The Kansas City Star (Sunday)

Kim faces annihilati­on in nearly all Korean war scenarios

- BY JON HERSKOVITZ

After decades of empty threats, much of the world tunes out when North Korea vows to unleash destructio­n on its enemies. But in the past few months, some prominent analysts began warning that Kim Jong Un may actually be serious about preparing for war.

Now in his 13th year running North Korea, Kim is more aggressive­ly testing the boundaries of what his adversarie­s will tolerate. Backed by rapid progress in his nation’s nuclear capabiliti­es and missile program, the 40-year-old dictator began 2024 by removing the goal of peaceful unificatio­n from North Korea’s constituti­on and declaring he had the right to “annihilate” South Korea.

While such bellicose rhetoric would normally be dismissed – Kim could just be posturing ahead of South Korean elections on April 10 – two prominent analysts set off a round of discussion among North Korea watchers with an article suggesting that this time Kim isn’t bluffing.

“Like his grandfathe­r in 1950, Kim Jong Un has made a strategic decision to go to war,” former CIA officer Robert Carlin and nuclear scientist Siegfried Hecker wrote in early

2024 on the website 38 North, which focuses on North Korea. They didn’t forecast how soon that could take place.

Carlin and Hecker’s views are not universal: Most analysts argue that any full-scale attack would be a move of desperatio­n or suicide, inviting a response from South Korea and the US that would end the Kim family’s nearly eight-decade-long rule.

But with multiple conflicts raging in Ukraine and the Middle East, it’s just the kind of war the world could stumble into – with potentiall­y devastatin­g consequenc­es for not just the Korean Peninsula, but the global economy and, particular­ly, the chip supply chain.

Seoul’s response to all the speculatio­n has been blunt: “The Kim regime will meet its end” if it pursues all-out war, South Korea’s Defense Ministry said in January.

Here are the potential scenarios if Kim Jong Un decides to make good on his threats to attack South Korea.

FIRST STRIKE BY NORTH KOREA

Back in 1950, North Korean troops invaded South Korea, catching the United States off guard. The forces of Kim Il Sung – Kim Jong Un’s grandfathe­r – took over much of the peninsula before US and South Korean forces countechno­logy terattacke­d. China’s interventi­on led to a stalemate that resulted in a cease-fire but no formal peace treaty, and the Korean Peninsula has remained split at around the 38th parallel ever since.

Kim Jong Un is unlikely to risk a similar invasion. But he has shown an appetite for smaller provocatio­ns that could spin out of control – a trait shared by his father, Kim Jong Il.

One flashpoint is the Yellow Sea border islands that are part of South Korea but located in waters claimed by Pyongyang. In 2010, some two years before Kim Jong Un took power, Yeonpyeong Island was the scene of a deadly artillery bombardmen­t that killed two South Korean soldiers and two civilians, while setting houses ablaze. About six months earlier, South Korea accused North Korea of torpedoing its warship Cheonan near the island, killing 46 sailors – an allegation Pyongyang denied.

South Korea has since pledged that another attack in the Yellow Sea would be met by an even stronger response, raising the chance for miscalcula­tions on both sides that could quickly escalate.

“If North Korea makes a provocatio­n, we will punish it multiple times over,” conservati­ve President Yoon Suk Yeol said in January after North Korea conducted artillery drills near a border island.

Any peripheral attack that escalates would immediatel­y turn the spotlight onto greater Seoul, home to about half of the country’s 51 million people. North Korea has spent decades stockpilin­g millions of rounds of artillery and thousands of rockets in the terrain north of the demilitari­zed zone, which sits some 25 miles away from South Korea’s largest city.

That border region is also home to about 70% of South Korea’s $1.67 trillion economy, the base for some of the world’s top and manufactur­ing powerhouse­s, including Samsung Electronic­s Co., LG Electronic­s Inc. and Kia Corp. Even a brief conflict would reverberat­e throughout global supply chains.

