear East Asia. That is the only leverage that will work against North Korea.
Right on the money!
This is a classical example of how to think in Realist terms. I admire Prof. Walt's clarity, courage, and above all his political compromise. One of the hardest parts of being a committed Realist political scientist is to say what has to be said regardless of what that may entail. Prof. Walt has wonderfuly honoured his duty as a Realist. Keep up the good work!
the United States has tested
Professor, I am just wondering how many tests Israel conducted without the World noticing it;->>That figure would give a better perspective;->>
Yeah but Professor from Israel's point of view the business is not so as usual, remember Israel bombed Syrian nuclear sort of installations which were building by NK. So. Israel would be really irritated to take the business as usual. Besides Israel cannot reach that far to stop NK's tests like she could do Iranian's. I mean Israel cannot state "If the US doesn't stop NK, we will!" like she said for Iran.
Grand Sen~or.
The best idea right now would
The best idea right now would be to dump the entire problem of North Korea into China's lap, since they're the largest "supporter" of the regime (I say supporter in parenthesis simply because there's no love lost; the Chinese just don't want a bunch of North Korean refugees fleeing over the border if the North Korean state loses the capability to close its side of it). Let them bear the costs of keeping the regime alive, in full.
Instead, the US should be building up a consensus between Japan and South Korea to avoid giving any aid to North Korea, while expanding the use and testing of ABM technology to both countries. The Japanese are already working down this road, and South Korea should take it too. I'd even go one step further and give South Korea nuclear warheads, but that's probably not politically possible. That way, North Korea's impending nuclear capabilities are neutralized, and you could couple this with a program of increased arms sales to both countries, along with a greater cooperative military commitment.
Actually, building up a solid strategic alliance between South Korea and Japan would probably be the biggest political coup for the US in the region, and harder than it sounds.
"building up a solid
"building up a solid strategic alliance between South Korea and Japan "?
Good luck with that.
Hence why I said it would be
Hence why I said it would be a major political coup for the US in the region. For various reasons including history and strategic concerns, the South Koreans and the Japanese don't always get along, to put it lightly.
Stacked deck
Walt is stacking the deck by arguing that taking out North Korea's nuclear capability is unreasonable. In the same breath he admits that it was considered by a previous Democratic administration; thus the proposition is not unreasonable. That the state of weapons art then contributed to a negative Clinton decision is irrelevant. The state of art has improved dramatically since then, and been proven over the course of two subsequent wars, particularly with respect to the capability and accuracy of cruise missiles and "bunker buster" weapons.
The Circumstances Have Changed
Before today I could understand the "nothing we didn't expect" response to North Korea's recent nuclear and missile tests but as of today the circumstances have changed. Today North Korea has vowed to no longer hold itself accountable to the agreement that ended the fighting in the Korean War in response to South Korea's decision to join the US in its initiative to prevent nuclear materials from being shipped to or from North Korea. One of the problems about intervening in North Korea until now has been the threat that it would respond unkind against the South Koreans. Now that the DPRK has openly announced its intent to start aggression, it poses a real threat to the peace and security of the international community (see http://acollegialcow.blogspot.com).
No longer can the DPRK be ignored or passed off to China. They are openly threatening the South Koreans and being a major ally in that theater, the United States will have to involve itself. The United States will have to actively engage in, at the very least, some strong diplomacy on this issue rather than taking a passive approach to it. Don't be surprised if major pressure is applied to China and Russia to join in any physical response (because the US is unlikely to go this alone).
Don't be surprised if major
Don't be surprised if major pressure is applied to China and Russia to join in any physical response (because the US is unlikely to go this alone).
"It is better to have a known enemy than a forced ally" - Napoleon Bonaparte