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Pyongyang 1, Bush 0

John Feffer, IRC | October 10, 2006

Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco, IPS

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Foreign Policy In Focus

Five years ago, when George W. Bush took office, North Korea didn't claim membership in the nuclear club. Its plutonium reprocessing facilities were frozen. It was even willing to negotiate away its missile program.

Instead of pursuing the diplomatic route, the Bush administration tried to ignore Pyongyang. Then came the schoolyard taunts such as lumping North Korea together with Iraq and Iran in an “axis of evil.” When indifference and insult failed to move the isolated East Asian country, the administration accused North Korea of enriching uranium, which led to the unraveling of the 1994 Agreed Framework and the reigniting of a major crisis. To top it off, Washington began to squeeze Pyongyang economically with sanctions.

Pyongyang has refused to cry “uncle.” Instead, it has replied in kind. With its missile launches in July and its recently announced nuclear test, Pyongyang has demonstrated that it can be as stubborn and as enamored of military playthings as the Bush administration.

With such a miserable track record in inducing behavior change, why has the United States continued to speak loudly and wield a big stick against a hornet's nest like North Korea? It might be, like North Korea's recent test, a fundamental miscalculation. The Bush administration, after all, has shown a pathological inability to learn from its mistakes. Or there might be a deeper, more malign intent at work.

Wave Stick, Hornet Stings

At first, the Bush administration followed the logic of its predecessors. It looked at North Korea through the prism of Eastern Europe. With a little nudge, the regime was supposed to topple just like the communist governments in Warsaw, Bucharest, and East Berlin. But North Korea showed remarkable resilience, surviving the collapse of its Soviet trading partner, several years of extreme famine in the mid-1990s, and then the containment-plus tactics of the Bush administration.

In the absence of a dramatic coup or military putsch in Pyongyang, the Bush administration had to demonstrate that it was not just twiddling its thumbs while North Korea unfroze its plutonium reprocessing facilities and moved full-speed ahead toward a nuclear arsenal. The faintest whiff of weapons of mass destruction had justified U.S. military intervention in Iraq. And all the United States could do with North Korea was call it names?

Thus were born the Six Party Talks, a multilateral effort involving the two Koreas, China, Russia, Japan, and the United States. A remarkable group of diplomats gathered to talk, but alas, not to negotiate. Guided by the uncompromising Vice President Dick Cheney, the Bush administration has viewed any meaningful negotiations with North Korea—and the prospect of any serious agreement—as simply prolonging the lifespan of Kim Jong Il's regime. The State Department was on a short leash. The Bush administration refused to negotiate bilaterally, North Korea's negotiating process of choice. In the Bush-Cheney lexicon, compromise equals appeasement and “Munich” stops all conversations.

Here's what the problem with the strategy of pointless talking was: North Korea was not satisfied with cat-and-mouse maneuvers. Its economy reeling and its population malnourished, the North Korean government wanted a deal. And the only thing worth trading that it possessed—or that the world thought it possessed—was a nuclear program.

The recent nuclear test is the logical consequence of the North's policy over the last four years. It developed a nuclear program to deter U.S. attacks, but it also needed a bargaining chip to trade for status, cash, and other goodies. It froze its nuclear program under the 1994 Agreed Framework, but probably kept some reprocessed plutonium in reserve just in case and began a covert uranium-enrichment program as a similar insurance policy. When the Agreed Framework collapsed in 2002, North Korea changed tactics, declaring that it did in fact have nukes, which served to strengthen its deterrent capabilities and increase its ask at the negotiating table.

But the Bush administration wasn't dealing. So North Korea ended its self-imposed missile moratorium last July. And when that didn't get the United States into one-on-one negotiations, it raised the ante once again with a nuclear test.

Such tactics should surprise no one. Pyongyang has begun giving the world advance notice of its actions. Psychologists call these signals a “cry for help.” North Korea wants to negotiate, wants to avoid options that are clearly suicidal. But global 911, staffed by the inattentive Bush administration, is just not responding.

External Signal, Internal Audience

The nuclear test is a signal to the international community that North Korea refuses to be disrespected, have its sovereignty abridged, or suffer a full-frontal military assault. But the test also serves various internal purposes.

The staff of the country's nuclear complex—scientists, military officials, and government representatives—have an important stake in seeing their project through to completion. As George Perkovich perceptively argued in his book India's Nuclear Bomb, the team developing nuclear weapons is not simply a group of technicians that can be turned on or off depending on government whim. The nuclear complex develops political power within the overall government system. Tasked to create a bomb, it must demonstrate its success or it will lose that power. A nuclear test translates into bonuses and promotions, and consolidated political power within the system.

Another internal rationale is provided by the date of the test: October 9. North Korean leader Kim Jong Il formally took the helm of the Korean Worker's Party on that date in 1997. There have been only two leaders in North Korean history. Kim Il Sung founded the country and, despite often horrendous policies, enjoyed the adulation of the population. With the famine that took place on his watch and the near collapse of the country, Kim Jong Il has squandered his father's legacy.

