North
Korea Does Not Trust America for a Pretty Good
Reason
By Doug
Bandow
August
11, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- North Korea obviously wants to be a nuclear
power with the ability to deter the United
States. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson sought
to reassure Pyongyang about America’s
intentions. Unfortunately, however, Kim Jong-un
would be a fool to believe any promises made by
Washington. Only actions are likely to convince
him.
In
recent days Secretary Tillerson has gone on a
charm offensive directed at the Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK). He said
America is not the DPRK’s enemy and Washington
is not seeking regime change. The implication is
that Kim should relax, agree to give up his
nukes and missiles, and enter into a beautiful
new friendship with America—just like Muammar
el-Qaddafi did back in 2003. Okay, maybe not
Qaddafi, but surely the North Korean Supreme
Leader gets the point.
The
problem is, Kim almost certainly does get the
point. And that doesn’t help Secretary Tillerson
or the Trump administration.
Imagine
trying to maintain the Kim dynasty, now on the
third generation, in today’s world. The DPRK
remains desperately poor; a bad harvest
threatens the countryside with malnutrition and
hardship. The North is locked in a long-term
competition with South Korea, which has around
forty times the GDP and twice the population.
Moreover, Seoul is defended by the world’s sole
superpower, which routinely runs aircraft
carriers along North Korea’s coast and flies
bombers over North Korea’s cities. Pyongyang is
friendly with Russia and nominally allied with
China, but neither of its traditional protectors
likely would save the DPRK from internal
collapse or external aggression.
The way
forward surely involves some economic reform,
which Pyongyang is undertaking. But too much
economic liberty could undermine the
totalitarian political order. The People’s
Republic of China (PRC) is willing to help, but
Beijing does little for free. Kim wants to rule
an independent nation, not a de facto PRC
province. Whatever Moscow does likely will
reflect its relations with America, since
relations with the DPRK are more a means to
inconvenience Washington than than a positive
end. Ultimately, the North can only depend on
itself.
For
that purpose, nukes and missiles obviously are
helpful. They certainly offer a comparatively
cheap means of defense, given the impossibility
of matching the Republic of Korea and United
States in conventional forces. Affirming the
North’s strategy are the squeals from Washington
policymakers who fear not so much of being
attacked, but of being prevented from attacking
the DPRK without consequence.
There
are other reasons Kim might want his country to
become a nuclear power—international status,
opportunities for neighborly extortion,
strengthening the military’s allegiance to the
family dynasty. However, long-range missiles
only make sense as a means to confront the
United States. If Washington wasn’t threatening
North Korea, Pyongyang would prefer to ignore
the hyper-power half-way around the globe. Since
that’s not the case, the North logically wants
to be able to bring the war home to Americans.
Thus,
Tillerson hopes to convince the DPRK leadership
that it has nothing to worry about. It is a
worthy intention. If only Kim felt safe, he
would disarm and embrace Uncle Sam. Or something
like that.
Should
Kim believe Secretary Tillerson? No knock on the
secretary, but diplomats and their equivalents
have been lying since the first negotiation at
the beginning of time. Who can imagine the
secretary instead declaring that the DPRK tops
America’s target list for regime change?
Whatever Secretary Tillerson actually believes,
he will say he is for peace.
Even if
Secretary Tillerson is truly inclined in that
direction, why should anyone believe the same of
President Donald Trump? The two have disagreed
on a host of issues—how to approach to Europe,
the value of the Iran nuclear deal, blame among
the feuding Gulf States. As president, Donald
Trump can set policy if he chooses. Having
already threatened war and talked of sending
armadas to the region, the president could
easily overrule his secretary of state and opt
for war.
Alas,
no one knows what the president believes. He
accused the South Koreans of cheating the United
States by free-riding, called Kim a
“smart-cookie” he would be honored to meet,
affirmed the alliance, suggested that Kim was
insane, tried to subcontract the North Korea
problem to China, dismissed the alliance as of
no value, promised to act alone against the DPRK.
What foreign leader would trust President Trump
to take a position—any position—and stick with
it?
No
Advertising
- No
Government
Grants
-
This
Is
Independent
Media
|
Moreover, the North Koreans surely are not
ignorant of the strong war party in Washington
whose members do the Maori Haka whenever a
possible conflict appears on the horizon.
Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham have
been talking up the likelihood of war. The
latter said he expects President Trump to act if
Pyongyang does not yield. Even if the DPRK
abandoned its nukes, American politicians soon
might be back advocating military action. Only a
couple years before the ouster of Qaddafi,
McCain and Graham had dinner with the Libyan
leader in Tripoli and suggested the possibility
of foreign aid to reward him for his cooperation
against Al Qaeda. Soon thereafter they were
pushing for military action to oust him.
Nor is
it enough to believe that President Trump won’t
change his position, whether under pressure or
not. President George W. Bush struck his deal
with Qaddafi after ousting the leaders of
Afghanistan and Iraq. But Bush kept his word and
left Libya alone.
That
changed in the next administration. The 2011
Arab Spring gave the Obama administration its
opportunity to defenestrate the Libyan dictator.
In the name of humanitarianism, even though
Qaddafi had neither targeted nor threatened
civilians—his infamous speech was directed
against armed insurgents—the United States and
Europeans pushed regime change. Never mind past
deals and discussions of aid. Qaddafi was
vulnerable and the allies struck.
No one
knows who will follow President Trump. It could
be an uber-hawk Republican. Moreover, Hillary
Clinton could run again. Her comment on
Qaddafi’s end, delivered while laughing, was “we
came, we saw, he died.” If Kim disarmed, what
would prevent a change of position in Washington
similar to that toward Libya?
Of
course we would be better off if the Kims went
the way of the Ceausescus, Romanovs, Habsburgs,
and other ruling dynasties. However, like others
before them, they are not likely to go
voluntarily, quietly or peacefully. To the
extent they believe they are threatened, they
will amass the tools necessary to resist their
ouster. In North Korea’s case that means nukes
and missiles.
If
Secretary Tillerson wants to convince Kim Jong-un
that the United States does not seek the North
Korean dictator’s ouster, America needs to act
the part. That means reducing obvious military
threats against the DPRK: warnings of potential
attack, comments that all options are on the
table, bomber overflights, carrier sail-byes,
military exercises, bases and garrisons, and the
like.
More
important, Washington should bring home its
troops from South Korea. It is the bilateral
alliance which puts American military units up
against those of the North. The Republic of
Korea is capable of defending itself. Seoul
should construct the military and adopt the
policies necessary to deter the North from
attacking and win the war if one erupts. That
could include South Korean nuclear weapons as an
alternative to the United States providing a
so-called nuclear umbrella over South Korea. If
Washington was not aiming its forces at the
DPRK, the Kim regime would not be aiming back.
Secretary Tillerson has the right idea in trying
to reassure North Korea about America’s
intentions. But Kim would be foolish to believe
verbal assurances by someone who may not even
speak for his own administration, let alone for
the U.S. government over the long-term. American
conduct must change. Only if Washington stops
targeting the DPRK is the latter likely to see
no need for a nuclear deterrent against America.
Washington policymakers must decide if they
believe defending South Korea is worth
endangering the American people.
Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at
the Cato Institute and a former Special
Assistant to President Ronald Reagan. He is the
author of Tripwire:
Korea and U.S. Foreign Policy in a Changed World
and co-author of The Korean Conundrum:
America’s Troubled Relations with North and
South Korea.
This
article was first published by
The National Interest
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.