USA TODAY US Edition

CONFRONT KIM OVER MISSILE TESTS

We can’t have threat of North Korean strike hanging over West Coast

- Bruce W. Bennett Bruce W. Bennett is a senior defense analyst at the non-profit, non-partisan RAND Corporatio­n.

One of the most critical foreign policy challenges President-elect Donald Trump will face in the early days of his administra­tion is what to do about the nuclear saber rattling that continues to emanate from North Korea.

Ringing in 2017 with a New Year’s Day address, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un told the world that the year ahead would see North Korea test an interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM), perhaps one capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.

Because North Korea denies most informatio­n to the outside world, no one knows for sure whether Kim’s claim is true or whether North Korea possesses the technologi­cal know-how to launch a missile on a suborbital trajectory and have it return to Earth on target. Last year, it tested its intermedia­te-range missile and failed seven of eight times.

Trump has signaled that he has a plan, but it remains under wraps. He did tweet that “North Korea just stated that it is in the final stages of developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching parts of the U.S. It won’t happen!”

BASICS OF DETERRENCE Whether successful or not, an ICBM test by North Korea would be very much against U.S. interests. Trump should act to counter it as early as possible. A turn to the basics of deterrence would be the path most likely to succeed.

For deterrence to be effective, America should make clear to North Korea and its 33-year-old autocratic leader that an ICBM test will neither empower the Kim regime nor advance its nuclear capability.

When North Korea threatened ICBM developmen­t in 2006, former Defense secretary William Perry and Ashton Carter, who now holds the job, recommende­d that the United States destroy any test missile on its launch pad. That plan, however, was considered too escalatory and raised fears that North Korea might respond by firing artillery at U.S. allies in the region, such as South Korea or Japan.

Instead, Trump could announce a plan to use U.S. missile defenses to shoot down any test ICBM after its launch. Shooting down North Korea’s test vehicle would be a spectacula­r demonstrat­ion of the futility of the Kim regime continuing to pursue its nuclear ambitions, and far less escalatory than dropping bombs on North Korea.

At the same time, the Trump administra­tion could threaten to undermine the Kim regime’s power through new informatio­n operations if North Korea tests an ICBM. Trump also could pressure China to intervene, though Presidents Obama and George W. Bush had similar hopes and China never delivered.

TWEETING AT CHINA Trump made clear his dissatisfa­ction with China’s failure to intervene in a recent tweet: “China has been taking out massive amounts of money and wealth from the U.S. in totally one-sided trade, but won’t help with North Korea. Nice!” But China might be more willing to intercede if it knows that the United States is prepared to take major action against the Kim regime to stop its testing of ICBMs.

Kim has parallel goals in pursuing nuclear weapons: One is to distract his people from the many economic and social failures of the Kim family regime by showing the world that North Korea is a nuclear peer of the United States. The other is to demonstrat­e his ability to strike the USA with nuclear weapons. He hopes to thereby coerce U.S. agreement to a peace treaty with North Korea to end the 1950s Korean War, which could lead to an eventual withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Korea. Without U.S. forces in South Korea, Kim might be emboldened to pursue the only form of reunificat­ion he supports — North Korean conquest and absorption of South Korea.

Though a test is merely a test, if Kim orders enough of them during 2017, North Korea could succeed in resolving the many problems its missile program has encountere­d. That’s why a strong U.S. response is needed now.

There clearly are risks to any response that could provoke the mercurial Kim, but the risks of allowing North Korea to have a proven ICBM capable of carrying a nuclear payload are far greater. If even a single nuclear-armed North Korean ICBM were to strike a U.S. city, it could kill or seriously injure several hundred thousand Americans.

Trump should be clear on how he would respond, not just to the threat of attack, but also to the tests that could make such an attack possible in the future.

Kim should know that testing ICBMs will bring no benefits but will instead extract costs.

 ?? KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY VIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, wearing glasses, and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, on New Year’s Day. Kim turned 33 on Sunday.
KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY VIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, wearing glasses, and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, on New Year’s Day. Kim turned 33 on Sunday.

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