The nuclear test is, in other words, a rather large example of overcompensation. Economic news out of North Korea hasn't been very positive. Heavy rains and flooding over the summer damaged the country's capacity to feed itself. Financial sanctions applied by the United States have helped stall any economic reforms. Even China, outraged over the July missile launches, has begun to put a gentle squeeze on its neighbor. There's not a lot of bread in North Korea and, though the Pyongyang Circus is quite good, such performances will not distract the population. Kim Jong Il might have as much charisma as a chunk of anthracite but only a handful of world leaders have pushed their countries past the well-guarded gates of the nuclear club.

But did North Korea really test the bomb? The verdict isn't yet in. The recent test might have been just a lot of TNT or it could have been a very small weapon tested unsuccessfully. However, from North Korea's point of view, the perception of deterrence is more important than the reality. It wants to prevent an attack. If the United States and others are scared off by empty underground caverns—like Kumchang-ri in 1999—or by a whole lot of dynamite, so much the cheaper.

To Strike or Not to Strike

Will an attack on North Korea be the administration's October surprise? The rally-around-the-flag effect of bombing North Korea would be overwhelmed by the sheer scope of the immediate consequences, not to mention the longer-term blowback. The Bush administration has insisted on keeping all options on the table, even though the Pentagon has made it clear that a military strike against North Korea would lead to retaliatory attacks that would kill tens of thousands of U.S. and South Korean soldiers and civilians. The Pentagon has also confessed that it would have great difficulty eliminating the dispersed nuclear facilities in North Korea.

For military, economic, and electoral reasons, it doesn't make sense for the Bush administration to launch an attack against any country at this moment. Alas, the administration seems to be singing only one tune these days, that old Talking Heads favorite: Stop Making Sense. The administration ignored the top-level Pentagon advice on Iraq. It could do so again with North Korea.

If the military option is not really on the table, the Bush administration is running out of choices. It is unveiling a new set of financial sanctions and wants inspections on all cargo going in and out of North Korea. But Pyongyang, while not exactly reveling in its isolation of late, is accustomed to being the odd man out. Kim Jong Il's regime endured several famine years; perhaps it calculates that two more cold-shoulder years from the Bush administration are survivable.

For some in the Bush administration, the nuclear test is cause for celebration. The coterie around Dick Cheney rejoices at the growing divide between North Korea and China, the more aggressive military and foreign policy of Japan, and the compromised efforts of South Korea to engage the North. The nuclear test is the most effective argument the Cheney crowd can use to defeat calls for diplomacy. An amplified North Korean threat works wonders on Capitol Hill and with our allies to push missile defense, more military spending, and the like.

But the recent test has not destroyed the diplomatic option. Pyongyang has reiterated its willingness to negotiate. It doesn't have much choice. A nuclear weapon can't feed its people or rebuild its factories.

The international community, through the UN, should by all means register its outrage at North Korea's act and translate that outrage into some concrete actions. But many years of sanctions haven't brought North Korea to its knees or back to the negotiating table. It's time for the Bush administration to make up for a half-decade of failed policies by talking seriously with Pyongyang, both bilaterally and multilaterally. Just inside the door, North Korea can still be persuaded to back out of the nuclear club.

John Feffer is the co-director of Foreign Policy In Focus for the International Relations Center (online at www.fpif.org) and the editor of The Future of U.S.-Korean Relations (Routledge, 2006).

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
John Feffer, "Pyongyang 1, Bush 0" (Silver City, NM and Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, October 10, 2006).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/3581

Production Information:
Author(s): John Feffer, IRC
Editor(s): Emily Schwartz Greco, IPS
Production: Chellee Chase-Saiz, IRC

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name Robert A. McCallister Date: Oct 11, 2006
I gather that you consider it perfectly acceptable for North Korea to counterfeit our currency, to flood the world market with counterfeit drugs and to sell arms to those who would do harm to us and our allies.
Name Ethel Tobach Date: Oct 13, 2006
Until the USA destroys all its nuclear weapons, and explains why it supports Israel, India, and Pakistan, it cannot speak out against North Korea, Iran, or any other country.
Name Shahin Sakhi Date: Oct 21, 2006
If the ultimate reason to attack or judge those countries that make nuclear weapons is to prevent use of nuclear weapons, then we should bring the first country, that has used nuclear weapons, to international court at Noremberg (I prefer Hiroshima) to be judged and tried before the next ones.
Name P.C. Mahesh Date: Oct 29, 2006
The world today has indeed shrunk into the metaphorical global village. Our lonely planet is currently passing through a very dangerous phase, when all of life including some of the greatest achievements of human ingenuity can be destroyed in an instant of insanity. It is the duty of all of us to stop pointing our fingers and begin with sincere self examination and make changes in our life such that our planet will survive - to one day afford our progeny the same comforts and pleasures that many of us enjoy today. Om Shanti, Shanti, Shanti. Peace, Peace, Peace be unto all.
Name Liam Brent Kelly Date: Oct 30, 2006
I believe that the 'Test Ban Treaty' established by JFK was an excellent diplomatic tool that worked in real world terms for its duration-which I consider finally fully abridged with the unilateral invasion of nation-state sovereignty by augustus bushie II the war profiteering anarchist and imbecile. After they murdered JFK/MLK/RFK/Medgar evans et al. they did not merely go away- they then proceeded to take over the government and ratchet up the military-industrial complex. It is a 'manageable chaos' doctrine that Nixon and Kissinger created and first implemented as their basic policy in the middle-east and now a policy-most foreign that is in fact THE foreign policy of the U.S.- I not-so-humbly-suggest it is a National INsanity not a national security policy. Please read the following-Sent to the Christian Science Monitor under the subject heading: When are you people going to stop pimping?

