Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP’S SCARY STRATEGY ON NORTH KOREA

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On just the first day of a war between the United States and North Korea, according to a Stanford University assessment, 1 million people could be killed.

Yet after my five-day visit to North Korea with three New York Times colleagues, such a nuclear war seems terrifying­ly imaginable.

In the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, it was clear that President Donald Trump’s threat to “totally destroy” North Korea had backfired and is being exploited by Kim Jong Un for his own propaganda and military mobilizati­on.

The country has seized on Trump’s words to reinforce its official narrative that its nuclear arsenal is defensive, meant to protect Koreans from bullying American imperialis­ts. And North Korean officials use Trump’s bombast as an excuse for their own.

“The American Trump uttered nonsense about demolishin­g our country,” a military officer, Lt. Col. Hwang Myon Jin, told me. “So as soon as our supreme leader gives us an order, we will turn the entire country of the U.S. into fire.”

One typical propaganda image shows a powerful North Korean soldier stepping on the face of an evil-looking blond U.S. soldier and reads, “Death to invaders.”

Kim doesn’t want to appear weak and seem as if he is caving to U.S. pressure, and officials in North Korea repeatedly cited Trump’s threats to justify their military mobilizati­on and their reluctance to engage in dialogue or conciliati­on.

“The current Trump administra­tion’s aggressive remarks about how he can totally destroy my country make it unthinkabl­e that we can start any dialogue,” said Ri Yong Pil, a senior Foreign Ministry official. My visit left me thinking that Trump’s entire strategy rests on a series of fundamenta­l and dangerous misconcept­ions.

The first misconcept­ion is that sanctions and talk of war will lead North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons. Every North Korean official we spoke to insisted that this was impossible, and the U.S. intelligen­ce community likewise believes that this just won’t happen, for (as I mentioned in my last column) North Korea sees nuclear warheads as crucial to its survival.

We did see signs that sanctions are biting, for businessme­n complained about China cracking down on trade; gas prices have doubled; and electricit­y is rationed. Power outages are routine even in the capital.

Yet solar panels are becoming more common, and Kim has moved to liberalize the economy in ways that generate growth despite sanctions. Collective farms are allowing greater use of private plots, factory managers enjoy more responsibi­lity to turn profits and street markets are more tolerated than before.

The bite of sanctions on elites also is dulled by a Kim initiative to inject a bit of fun into life in the capital (special permission is needed for North Koreans to visit Pyongyang, let alone live there). This is still the most totalitari­an country in the world, but it does have an amusement park, a water park, a ski area and a dolphin show — North Korea’s version of SeaWorld. (I genuinely enjoyed the dolphin show, until it ended with widescreen images of missiles.)

Economic reforms helped generate gross domestic product growth, after long stagnation, of 3.9 percent last year, according to South Korea’s central bank. That’s more than twice the growth rate last year in the U.S. of 1.6 percent.

The second U.S. misconcept­ion is that China can transform North Korean behavior. We’ve always exaggerate­d Chinese influence on North Korea. Kim has gone out of his way to humiliate President Xi Jinping, and Chinese officials fear that this will happen again this month with a missile launch or nuclear test during China’s 19th Communist Party Congress.

North Korea has refused even to allow a visit by the Chinese point man for North Korean affairs, Kong Xuanyou. “We know what Kong would say, so he doesn’t need to say it here,” one North Korean official told me scornfully.

The third U.S. misconcept­ion is the assumption that the North Korean regime is near collapse, and that huffing and puffing will accelerate this. In the early 1990s my wife and I chose to be Tokyo correspond­ents for The Times partly because that would enable us to cover North Korea — and its impending collapse. We’re still waiting.

Yes, at some point it’ll happen, but don’t count on it tomorrow. And the economic reforms, however modest, may give the regime a bit more life.

Trump genuinely has increased the economic pressure on North Korea through United Nations sanctions, and the pinch may increase. But one of the worst mistakes in internatio­nal relations, plaguing us from Vietnam to Iraq, is to operate on wishful thinking rather than reality, and I fear that’s what’s happening here in a perilous way. To be blunt, Trump’s strategy frightens me.

In speech and through Twitter, he is escalating a conflict and trumpeting military options as he insists on a goal of denucleari­zation that is unachievab­le, a tactic of Chinese pressure that is unrealisti­c and a premise of regime fragility that is wishful thinking.

That’s how wars happen. New York Times News Service

 ??  ?? Nicholas Kristoff
Nicholas Kristoff

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