The Telegram (St. John's)

The case for using military force against North Korea

- BY DANNY LAM, Danny Lam is a research associate on Environmen­t and Security at the University of Waterloo. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic expert

As American and Canadian officials meet this week to discuss North Korea, it’s worth a reminder that military options must be on the table if diplomatic efforts to de-nuclearize the country fail.

The Korean conflict of the 1950s never formally ended. It concluded with an armistice that saw six decades of relative calm with sporadic outbreaks of violence.

Meanwhile, South Korea became democratic and the world’s 10th largest economy. North Korea, on the other hand — an impoverish­ed Communist dynasty — is on the third generation of Kims.

Kim Jong-un, who became leader in 2012 the Democratic Republic of Korea (DPRK), has transforme­d a modest nuclear weapons program under his father. Weapons of Mass Destructio­n (WMDS) became a national priority, and now North Korea is just months away from achieving a credible nuclear armed interconti­nental ballistic missile capability (ICBM) capable of targeting North America.

Many “experts” dismiss or underestim­ate this threat. U.S. intelligen­ce did too until recently.

Soon, North Korea will be able to threaten or fight a war with nuclear weapons. Will we be able to live with them just as we do with Russia, China and other nuclear armed states?

Since the end of the Second World War, nuclear weapons have been used only as defensive weapons and not against any state. They serve as a deterrent to others, not an offensive weapon by any rational state — barring accidents or miscalcula­tions.

Crossing the red line

The 21st century’s Korean War will likely involve crossing that nuclear threshold. This has long been viewed as a “red line” no state has crossed since 1945.

The nuclear threshold was formulated because nuclear weapons are so destructiv­e. War between nuclear armed states will almost certainly result in “mutually assured destructio­n.”

Post-second World War, nuclear weapons states have uniformly refrained from using the weapons on others. Superiorit­y in convention­al weapons was sufficient without crossing the nuclear threshold, and war between nuclear armed states was unthinkabl­e.

North Korea, therefore, presents a major challenge today. It is a nuclear-armed state that is very close to, if not already capable of, wreaking mass destructio­n anywhere in the world — and openly threatenin­g to do so.

The fear that North Korea could strike any time contribute­d to the widespread panic felt in Hawaii over the weekend when a false alert about an incoming ballistic missile attack was dispatched to cellphones throughout the islands, already on edge because of the tensions.

Defences like Ballistic Missile Defense systems against North Korean ICBMS are uncertain. Many countries like Canada and most of the European Union, in fact, have no defence against North Korean ICBMS.

The question of North Korea’s intentions and motives has divided expert opinion.

Rational? Or a madman?

Many experts believe that Kim Jong-un is actually rational and is using his nuclear arsenal as a deterrent, knowing that launching a nuclear attack would amount to suicide since the U.S. would retaliate in kind. North Korea, therefore, is just like any other nuclear armed state, these experts contend.

The U.S. government, on the other hand, has different ideas. The Americans argue North Korea’s goals are not defensive or centred on regime survival, but offensive, with the intention of expelling the U.S. from South Korea, unifying the Koreas on their terms and then extorting compensati­on from those with whom North Korea has grievances. I am a defence analyst who testified to a Canadian parliament­ary committee in 2017 on why and how Canada could defend itself against such an attack from Kim Jong-un. I believe that despite the risks, the U.S. and its allies must consider a resumption of the Korean War in order to de-nuclearize the Korean peninsula.

There is a brief window of perhaps one year in which allies have “good” military options — meaning options that would not result in global mass destructio­n — to permanentl­y eliminate North Korea’s nuclear arsenal. After that, North Korea’s nukes will be too large and sophistica­ted.

These military options must comply with internatio­nal convention­s on the legitimate use of force — specifical­ly, that it’s the last resort after all other peaceful means have failed.

Force used should also be proportion­ate, and ideally the minimum necessary.

Minimize damage

The U.S. is constraine­d by rules of law, convention and considerat­ion to both protect allies and minimize collateral damage to both allies and belligeren­ts.

While precision munitions can limit damage, the sheer quantity of North Korean targets means that assured destructio­n will be difficult. Low-yield nuclear explosives may be the only technicall­y sound means for certain targets whose destructio­n must be achieved with certainty.

Crossing the nuclear threshold is a big decision, made more difficult because the internatio­nal law definition of WMDS, by default, defines all nuclear explosives as WMDS, regardless of their actual effect.

North Korea has expressed no compunctio­n about crossing the nuclear threshold. It has made clear its intent to do so either by surprise attack or a pre-emptive strike. The country’s intention to challenge and change the status quo with offensive use of nuclear weapons is well-documented.

China, Russia and the U.S., on the other hand, have historical­ly had grave reservatio­ns about crossing the nuclear threshold for fear that it would lead to general nuclear war; they still do.

It’s not clear that either Russia or China would use their nuclear arsenal to defend North Korea in the event of a conflict. It’s also not inevitable that American use of nuclear explosives would result in mutual destructio­n. On the contrary, it may prevent North Korea from using its own nuclear weapons.

As it stands, there is no question that the United States would use nuclear weapons to retaliate against a successful North Korean nuclear strike on American soil.

Selective, judicious, limited use of nuclear explosives on the most difficult North Korean targets, indeed, may offer the only military option that can prevent mass casualties in North Korea, South Korea, Japan and the United States.

Properly used, nuclear munitions can result in a minimum of radioactiv­e or long-term contaminat­ion, or mass destructio­n — far lesser consequenc­es than if North Korea actually detonated one of their crude nuclear weapons.

The implicatio­ns of resorting to military options on North Korea that might include nuclear explosives should weigh heavily on Kim Jong-un. China, Russia and others have assumed that the U.S. is just bluffing.

But realistic assessment­s of North Korea’s vulnerabil­ity to American power and determinat­ion to de-nuclearize the Korean Peninsula could bring them to the negotiatin­g table before it’s too late.

I am a defence analyst who testified to a Canadian parliament­ary committee in 2017 on why and how Canada could defend itself against such an attack from Kim Jong-un. I believe that despite the risks, the U.S. and its allies must consider a resumption of the Korean War in order to de-nuclearize the Korean peninsula. - Danny Lam

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? This photo distribute­d on Aug. 30, 2017, by the North Korean government shows what was said to be the test launch of a Hwasong-12 intermedia­te range missile in Pyongyang, North Korea.
AP PHOTOS This photo distribute­d on Aug. 30, 2017, by the North Korean government shows what was said to be the test launch of a Hwasong-12 intermedia­te range missile in Pyongyang, North Korea.
 ??  ?? In this Aug. 10, 2017, file photo, a man watches a television screen showing U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. North and South Korea sat down to talks recently after a year that had seen only mounting tension, as North Korea conducted tests of ever-more capable missiles and its largest nuclear detonation ever, and the U.S. and its allies responded with harsh rhetoric and sanctions.
In this Aug. 10, 2017, file photo, a man watches a television screen showing U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. North and South Korea sat down to talks recently after a year that had seen only mounting tension, as North Korea conducted tests of ever-more capable missiles and its largest nuclear detonation ever, and the U.S. and its allies responded with harsh rhetoric and sanctions.

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