You definitely got jokes! Do you really expect anyone with a brain to believe that the 'War on Terror' is not being prosecuted with all intention as a 'policy most foreign' to fulfill the skewed view of our Nation-States best interests? This impossible to sit down and sign a peace-treaty with any party perpetual ‘war on terror’ is not simply anti-Christian in killing the 'children of GOD'* ,(for: who are the peace-makers in this war? we are all traitors and defeatists aren't we)- it is achieving the opposite of its 'supposed' purpose: it is raising a terrorist army and generating instability. Now, ONE MIGHT LIST THE FOLLOWING AS REASONS WHY THIS ORWELLIAN 'WAR ON TERROR' IS A FAILURE:

1) If a Nation-State can't defend its Nation-State Sovereignty through political means and failing that conventional weaponry then it will turn to the nuclear option thus undoing the movement toward disarmament and moving instead toward nuclear weapon proliferation;

2) An insurgent and therefore future terrorist army is being trained, not destroyed, each day we are in IRAQ;

3) The instability in the Middle East is creating a generation to whom peace will be unacceptable as the body count rises

4) The unification of the Muslim world as defending against a 'modern crusade' is giving political legitimacy to the hardliners and eroding the political position of anyone who dares 'work with the American Satan’, (GREAT SATAN, I believe is how it is expressed); the false witness bearing false accuser using WMD as an excuse to invade Nation-State Sovereignty;

5) The promises of 'democracy' and stability VS. the reality of the destruction of the society to a continuing worse condition than pre-existing is causing those who would stand against the taking over of the 'new' institutions by those who reject the west to lose face and tenability- thus each day that goes by the institutions being 'imposed', (ever more perceived so!), are being co-opted by those who will overthrow them or divert them to their own anti-western/ anti-democratic ends;

6) Thus unification of the 'enemy' and factionalization of the 'allies' of indigenous Iraqi populous is occurring:

BUT WHAT IS THE POINT-Augustus Bushie and the boys know THAT IT IS AND ALWAYS WILL BE A FAILURE- it doesn't matter to them because they are beholden to the Kissinger Doctrine: It doesn't matter who is a friend and who is an enemy: as long as you create factionalism amongst the various Nation-States of the Arab world. This is based on the belief that peace, prosperity, and SECURITY cannot co-exist. It is a policy most foreign that does not have peace but WAR as the objective. The FEAR is that the Arab world will unite along the lines of Religion/ Culture/ Language/ History/ Co-incidental Self-Interest and a Charlemagne might arise to unite the Arab world and threaten Israel; and American Industrial interests. How long do you think this failure of a policy could be perpetuated before the people who have suffered the building up then tearing down cycle ad infinitum...ad nauseum..without any winners... except America and Israel; would wake up to what is really going on? The invasion of Nation-State Sovereignty is the resignation of one's own Nation-State Sovereignty, (funny how 'do unto others' works isn't it!) and don't even try and suggest that 911 was the beginning... it is the denouement to the last 50 years of similar invasions of Nation-State Sovereignty in the middle-east on our part; committed to this Kissinger policy of death and destruction and of the commitment to following the 'sons and daughters of Satan' instead of JESUS. Peace, prosperity, and SECURITY can co-exist and arguably are necessary and sufficient conditions of one another. Until peace is the TRUE purpose and commitment of our foreign policy recognizing our real and true Nation-State interests lie with such purposes don't expect any different results.

Liam Brent Ceallacht, (Kelly) - An American in Exile

*- in scripture Jesus said in his sermon on the mount, amongst other things, that: BLESSED ARE THE PEACEMAKERS FOR THEY WILL BE/ (WOULD BE) KNOWN, (sic: called), (AS) THE CHILDREN OF GOD

Name Filip Capanda Date: Jan 04, 2007
It seems to me that USA has lost its first real "chicken game" in history. Whatever led White house to the assumption that N. Korea would get scared and give up its sovereignty, in order to protect its inhabitans from long-lasting famine, proved to be wrong. The outcome of US policy is on both sides more negative than it could have been if the strong words about the axis of evil had never been said and serious diplomatic talks had started in the right time.
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