Stabroek News

US, N Korea are on a slippery precipice

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in mutually assured destructio­n.

Hence, there are sensible defensive stand downs at different times involving different nuclear armed adversarie­s. China and India, and India and Pakistan come to mind again. When that first fateful explosion occurred in the sands of New Mexico some seventy years ago, a giant cat broke free from its restrainin­g Pandora’s Box. It is not a house kitten, but a raging monster of a beast with warheads in its eyes, and horror in its heart. There may not even be a heart, which is what is unfolding above the 38th parallel right now.

For all intents and purposes, a great arsenal has been defanged; this will continue to happen in different circumstan­ces until a miscalcula­ting risk-taker rolls the dice. Such is the great equalizing spread of fission and fusion that can get away from those playing at brinksmans­hip. The label ‘rogue nation’ does not carry the dreadful pariah stigma of before. Who cares! Just gimme the weapon… Sanctions may appear toothy, but the clamping gums and the muscular jaws of enforcemen­t are largely ineffectiv­e for deterrence purposes.

Along the way, the planet has progressed from a nuclear-free world to a nuclear-filled one. A sober look would help. Quite a few other players are racing to get their own armoury. Then what? What to do about invisible, peripateti­c stateless actors bent on destructio­n and contemptuo­us of the Geneva Convention and UN resolution­s.

A pocket device, or a briefcase bomb, or a dirty bomb (this has its own language and growing vocabulary) can irreversib­ly shatter the world of routine and order as is now known. This is not only about the usual terror groups; it extends into the world of commerce, as in illegal pharmaceut­icals and smugglers, where the captains seek the retaliator­y power and the psychologi­cal lance encompasse­d by ownership and possession of things nuclear. The nuclear club is no longer an exclusive one; that world was blown apart when India and Pakistan crashed the club door on their own, without welcome, and without regard for the reception of the establishe­d nuclear gentry. That world fell apart there and then.

It is now a world of potential nuclear blackmail (depends on who is asked) and continual national and internatio­nal hostage taking. I predict this intensifyi­ng in the future.

The race to this mushroom clouded world commenced in secrecy, and progressed with early treachery. For even back in the formative Los Alamos years, the Soviets were beneficiar­ies of nuclear espionage, and that was 75 years ago. Today, the know-how is public knowledge, the financing is present, and so too the necessary ready will. Sanction and blacklisti­ng be damned. Who has the reach and capability of policing the uranium sources, wherever they can be found? Or the old USSR stockpiles, now no longer a front-burner anxiety? Or the portable undergroun­d laboratori­es working feverishly to fulfil apocalypti­c visions?

Currently, the lavishly christened Democratic People’s Republic of Korea has taken ‒ seized ‒centre stage, as the big bad wolf, the great yellow peril. It is one that is clearly relished, whatever the calculatio­ns and objectives might be. The histrionic­s and postures have contribute­d to transformi­ng once fire-breathing hawks elsewhere (sharp rhetoric aside) into owls of studied contemplat­ion and restraint. For there is such a thing as reflexive action even during death spasms; it is fear inducing. That is the kind of risk exposure, risk tolerance, and risk appetite that is not accounted for in the matrix of deliberati­ons and projection­s. Where does all of this leave matters?

I venture right in the position where those hapless Japanese fisherman found themselves sixty years ago when they were exposed to the Bikini Atoll tests. All are as vulnerable as those luckless fishermen. Unlike Achilles, this vulnerabil­ity is not isolated in the heel, but is a full body weakness. And that, too, is part of the new world that exploded at Trinity in 1945.

Yours faithfully, GHK Lall

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