Blogs and Stories
Last Chance with North Korea
Charles Dharapak / AP Photo
After Kim Jong Il’s nuclear test, what can Barack Obama do with no viable military options? He can play the only card he has left: Ask China for help.
North Korea sure knows how to get President Obama’s attention on Memorial Day. And it’s not by extending an unclenched fist.
While its first nuclear test in 2006 was by all accounts a dud, Pyongyang’s test this morning at 9:54 a.m. GMT apparently yielded a more than respectable blast of between 4 and 20 kilotons.
That officially makes North Korea the ninth member of the world’s nuclear club—and the only state to have signed and withdrawn from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, an international dike against proliferation now springing so many leaks that it risks collapsing.
Beijing can command North Korea’s attention in a way that Washington cannot. Until now, it has declined to do so, eager to shore up the ugly North Korean regime to prevent its collapse or reunification with South Korea.
What to do now? The expected denunciations are being proclaimed today at the United Nations Security Council, which is meeting to discuss what President Obama called North Korea’s “violation of international law,” and a “threat to international peace and security.” Such provocations, he added, “will only serve to deepen North Korea’s isolation.”
But the White House statement was short on specifics. Stating the obvious—that North Korea’s tests “warrant action”—President Obama said the U.S. would “continue working with our allies and partners in the six-party talks as well as other members of the U.N. Security Council in the days ahead.”
But all “partners” are not equal. China is the key to stopping North Korea’s nuclear-weapon activities. Just as Obama must cajole Beijing into supporting tough sanctions against another nuclear-power wannabe—the Islamic Republic of Iran—the administration must persuade China to do what it has so far resisted: Tell North Korea to cease and desist its nuclear development and dismantle the program, as it has previously pledged to do.
Make no mistake: China must now act. It supplies between 80 and 90 percent of North Korea’s electric power, 90 percent of its crude oil and all of its diesel fuel. Between 70 and 80 percent of North Korea’s food imports come through China. And while ailing autocrat Kim Jong Il clearly doesn’t care if his people starve, he might care if China nixes his apparent plans, as reported in The Wall Street Journal two days ago, to have his brother-in-law and third son succeed him.
As Thomas C. Reed and Danny B. Stillman argue convincingly in their terrifying new book, The Nuclear Express: A Political History of the Bomb and Its Proliferation, China is the only country with true leverage over North Korea.
A little nuclear history is in order here. Washington, these authors note, has tried myriad strategies to rein in Pyongyang since the end of the 1980s, when it developed enough fissile material for one or two atomic bombs. (It now has enough plutonium for five or six.) Washington has considered but always rejected military action—wisely, they believe, given U.S. troops' presence in South Korea and the vulnerability of our South Korean ally.
In spring of 1994, Reed and Stillman note, President Clinton’s Defense secretary, William Perry, developed plans to bomb North Korea’s plutonium reactor, but shelved the option out of concern that North Korea would attack South Korea.
North Korea then tested its bomb, a one-kiloton dud that achieved only 4 percent of its yield design, say Reed and Stillman. Though a technical failure, the test was a political success. It prompted the U.S. to return to six-party talks. This, John Bolton, the former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. argued only five days ago, “gave Kim Jong Il cover to further advance his nuclear program.”
In 2006, former Defense Secretary Bill Perry and fellow defense analyst Ash Carter urged President Bush in an essay in The Washington Post to "immediately make clear its intention to strike and destroy the North Korean Taepodong missile before it can be launched." They wrote: “Should the United States allow a country openly hostile to it and armed with nuclear weapons to perfect an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of delivering nuclear weapons to U.S. soil? We believe not.” (Ash Carter has since been appointed President Obama's undersecretary of Defense for acquisition.)
Nevertheless, the Bush administration wound up doing what its predecessors had done: negotiating again with Pyongyang through six-party talks. In 2007, Washington agreed to supply North Korea with one million tons of fuel oil in exchange for a pledge to dismantle its nuclear facilities. A year later, North Korea destroyed the cooling tower of its reactor, but quickly reverted to its usual tactics of ordering, then stopping, dismantlement, allegedly because of a dispute with Washington over how its 18,000-page list of atomic-related activities would be verified.
In April, North Korea launched a Taepodong-2 missile, prompting more international condemnation. The missile fell short of its target but North Korea scoffed at international criticism of the test. Its national pride wounded, North Korea vowed to escalate further. Now it has, with a second bomb test.