In a display typical of his more aggressive stance, Kim watched his forces in March fire off the weapons that could be used in an attack on the South Korean capital. Just a one-minute artillery and rocket barrage against Seoul could result in nearly 15,000 casualties, according to a 2020 analysis by Rand. A onehour barrage would see that number rise to more than 100,000.

In either case, a larger conflict would be inevitable.

If Kim goes all-in on a war, he would likely kick it off with an artillery barrage at key military, political and economic targets in Seoul. North Korea keeps its howitzers, mortars and rocket artillery in hardened positions and ready to fire on short notice for exactly this purpose.

At the same time, an estimated 200,000 soldiers in Kim’s special operations units - part of a 1.1 million-strong active-duty army – would try to cross the border by land, sea, air and even tunnel, according to South Korea’s Defense Ministry. One goal would be to target bridges on the Han River that flows through the center of Seoul, cutting the city in half and making it difficult for millions of people to flee to the less-populated southern end of the peninsula.

Kim would also seek to impose huge economic costs as quickly as possible. The Rand war game analysis determined that a five-minute North Korean artillery strike on one LGrun factory in Paju, north of Seoul, would put an $8.9 billion investment at risk and cause thousands of casualties.

But North Korea’s advantages in striking first wouldn’t last long.

South Korea is also ready to fight: It has Patriot defense systems to intercept incoming missiles, 555,000 active-duty troops and a military budget that’s larger than North Korea’s entire sanctionsr­avaged economy. And there’s also 28,500 U.S. troops based in South Korea, along with American spy satellites constantly monitoring the Korean Peninsula.

Although North Korea has a manpower advantage, the bulk of its forces rely on “increasing­ly obsolete equipment” dating back to the days of the Soviet Union, the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies said in its 2023 review of the world’s militaries.

North Korea’s few Soviet-era fighters and its squadrons of single-propeller An-2 biplanes – developed in the 1950s and with a top speed of about 160 miles per hour – would be easy pickings for South Korea’s surface-to-air missiles and modern F-35A jets, which can travel at speeds exceeding 1,200 mph.

“The United States and South Korea would essentiall­y, instantly, from the very first moments of the war, have absolute air superiorit­y in every way that could be imagined,” said Michael Mazarr, a senior political scientist at Rand.

It’s the same when it comes to other weapons systems: Pyongyang’s submarines are mostly small underwater clunkers that can’t stray far from the coast because they are easily detected. Its tanks are Soviet-era, and easily destroyed by Stinger missile systems used in Ukraine to stop Russia.

What South Korea doesn’t strike in the first few waves would likely be subject to air and missile attacks in the days that follow, leaving North Korea’s cities vulnerable to destructio­n – as happened in the original Korean War.

“Inadequate availabili­ty of fuel and transporta­tion assets, poor maintenanc­e of ground lines of communicat­ion, and insufficie­nt training all constrain North Korea’s ability to sustain large-scale convention­al offensive operations,” the U.S. Defense Intelligen­ce Agency said in a recent report.

THE PREEMPTIVE ‘BLOODY NOSE’

Another possibilit­y is a “bloody nose” strike against North Korea by the U.S. and South Korea, an option discussed during the Trump administra­tion. This scenario would only be on the table if the allies believed a large-scale North Korean attack was imminent, with the intent to show force and remind Kim that his antiquated military is no match for America’s might.

But the move was always seen as risky, likely leading directly to a bigger conflict. Moreover, in recent years, many of North Korea’s liquid-fuel rockets – which take time to fire off – have been replaced by solid-fuel versions that

Kim can quickly shoot from train carriages, lake beds and launchers hidden in caves with little to no warning.

If Kim misjudged and thought the U.S. and South Korea were looking to end his regime – instead of just deliver a message of deterrence – he might preemptive­ly use a nuclear weapon, said Duyeon Kim, an adjunct senior fellow in Seoul at the Center for a New American Security.

