Cape Times

Nuke law reflects global trend

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NORTH Korea’s Kim Jong-un declaring he will never give up his nukes and enshrining a “first-strike” doctrine into law are part of a worrying new escalatory dynamic in nuclear weapons policy around the world, analysts say.

Since the height of the Cold War, nuclear arsenals have served primarily as a deterrent to be used only as a last resort, but when Russia invaded Ukraine in February, everything began to change, experts say.

Russian officials have refused to rule out the possibilit­y of a nuclear strike against Ukraine, and President Vladimir Putin has made thinly veiled threats of nuclear war, vowing that Moscow would use “all the means at our disposal to protect Russia”.

North Korea, long a global pariah for its nuclear weapons programme, revised its laws this month, declaring itself to be an “irreversib­le” nuclear power and offering an array of scenarios when it would use its nukes.

“We have entered a new era in which one nation is open to using nuclear weapons, in contrast to the Cold War doctrine,” said Kim Jong-dae of the Yonsei Institute for North Korean

Studies. With talk of “automatic” first strikes and tactical nuke deployment­s, North Korea’s new policy “reflects Kim’s response to changing nuclear dynamics around the world”, he said.

It is not just Putin that Pyongyang is responding to: the US has also played a role, the analyst added, pointing to the revival of its tactical nukes, smaller weapons designed for battlefiel­d use, under ex-president Donald Trump.

The Pentagon under Trump had pointed in 2018 to Russia’s tactical nukes to make the case for the US to have matching nukes as a credible deterrent. “We should not equate Pyongyang’s latest move as an irrational decision or Kim being unpredicta­ble. Kim is being nimble in adapting to a new global trend,” he said.

Announcing North Korea’s new policy, Kim said the country’s status as a nuclear power was “irreversib­le”, effectivel­y eliminatin­g the possibilit­y of denucleari­sation talks.

Washington’s decades-long goal of getting Pyongyang to give up its nukes for aid is now “impossible to realise” and Seoul should seriously consider acquiring nuclear weapons of its own, said Cheong Seong-chang of the Centre for North Korean Studies at the Sejong Institute.

This is a step that even hawkish new President Yoon Suk-yeol, who took office in May, has ruled out, although he did hint on the campaign trail that he could be open to the US deploying tactical nuclear weapons in South Korea. Kim’s new law also “carries a message to President Yoon”, said Cheong, describing it as a clear warning that “Seoul would not be spared from nuclear strikes” if it attacked or joined a US attack on North Korea.

The goal of the law is to “underline how North Korea’s nuclear weapons are a part of its national identity, and cannot be negotiated away”, said Mason Richey of the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. “There is also a message to potential aggressors that an attempted first, disarming strike against North Korea will be a failure,” he said. “The risk here is that North Korea is playing into a dynamic of escalatory ‘use it or lose it’ logic.”

Kim is trying to use his nuclear weapons to head off any threats to his rule, analysts say. The US and

South Korean militaries have recently ramped up drills under Yoon. There have been reports that commandos from both countries have been practising “decapitati­on” strikes that would target the North Korean leadership.

Kim is “apparently fearful of regime decapitati­on in a conflict and even of a US or South Korean pre-emptive strike against North Korea’s strategic assets”, said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.

He has chosen to respond by “advertisin­g an irresponsi­bly risky and aggressive nuclear doctrine”.

Seoul and Washington have said that any attempt by Pyongyang to use nuclear weapons would be met with a “decisive” response. But the risk that North Korea will be punished at the global level for its move is slim.

“With Russia and China clear enemies of the United States, the North feels emboldened and knows that sanctions enforcemen­t will be very lax,” said Harry Kazianis, president of think tank Rogue States Project. So Pyongyang has focused on building “a world-class programme that can kill millions of people in minutes”.

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