The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Can the U.S. stop North Korea from becoming a nuclear power?

-

The U.S.-North Korea confrontat­ion is nearing another tense inflection point, with North Korea signaling that it could be ready for negotiatio­ns with Washington soon, even as it moves toward becoming a full nuclearwea­pons power.

When such diplomatic standoffs get resolved, it’s often by allowing each country to claim it’s entering negotiatio­ns on its own terms.

In this case, North Korea would assert its status as a nuclear-weapons state, while the U.S. would insist the dialogue is about eventual denucleari­zation of the Korean peninsula. This may sound like an unbridgeab­le divide, but that’s what diplomacy is for.

But as 2017 nears its end, the two countries still appear to be on a collision course. Kim Jong Un’s bellicose rhetoric matches President Trump’s. There’s an odd mutual fascinatio­n, too, which one foreign diplomat describes as “love/hate.”

Speculatio­n about talks increased, paradoxica­lly, after North Korea’s latest missile test on Nov. 29, which appeared to demonstrat­e Pyongyang’s capability to strike the continenta­l United States.

In a statement, Kim announced “with pride that now we have finally realized the great historic cause of completing the state nuclear force.”

To some analysts, Kim was declaring victory — and preparing a pivot. Russian emissary Vitaly Pashin told Interfax news agency on Dec. 1, after a visit to Pyongyang, that senior officials there “told me that the North was prepared to sit at the negotiatin­g table.”

North Korea’s insistence on its nuclear-weapons status was conveyed to Song Tau, a senior Chinese emissary who visited Pyongyang on Nov. 17.

Pyongyang seemingly wants negotiatio­ns with America, but on its own terms.

Analysts speculate that to justify keeping its existing stockpile of several dozen nuclear weapons, North Korea might promise not to share its nuclear technology with others, and not to attack the U.S.

North Korea evidently wants to be like India and Pakistan, which became de facto members of the nuclear club after building weapons secretly. It doesn’t want to be like Libya or Iraq, whose leaders were deposed and killed after giving up their nuclear programs.

An interestin­g visitor to Pyongyang this week is Jeffrey Feltman, U.N. undersecre­tarygenera­l and a former U.S. assistant secretary of state. He’s the highest-ranking U.N. envoy there in six years. What’s he up to? Diplomats aren’t talking.

The U.S. strategy for pressuring North Korea remains centered on China, and the hope that the Chinese will tighten sanctions so much that they squeeze Pyongyang into backing down.

Many analysts are skeptical this will work: The North Koreans resent Chinese interferen­ce, and they have stockpiled a year or more of energy supplies to cope with such pressure tactics.

China doesn’t want a nuclear North Korea; but it doesn’t want a U.S. strike on its border, either. It seeks a diplomatic solution that will resolve the irreconcil­able.

History tells us that an unconventi­onal solution was found to avert nuclear war 55 years ago, and interestin­gly, Washington and Beijing are reviewing those very lessons. According to a senior Pentagon official, a highlevel Chinese-American military gathering last week in Washington conducted a joint case study of the Cuban missile crisis.

Has North Korea crossed the nuclear threshold?

Pyongyang’s recent statements suggest they have, but some analysts have doubts. North Korea hasn’t shown it can control an ICBM’s re-entry, and it hasn’t fitted an actual warhead atop a missile, sources say.

Will the Trump administra­tion try to block North Korea from crossing this final goal line, by military means if necessary?

Or will it seek a diplomatic formula that could, over time, leave all sides better off than the cataclysm of war? At this holiday season, that conundrum is hidden in the dark box in the corner.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States