The Mercury News Weekend

Stop North Korea now; it won’t get any easier

- By Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

North Korea recently test-launched a missile capable of reaching Alaska. When North Korea eventually builds a missile capable of reaching the U.S. mainland, it will double down on its well-known shakedown of feigning indifferen­ce to American deterrence while promising to take out Los Angeles, San Francisco or Seattle unless massive aid is delivered to Pyongyang.

Kim Jong Un rightly assumes that wealthy Western nations would prefer to pay bribe money than suffer the loss of a city — and that they have plenty of cash for such concession­s. He is right that the medicine of taking out Kim’s missiles is considered by Western strategist­s to be even worse than the disease of living with a lunatic regime that has nukes.

No wonder that the Clinton, Bush and Obama administra­tions had few answers to North Korean serial lying and deceit. Sanctions eventually were dropped or watered down either on reports of the mass starvation of innocent North Korean civilians or on false promises of better North Korean behavior.

China publicly promised to help rein in its unhinged client while privately doing nothing. Apparently, Beijing found a rabid North Korean government useful in bothering rivals such as the Japanese and South Koreans while keeping the U.S. off balance in Asia and the Pacific. The dynamic economies and pacifism of Japan, South Korea and Taiwan were taken for granted by China as easy targets for coercion and blackmail.

Russia is never any help. Under President Vladimir Putin, Russian foreign policy is reductive: Whatever causes the United States and its allies a major headache is by definition welcomed. The brainwashe­d North Korean population is cut off from global news and knows nothing other than three generation­s of Kim family dictators. The military junta that surrounds Kim is likely as aggressive as its leader.

A preemptory strike might not get all of North Korea’s nuclear missiles and could prompt a convention­al response that would wreck nearby Seoul — a scenario about which North Korean openly brags.

Pyongyang believes that only the Israelis are wild enough to preempt and bomb neighborin­g nuclear facilities, as they did in 1981 against Iraq and again in 2007 against Syria. And yet Israel attacked only because neither Iraq nor Syria had created deterrence by possession of a single deliverabl­e nuclear weapon.

What are the bad choices before Korea miscalcula­tes and sends a missile that prompts a war?

Sanctions have in the past crippled Pyongyang. But this time around they should not be lifted despite the prospect of ensuing chaos. It might be tragic that a captive population suffers for the lunacy of its leader, but that is preferable to an all-out war.

Nor should China be exempt from stiff trade re- strictions. Almost every weapon component in the hands of North Korea either came directly from China or was purchased by cash earned through Chinese trade and remittance­s.

Australia, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the U.S. need to coordinate a massive missile defense project aimed at ending North Korean assumption­s that even one of its missiles has a chance to reach its intended target. Such a Marshall Plan-like investment would also send a message to China that its own nuclear deterrent could be compromise­d.

None of our allies in Asia wish to develop nuclear weapons, both for historic and economic reasons. But the United States should inform Russia and China that allied democracie­s in the region might choose to develop a nuclear deterrent to stop North Korean antics. Asia is already a dangerous place. Do Moscow and Beijing wish to add three or four more nuclear powers near their borders?

The current danger is not just limited to North Korea. Iran, a beneficiar­y of North Korean nuclear assistance, is watching how far Kim can go. It will make the necessary strategic adjustment­s if he succeeds in shaking down the Western world.

We are nearing an existentia­l showdown, as failed efforts at bribery and appeasemen­t have run their course. Only a tough, messy confrontat­ion now can prevent a disastrous war later on.

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