North Korea says it wants direct talks with the U.S. and no more sanctions. The Obama administration seems determined to return to the trap of six-party talks, which Bolton, a hard-liner on North Korea, calls “a charade" that reflects "a continuing collapse of American resolve.” Bolton also recently warned that U.S. acquiescence to a second North Korean nuclear test will “likely mean that Tehran will adopt Pyongyang's successful strategy.” Iran is obviously closely watching what happens to North Korea.
Fearing some serious economic sanctions or perhaps even more aggressive reprisals, Pyongyang has taken out additional insurance in the form of two American reporters it is about to put on trial for trumped-up charges. The fate of these women seems to hang in the nuclear balance as well.
But because there seems to be no viable military alternative to diplomacy, the Obama administration should play the only card it might have—China. Beijing can command North Korea’s attention in a way that Washington cannot. Until now, it has declined to do so, eager to shore up the ugly North Korean regime to prevent its collapse or reunification with South Korea. In this moment of nuclear crisis, with so much at stake, Obama must see who its real nonproliferation friends are.
Judith Miller is an author and a Pulitzer Prize-winning former investigative reporter for The New York Times. She is now an adjunct fellow at Manhattan Institute, a contributing editor to its magazine, City Journal, and a Fox News commentator.







Ritarita
Judith Miller?
No thanks.
oliverckerr
Next time you see file film of the North Korean Army marching in their main square with "Great Leader," Kim Jong Il reviewing from the box above, look at the chests of the goose stepping soldiers. Their uniforms are starched. The shirts do not hide they his ground forces are all fat free and underweight!
An Army marches on its stomach. Great Leader's army is hungry.
In an actual battle against their brothers, south of the 38th parallel, an issue 60 years ago but not today, the North Korean army would collapse in a week. But an atomic bomb does not require a couple bowls of rice every day.
We need to a plan to overthrow the North Korean government, without delay, our goal, killing less then one hundred people, but total destruction of all military installations north of 38th parallel.
Upon that, a doable strategy, after 12 hours the white flag will fly and the country will immediately start becoming one Korea. The korean people North and South will endorse that, instantly!
This should be Obama's goal but this strategy / plan / idea requires creative thinking which is a prob limb. Obama is a winner. He is not a leader, nor is he a creative thinker. In that sense, the world is leaderless.
Having said that much as an introductory:
In the dead of bitter winter - say the middle of January we should bomb, without warning, specifically using those huge 500 pound bombs that create those monster craters - say a half dozen of them all around the main square in Pyongyang, where file film shows "Great Leader" reviewing his troops, at 4:00 a.m., when Pyongyang bureaucracy is asleep and absolutely no one is around!
One half dozen monster 500 pound bombs in the Pyongyang Square and no one is killed.
This bombing in the dead of night will have the effect of blowing out every window for blocks around. The square is surrounded by government buildings so the government will in effect be frozen out of business - shut down - because every building will be an ice cold freezing. Computers will not work when the temperature is 20 degrees below zero.
Option: Parachute in 20 South Korean commandos to seize the television station so immediately we begin broadcasting to the North Korean population, taking into account the only people with televisions are government employees.
We need every nuclear submarine in our own Red October arsenal to move up to the North Korean coast. Diplomacy: We want to invite the Russians and Chinese to join us with their submarine fleets also.
Then at 4:00 a.m. we cruise with our missiles all at once and hit every airfield hangar. With B-52's at the same time we hit eery airfield with the 500 pound monster bombs, to create huge pot holes on all the runways so any jet fighters that survive the cruise missile attack can't take off anyway. Bottom line: planes and airfields demolished. Fighter pilots and supporting people live.
At the same time, using infra red tech, at the 38th parallel, hit every building that has a stove blasting. Those would be the buildings where the army commanders are hanging out. They have plenty fuel oil for their stoves.
All the other barracks where the lowly enlisted one bowl of rice a day are living will be low heat because they don't have enough fuel. Those soldiers will be under their covers. We target only the warmest barracks.
Our purpose is to take out the commanders so an order to attack cannot be given. A hundred commanders should do the trick. One hundred heroes die a million lives are saved.
There is nothing to fear of an attack on South Korea by the North Korean army bunched at the border, whether or not we take out the command posts, though they are about 20 miles from Soul, because none of the North Korean trucks or tanks will start - all of the batteries are down in the dead of winter.
The North Koreans don't have enough fuel to start the trucks and tanks every day to keep the batteries charged!