A U.S. National Intelligen­ce Estimate that was declassifi­ed last year said Kim would probably only use his atomic arsenal if he believes he and his regime are in peril.

“Our analysis right now is, effectivel­y, that he will engage in increasing­ly provocativ­e behavior but not – is not interested – in escalating this into a fullon war and that there is a kind of a limit on this,”

U.S. Director of National Intelligen­ce Avril Haines told Congress in March.

If a broader North Korean attack looked likely, South Korea would aim to deploy new bunker-buster missiles and squadrons of fighter jets based south of Seoul. U.S. bombers in Guam and ships and fighters based in Japan could also come to South Korea’s aid.

The South Korea-U.S. alliance would use air superiorit­y to target command centers, weapons storage sites, rocket launchers, radars, military bunkers, missile silos and nuclear storage facilities in hopes of wiping out as many of North Korea’s assets as possible.

Also on the target list: North Korea’s leaders, including Kim. Yoon has not been shy discussing his country’s so-called Three

Axis plan that includes preemptive strikes, fullscale assaults and taking out Kim.

The question of nuclear weapons is the most harrowing. Various estimates indicate North Korea may have 40 to 90 warheads. The Seoul-based Korea Institute for Defense Analyses said Kim seeks to have between 100 to 300 over the long term.

A strike on the Seoul region with one of North Korea’s more powerful bombs could cause about 400,000 fatalities and 1.5 million casualties, Rand estimated. North Korea could also strike out against U.S. ally Japan, or target American facilities in Guam or even in North America, although opinion is divided on whether Kim’s regime has the ICBM technology to hit targets on the U.S. mainland.

“North Korea has yet to demonstrat­e its capability to launch a nuclear attack against the United States, with questions lingering about its proficienc­y in reentry vehicle technology,” said Lami Kim, a nonprolife­ration expert at the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies in Honolulu.

North Korea has also sought to deploy lower yield tactical nuclear weapons for the battlefiel­d, perhaps to slow down a U.S.-led counteratt­ack. But use of nuclear weapons would expose Kim to a far more powerful response, with the U.S. being able to hit back quickly, and overwhelmi­ngly.

In that case, the death toll for an all-out strike could reach into the millions. A full-blown war could knock the global economy off the rails, leading to trillions in dollars of damage. And Kim’s regime would almost certainly be finished.

SELF-PRESERVATI­ON LIKELY TO WIN OUT

“We assess that through 2030, Kim Jong Un most likely will continue to pursue a strategy of coercion, potentiall­y including non-nuclear lethal attacks, aimed at advancing the North’s goals of intimidati­ng its neighbors, extracting concession­s, and bolstering the regime’s military credential­s domestical­ly,” said the latest U.S. National Intelligen­ce Estimate report.

The biggest questions now are whether the die has already been cast and what could prevent it.

Most analysts say Kim’s more heated rhetoric is just amped-up saber-rattling, meant to influence South Korea’s elections, unsettle the West or win more concession­s. Kim has staged provocatio­ns ahead of every election held in South Korea during his time in power, and he has more of an incentive to deal Yoon’s conservati­ve party a blow in the April 10 vote for parliament.

“The fundamenta­l goal of the regime is regime preservati­on,” said Rand’s Mazarr.

 ?? KIM JAE-HWAN SOPA Images/Sipa USA ?? A television in Seoul, South Korea, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, at a military training base last month. Kim’s rhetoric has grown aggressive ahead of elections in South Korea. Two prominent analysts wrote an article suggesting that this time Kim isn’t bluffing.
KIM JAE-HWAN SOPA Images/Sipa USA A television in Seoul, South Korea, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, at a military training base last month. Kim’s rhetoric has grown aggressive ahead of elections in South Korea. Two prominent analysts wrote an article suggesting that this time Kim isn’t bluffing.

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