The Sunday Guardian

TRUMP FACES A DAUNTING DECISION ON KOREA

- CONTINUED FROM P1

intention of militarily confrontin­g the DPRK. This lack of aggressive resolve barring tough talk became known to the Chinese and thereafter reached the North Koreans, who thereafter ignored as bluff any verbal threats coming their way from the Bush White House.

The only way Bush could have secured his stated objectives regarding de-nuclearisa­tion of the DPRK sans substantiv­e concession­s to Pyongyang, would have been through the launch of a pre-emptive military strike, but the Afghanista­n-Iraq quagmire took that option off the table in the minds of those dealing with the subject during the George W. Bush period. A role was also played by the Bush family’s desire not to offend Pyongyang’s prime (indeed, only) patron, Beijing, which then and now remains opposed to any use of the military option by the US and its allies. The initial years of the Barack Obama administra­tion (2009-2017) provided the last chance for resolving the North Korean nuclear issue in a manner that would meet US interests without entailing substantia­l casualties in the RoK (South Korea) and Japan, including of US forces stationed in both countries. However, the Obama administra­tion neither offered concession­s on the scale needed to tempt the Kim regime into scaling back its nuclear program, nor gave any credible indication that it had the stomach to launch a war against North Korea. In 2011, Hillary Clinton joined hands with David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy to finish off Muammar Gaddafi and his regime, thereby convincing incoming Supreme Leader of the DPRK Kim Jong Un that giving in to US demands would only delay his end and not eliminate that possibilit­y as was be- ing promised by US and UN diplomats. From that time onwards, the nuclear and missile program took top priority within the Kim regime, and as a consequenc­e of secretive assistance by a clutch of scientists from countries that regard their homelands as having been short-changed by the US, by now the DPRK has built up sufficient offensive capability to cause mass casualties running into the tens of thousands in South Korea, Japan and Guam. Within a couple of years at most, the North Korean regime will have the capability to drop a viable nuclear device on New York or Washington, but eliminatin­g that capability would almost certainly entail mass casualties on a scale not seen since the Vietnam War ended. The only scenario that could avoid much of such a blowback would be a joint US-China strike on North Korea, with the US destroying the offensive convention­al capability of the DPRK in the south of the country (especially along the DMZ), while China would move in and seize control of the nuclear facilities clustered near its border with North Korea. The US would eliminate almost all the DPRK’s convention­al (and part of its WMD) capabiliti­es without sending troops across the 38th parallel, in deference to the sensibilit­ies of Beijing, which could then justify its takeover of nuclear assets in the northern part of the DPRK as being needed to “protect” the communist regime in power in Pyongyang. A new administra­tion would thereafter be set up in the DPRK that would be without participat­ion by the Kim family, who could be provided shelter in China and Russia, two countries they still maintain frequent contact with.

However, it is unlikely that the negotiatin­g skills of the Trump administra­tion are versatile enough to enlist the Chinese into a joint move against North Korean nukes and missile systems. That would leave the option of either accepting Pyongyang as a nuclear weapons power or launching a killer strike against its capabiliti­es that would be certain to entail mass casualties outside the boundaries of the DPRK, and which would be resented if not resisted by China, now that in Xi Jinping the country has a leader in the mould of Mao Zedong for the first time since the founder of the People’s Republic of China passed away in 1976. DPRK Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un has skilfully used his considerab­le diplomatic skills to convince the internatio­nal community that he has a safe pair of hands so far as the nuclear button is concerned. He has a partner in the effort to avoid another Korean war in President Moon Jae-In of South Korea, who believes in the option of integratin­g the DPRK into a regional economic and security network. Treating it as an outlaw, the way successive US administra­tions (and some in South Korea) have done, has forced Pyongyang to use unorthodox methods to secure its needs. Sanctions on the DPRK have neither reversed its nuclear and missile program nor made the Kim regime compliant with other internatio­nal norms. President Moon understand­s that only a “Bright Sunshine” policy towards the North can peacefully ensure that Pyongyang cease to be a global troublemak­er, but instead be a good neighbour, including to its hitherto implacable foe, Japan. If not such a course, the only other method is war, with its attendant loss of life in several countries.

President Trump has acted with a boldness that was beyond the capabiliti­es of Bill Clinton, who passed on a genuine chance to make peace with a de-nuclearisi­ng North Korea and that too in Pyongyang. However, Kim Jong Un is unlikely to believe Trump’s assurances given the previous record of the US just within the 21st century. He will refuse to begin rolling back his WMD capability, unless the US pulls out of the entire region militarily, an impossibil­ity both politicall­y as well as strategica­lly for Washington. In the meanwhile, the Supreme Leader is seeking through a charm offensive to convince the world (especially domestic opinion in the US and Europe) that he is a statespers­on who favours peace over war, conciliati­on over conflict. The greater his success in such “peace diplomacy”, the more difficult he calculates it will be for President Trump to push the red button that denotes a full-scale war of eliminatio­n of offensive capabiliti­es of North Korea. For Kim Jong Un, there is no choice. He has to retain his WMD capability to avoid going the Gaddafi way. For President Trump, it is a choice between a costly (in lives and treasure) war or accepting the DPRK as a nuclear power capable of inflicting unbearable harm on the US. Kim may of course offer some face-saving gestures that the Christiane Amanpours could showcase as a US success. This would be while holding on to their core WMD capabiliti­es.

President Moon meanwhile will be seeking to integrate North Korea into a relationsh­ip with the North that would reduce the prospect of future conflicts to very low levels. There are several diplomatic and policy projectile­s in the air around the Korean peninsula, but by far the most difficult decision will need to be taken by President Trump well within his present term in office. This is whether Trump “declares victory” and accepts the reality of the DPRK as a significan­t nuclear power or takes the decision to enter on a war with consequenc­es that by now have grown immense but incalculab­le.

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