At the same time leaflets everywhere and loudspeakers inviting the North Korean Army to immediately march south waving white flags and expect a hot lunch when they get to the suburbs of Soul, expect to start tomorrow in the KIA factory.
Through diplomatic channels we offer an olive branch and take it or leave it 500 acres in Montana for Great Leader Kim.
The most important element - the key to success is all of the above could be put into an illustrated loose leaf notebook and presented to the Jap-Sin-Easy, The Rooskies, and the shiny Cheyenne- Easy, to secretly pass along to Great Leader Kim, giving Great Leader ample time to consider the consequence of his nuclear pretense.
He has a choice. 500 acres in Montana, or permanent visit with Saddam the Big Salami. The loose leaf notebook will do it.
These are the words of the poet prophet candidate for president - what he will do upon election - what he would be doing right now were he president. He sent this to me via email with instructions to post it. Visit michael s levinson dot commie to see the improvements in his web site. Visit alphabet-learning.com/phonicsbox.html where you will see and hear the first column only in his 112 page double column Television Scripture he wrote down to perform on whirled wide television for all the world's peoples to participate in all at once.
Then you might ask yourself who do you prefer to deal with "Great Leader" poet prophet or who you got?
grrrrr
billybob
one of the craziest things i've ever read
oliverckerr
Dear Billy Bob,
The North Korean and South Korean people would like to live as one people. Standing in the way is a vicious buffoon, also known as "Great Leader, and the bureaucracy he created.
The above was featured in a great movie, a few years ago. It was titled, "Wagging the Dog."
When Kim drops an A bomb a lot of dangerous nuclear dust is going to blow over China, Japan, and Russia. They don't want that. These other countries do not fear a United Korea.
Tell us how you would bring that about. What is wrong with producing a loose leaf notebook with graphic examples of what we are capable of doing without involving any of our troops or actually killing any Koreans (except for the 38th parallel commanders and that is only a possibility.
The North Korean people are slowly starving to death! Don't you get that?
troublemonkey
I'm not saying the "nuclear threat" is inconsiderable... but whoever plays that card first (if it's not the US) had better be prepared to find themselves looking a glowing hole in the ground where their country used to be the very next day.
When nuclear proliferation was REALLY scary was when thousands of nukes were ready to be fired on a hair trigger by two (or three?) superpowers.
Today, even if North Korea fired off all the five or six missiles they have fissile material for, and *all of them hit the US*, it would HURT us, but not destroy us... and North Korea would be history within hours.
The same is true for any country that allows a nuclear strike against America... they'd better be prepared to simply cease to exist the following day.
Nukes could cause a great deal of grief in the US, maybe even the loss of a major city or three... but, hell, huge fires and earthquakes have decimated American cities before... we're just too BIG to be knocked out with one punch. Most of these little nuclear wannabes do not have that advantage.
Fanatics may not care if they're sent to Allah for their reward... but we'll be happy to arrange that if so much as one suitcase nuke goes off in the US, I pretty much guarantee you.
troublemonkey
Seems like swatting down their first attempt (as Ash Carter suggested) would definitely have been the smart move.
Kind of like throwing a punch at Bruce Lee and having him casually snatch your fist out of the air. Deterrent for sure(ent).
Sandras
If China has no success with this spiteful, childish little man, then I think we should arrange for N. Korea to cease to exist - without nukes first, but if necessary with them. To let a loaded gun remain in the hands of a spiteful child is like asking for catastrophe.
xbainx
Spoken like a true chickenhawk. Let's destroy an entire country because it has a leader we don't like. Volunteer to drop the bombs, then you can talk.
chuckupd
North Korea makes the Iranian leadership look almost sane, by comparison. Judith got the time wrong. It was 9:54am local time Monday, not GMT.
Tucson138
North Korea at this point is a living monument to the pathetic ego of one little man; a broken, useless strip of barren land, bereft of ingenuity charm or intellect. I, for one, could foresee the international community sanctioning the utter destruction of North Korea without hesitation, such is the frustration caused by Kim Jong Ils intransigence and double dealings. Even the Chinese are fed up with them.
And for anybody looking for a first hand account of just what a mess N. Korea has made of itself, and why it may be impossible to salvage, look at this mini-documentary from Vice TV, it's really chilling stuff.
http://www.vbs.tv/shows/north-korea/
sissnitz
Ugh, The Daily Beast hired/employs Judy Miller? Crappy journalist, crappier human being.
