By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, January 04, 2018
For good or evil, we may see radical changes in North
Korea in 2018.
The beefed-up United Nations sanctions by midyear could
lead to widespread North Korean hunger, as well as the virtual end of the
country’s industry and transportation.
In the past, the West had called off such existential
sanctions and rushed in cash and humanitarian aid on news of growing starvation.
Would it now if the bleak alternative was a lunatic’s nuclear missile possibly
striking San Diego or Seattle?
To survive an unending trade embargo — and perhaps to
avoid a coup — Kim Jong Un would likely either have to recalibrate his nuclear
program or consider using it.
China has always been unwilling to give up pit bull North
Korea as its client. The Kim dynasty has proved especially useful over the past
30 years for aggravating and distracting the Chinese communist government’s
archenemy, Japan, and its chief rival, the United States.
Yet China is now worried that the Donald Trump
administration is as unfathomable as the prior Obama administration’s strategic
patience doctrine was predictable.
Beijing’s sponsorship of the rogue nuclear regime in
North Korea could increasingly become bad business, given global anxieties over
the many possible trajectories of North Korea nuclear missiles.
What are some likely scenarios for 2018?
1) The status quo. China may loudly proclaim that it is
following U.N. commercial sanctions while it secretly offers just enough
sanction-busting aid to keep Kim Jong Un afloat. It might use its leverage to
force Kim to cool his nuclear rhetoric — even as it stealthily supplies
embargoed fuel and food.
China would then hope that an amnesiac world would move
on and accept a gentler-sounding (but still nuclear and thus useful) North
Korea.
The status quo — North Korean missiles pointed at
America’s West Coast — is clearly untenable. Yet never underestimate China’s
faith in the therapeutic forces of Western appeasement to accept the
unacceptable.
2) A Chinese solution. China would cut some sort of deal
to remove North Korean missiles — or even the Kim regime itself through a coup
or uprising — in exchange for controlling the future of North Korea. That would
likely mean not allowing a democratic, free, Westernized, and unified Korean
peninsula on its borders.
Other than disassociating itself from the future status
of North Korea, the U.S. should ensure that it does not give any concessions to
China to remove the nukes. Such an indulgence would only reward North Korea
nuclear roguery and ensure that the cycle of the last three decades would be
endlessly repeated.
3) Forced removal. Barring acceptance of the status quo
or a Chinese solution, the U.S. would be forced to accept widespread
malnutrition of the North Korean populace and a constant ratcheting up of
pressures to eliminate Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons.
Such leverage might include radical bilateral trade
sanctions against China. The Japanese, Taiwanese, and South Korean militaries
could threaten to go nuclear.
The U.S. should sponsor a Manhattan Project-style
regional comprehensive missile defense system. It could also ban Chinese
Communist Party officials and their families from U.S. soil.
Such pressures might force something quite unpredictable
to happen.
A doomed North Korea could launch a missile, invade South
Korea, be forced to disarm, or disintegrate amid coups or popular uprisings. A
humiliated China would likely either be pressed to quietly abandon North Korea
or find financial, economic, and military ways to harm the U.S.
4) Preemption. Barring the “peaceful” options of
defanging nuclear North Korea, the U.S. and its Japanese and South Korean
allies would have to disable the missiles through military force.
Such a nightmarish action would not be limited to
“surgical strikes.” Instead, it would have to include massive attacks on North
Korean missile sites, command and control centers, artillery and missile
platforms, military bases, and WMD repositories.
Such preemption would quickly escalate to a
general-theater war — or worse.
Last-gasp North Korean nukes might escape preemptive
bombing and be launched at Japan, South Korea, America’s Pacific bases, and the
U.S. West Coast.
A tottering North Korea could order a full-fledged
artillery pounding of Seoul, chemical and cyber attacks, and a conventional
ground invasion of South Korea.
The U.S. and its allies would win such a war. But the
cost could be catastrophic and prompt global recession.
No one knows what China would do in such an exigency.
Would it merely cry crocodile tears while its troublesome patron disappeared?
Or to save its last communist client, would China send troops into the
peninsula as it did in the fall of 1950?
One thing is always certain. The naive architects of
appeasement who watch as monsters grow always win short-term praise for
avoiding immediate war. Their realist successors, who are forced to cage or
destroy such full-grown beasts, are usually labeled as war mongers.
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