The National - News

As the North Korean crisis deepens, Trump upends the mutually assured destructio­n calculus

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The world was shocked when Donald Trump vowed to retaliate against North Korea “with fire and fury like the world has never seen” if it continued to issue threats to attack the United States.

But the world should not have been surprised. Only last weekend Mr Trump’s national security adviser, General H R McMaster, told an interviewe­r that the president was “not going to tolerate” North Korea being able to threaten the US with a nuclear missile.

What was alarming was the change in tone. For decades US presidents have followed Teddy Roosevelt’s maxim: “Speak softly and carry a big stick: you will go far.” With his warning of nuclear war, he has upended the calculus endorsed by much of the military top brass that the consequenc­es of using nuclear weapons would be too catastroph­ic to contemplat­e.

What is certain is that in terms of military strike power, Mr Trump was not exaggerati­ng. The first US nuclear weapon, used on Hiroshima in 1945, had a yield of around 15 kilotons of TNT. Today’s US nuclear bombs are more accurately targeted and far more destructiv­e, with a yield of up to 340 kilotons.

Mr Trump is not the first US president to contemplat­e using military force to destroy the North Korean nuclear programme. In 1993, Bill Clinton said that if North Korea used nuclear weapons, “it would be the end of their country”.

The Clinton administra­tion considered bombing Pyongyang’s nuclear installati­ons, but decided that the retaliatio­n against the South Korean capital Seoul would lead to thousands of casualties.

So what has changed in 25 years? North Korea is now estimated to have an arsenal of 60 nuclear warheads. It also has a fast-developing missile programme. US intelligen­ce believes that North Korea is now able to miniaturis­e a bomb to put on an inter-continenta­l ballistic missile. Such a weapon could be ready for use next year.

Mr Trump has clearly decided that his predecesso­rs were weak. The most generous assessment is that such threats will galvanise China into putting pressure on its ally to freeze the nuclear programme. The president has long believed that China is capable of doing this, and owes it to the US for, as he sees it, having got rich on one-sided trade with the US.

There is little chance that China will warm to this approach. Rather, it is likely to be seen as a sign of confusion in Washington. Only last Saturday the Trump administra­tion scored a rare diplomatic victory when the UN stepped up sanctions against North Korea. China promised to implement the sanctions, despite the cost to its economy.

Chinese consent was won over by a diplomatic effort by the US secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, who declared that the US was not seeking options beyond sanctions against North Korea. It did not desire regime change, nor was it looking for an excuse to “send our military north of the 38th parallel” that marks the border between the two Koreas. This is exactly what Beijing wanted to hear. In fact, stability would be greatly enhanced if the American army and navy quit the region.

Unsurprisi­ngly, a Chinese expert dismissed Mr Trump’s nuclear threats as “irresponsi­ble”.

Decisive action from China to rein in its ally is unlikely. The consensus of experts is that Kim Jong-un cannot afford to step back after he has put nuclear missiles at the centre of his defence against the Americans. Barring a Chinese-engineered coup, it seems likely that the nuclear and missile programmes will continue.

Andrei Lankov, a veteran North Korea scholar, says that Pyongyang will be interested in diplomacy only once it has a proven ability to strike at the US. The regime will achieve that goal in a couple of years, and then it might be ready to talk, an offer the US should accept. Despite the overheated rhetoric, cool heads will prevail and there will be no war.

All very logical. But this scenario ignores politics. What of America’s credibilit­y, which Mr Trump has promised to uphold, unlike Barack Obama who failed to enforce his “red line” crossed in Syria? In January, Mr Trump tweeted of North Korea’s boast that it was developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching the US: “It won’t happen!”

How it is not going to happen remains as unclear now as it was in January.

Mr Trump has upped his rhetoric almost to the level of North Korea’s, where threats to destroy Seoul or Washington in a “sea of fire” are a staple of propaganda. He now appears on the world stage as a dangerous, unpredicta­ble actor, the opposite of the hyper-rational Obama.

But is he so unpredicta­ble that he would he launch a pre-emptive war of such cataclysmi­c consequenc­e that it would make the Iraq fiasco look like a sideshow?

 ??  ?? ALAN PHILPS
ALAN PHILPS

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