Banjo1
"Spoken like a true chickenhawk."
xbainx appears to think you can only have an opinion on military matters if you have worn the uniform. Let's see, that would eliminate everyone in the Obama administration, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, most of the GOP leadership -- well, just about everyone. Dude, I'm just sayin', as the barren fat lady from up north would say. It's not just the nuclear weapon. North Korea has thousands -- THOUSANDS -- artillery pieces pointed at Seoul. Think about it.
xbainx
I don't have to defend peace. It has a good track record. YOU have to defend war. War created the situation in Korea. The U.S. is a great country, but it has done terrible things. You are not going to war. If there's a draft I am going. So you can talk all you want, but you don't know your history.
Banjo1
Peace has a good record until the shit hits the fan, as it invariably does. The appeasement of the Nazis when they invaded Czechoslavakia is a good example. It led Hitler to misjudge what Britain and France would do if he invaded Poland. Um, do you know about that? (I thought not). The division of Korea was an outgrowth of Communist expansion. Do you know about THAT? (I thought not). You seem like a young person. Maybe you should consider withholding any further opinions on big issues until you have undergone further seasoning by age and experience. You'll be surprised how much they change.
shortcourse
That's right xbainx...the US has done terrible things...like expending thousands of servicemens lives to pull Eruopes ass out the fire, like going to war against japan that bruitalized the east, and many other circumstances that are politically debateable. Take it from me....the military does not want a draft...some politicians do for political reasons. And with suitcase nukes on the market...you won't have to go to war...war will come to you.
finderj
The US has no viable military options?
Who are you and where do you live tha tyou believe that?
THe US has no palatable military options.
Not the same thing, not at all.
Here's hoping China will deal, because if they don't, we will have to.
Fredocanada
the US has no military option (that includes distastefull solutions) or diplomatic option.
North Korea has the 4th largest army in the world with around 1 million troops and thousands of missiles pointed at South Korea.
Right now NK has China's support and needs absolutly no one else. They couldn't care less about sanctions from western countries. Kim claims NK only needs 15% of its population to go on so he is ready to make any sacrifice.
officianado
Seems to me that NK's just looking for some attention. The problem isn't that NK might at some point use 'the bomb' on the USA or SK (nuclear radius, wind, it's a lose lose scenario), but rather the potential for their on-selling them to terrorists / or other non-US loving countries...which is easier with Pakistan anyway. So whats the big deal? And besides, the US has a decent track record of fostering internal conflict and uprisings in Sth America...why hasn't it worked in Nth Korea? Kim's the attention seeking kid in pre-school, throwing rocks at people, while Pakistan's more like the schizo kid that might just stab someone...hard.
Hawnzz
China is the only nation with leverage over N. Korea. It is about time they play their part. They have, in large part created this problem... let them deal with it.
shortcourse
Here is the test that came up in the election....good luck!
anti-imperialist
The daily Beast proves it is a worthless MERICON (ignorant brainwashed Americans = MERICONS,you know a slur like NAZI) internet propaganda piece publishing propaganda from the CIA agent Judith Miller. You should be locked in a cage for your crimes Judith Miller and summarily executed for the death of 1.3 million Iraqis. The US empirial army has been threatening North Korea with destruction since Truman in 1950 - a threat of a nuclear war of aggression. The US has constantly tried to starve the people of North Korea to death with Japanese help. In the latest installment of acts of aggression the empirial army under the command of Obama threatened to shoot down North Koreas satellite launch - again another threat of a act of aggression which would lead to a war. Damn American imperialism, damn reporters who work for the CIA and damn this magazine for publishing such trash which pushes for war. Death to American imperialism and all who support it.
This user is no longer registered.
Genni2002
What about a little A-list actor diplomacy? He seems to love everything Hollywood.
Llplo99
China has already condemned N. Korea. Let's see what happens. I know U.S. is supposed to be the leader of the free world, but let's let someone else play this part for once. We have enough on our hands with Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran. Its is time for China to step up to the plate and show some leadership in providing order to the world.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/05/25/2580513.htm
"The Chinese Government expresses its resolute opposition," the foreign ministry said in a statement on its website.
"The Chinese side vehemently demands North Korea abides by its denuclearisation promises, stop any actions which may worsen the situation and return to the six-party talks process.
"The Chinese Government calls on all sides to calmly and appropriately deal [with the situation]."
JerryIzzo
Poll-driven career political class and Path of Least Resistance policy formulations once again West's soft underbelly.
Thank you.
As a first time user, your comment has been submitted for review. It can take anywhere from a few hours to a day or two for your comment to be reviewed, depending on the time of week and the volume of comments we receive.