Taranaki Daily News

West runs out of options with N Korea

Negotiatio­ns won’t stop North Korea from getting a nuke, says Eli Lake.

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When North Korea tested an interconti­nental ballistic missile this week – what its boy tyrant called a ‘‘gift to the American bastards’’ – the response from the Trump administra­tion was fairly convention­al.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson correctly called it an escalation. He announced America’s intention to bring the matter before the United Nations Security Council. And he assured, ‘‘We will never accept a nuclear-armed North Korea.’’

If that sounds familiar, it’s because not tolerating a nuclear North Korea has been a pillar of US policy since the peninsula’s first nuclear crisis in the early 1990s. Keeping nuclear weapons out of the hands of this regime is an admirable goal; a government is hardly a model of restraint if its prisons are so vast they can be seen from space. And a few years ago, it might have even been an achievable goal. But in 2017, it is at best quaint and at worst delusional.

The sad truth is that North Korea is dangerousl­y close to going nuclear, and almost every expert who has studied the problem understand­s there is nothing the US can do about it.

The North Koreans are much closer to going nuclear than they were when the US negotiated a flawed interim deal in 1994, known as the Joint Framework Agreement, to halt their progress.

Pyongyang has already detonated nuclear devices on five occasions. The first of these tests was in 2006, and the last two were in the final year of the Obama administra­tion. The North also has continued to make progress on ballistic missiles. The latest test went farther and higher than previous ones had. It’s only a matter of time until the regime of Kim Jong Un will perfect this technology, along with the relatively easier task of shrinking a nuclear device to fit on a warhead. Then the North will have a nuke.

North Korea will arm itself with nuclear weapons because the regime knows that its survival depends on it. In the first round of nuclear negotiatio­ns, there was a credible threat of force against North Korea. The deal offered for the last quarter century was essentiall­y: We let you survive if you give up your nuclear ambitions.

Today, that offer is no longer credible. North Koreans delivered this message as recently as last month to a group of Western experts who met with them in Sweden in what is known as Track 2 diplomacy. Sue Mi Terry, a former CIA analyst and expert on North Korea, explained it to her counterpar­ts at an event last month at the Asia Society.

‘‘The North Koreans emphasise over and over, denucleari­sation is completely off the table,’’ she said. ‘‘We are smoking something if we think this is something that is achievable. They say it’s not negotiable, it’s over, it’s done, this is not something we can talk about.’’

Terry went on to say her North Korean counterpar­ts said, ‘‘We are so close to completing the nuclear programme, we are so close to perfecting this nuclear arsenal, we did not come this far to give it up.’’ She added that they gave the examples of Libya and Iraq as regimes that abandoned nukes only to face regime change later.

It’s not just Terry who at this point is persuaded the goal of a denucleari­sed North Korea is not attainable. Bill Clinton’s former secretary of defense, William Perry, told a group of journalist­s last month in Washington that the best the US could hope for now would be a freeze on North Korea’s programme, similar to the one the Obama administra­tion negotiated with Iran. But again, this would not roll back the considerab­le progress the regime has made. What’s more, he said he would not recommend today a pre-emptive strike against the regime’s arsenal. This is in part because North Korea has thousands of mortars capable of hitting Seoul, but also because a military strike wouldn’t be able to take out the country’s entire nuclear infrastruc­ture.

Perry is less gloomy than other experts. Michael Auslin, the Williams-Griffis fellow in contempora­ry Asia at the Hoover Institutio­n, was blunt. He told me: ‘‘Negotiatio­ns won’t work.’’

Auslin explained that over a quarter century, Pyongyang has used the negotiatio­ns to buy time and extract concession­s from the West. Among the concession­s the North Koreans have gained from the negotiatio­ns are being removed from the US list of regimes that sponsor terrorism, shipments of food and fuel, the promise of light water plutonium reactors and the removal of crippling economic sanctions.

Despite all of these carrots, the regime has cheated on the commitment­s it has already made. The George W Bush administra­tion discovered this in its first term when it learned of North Korean work on a uranium enrichment facility. In 2002, an envoy for the regime acknowledg­ed it in talks, and the Bush administra­tion pulled out of the 1994 joint framework negotiated by Clinton.

The truth is there are no good policy options today for North Korea. It’s doubtful that regime change is even possible. The US government is culturally illequippe­d to foment insurrecti­on inside such a notoriousl­y closed society. And an invasion of North Korea would be about as popular in America today as cancer.

It’s possible that sabotage and other forms of cyber attacks could delay the North’s nuclear capability. What about working with China? President Donald Trump acknowledg­ed yesterday in a tweet that his desire for China to apply more pressure on North Korea has not worked.

‘‘There is no good existentia­l answer to North Korea,’’ Auslin said yesterday. ‘‘It’s not just about negotiatio­ns. It’s about the entire set of political, economic, social, security threats we face.’’ He said at this point the regime had accomplish­ed a stalemate, and was close to achieving a checkmate against the West.

That’s not the kind of thing Americans like to hear. We dream big. But in foreign policy, it’s important to be realistic. The Trump administra­tion has an opportunit­y to level with the public in a way prior administra­tions did not. If you want to stop North Korea from getting a nuke, that requires war. If you’re not prepared to go that far, stop pretending the US can achieve its goals with more talking. It won’t work.

- Lake is a Bloomberg View columnist. He was the senior national security correspond­ent for the Daily Beast and covered national security and intelligen­ce for the Washington Times, the New York Sun and UPI.

– Washington Post

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un reacts with scientists and technician­s of the DPRK Academy of Defence Science after the test-launch of the interconti­nental ballistic missile Hwasong-14.
PHOTO: REUTERS North Korean leader Kim Jong Un reacts with scientists and technician­s of the DPRK Academy of Defence Science after the test-launch of the interconti­nental ballistic missile Hwasong-14.

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