The US has been fundamentally wrong on North Korea for decades — and now it may be too late by Alex Lockie on Mar 31, 2017, 11:43 AM Advertisement
Since the Clinton years, the US has considered military action and imposed strict sanctions against North Korea in an effort to curb its nuclear program — but none if it has worked due to fundamental misunderstandings about the shadowy Kim regime. US and UN sanctions on North Korea have sought to cripple the regime through restricting access to commerce and banking, but despite limited successes here and there, North Korea now regularly demonstrates a variety of potent and expensive nuclear arms in open defiance of the international community at large. "The pace of North Korean testing, particularly on the ballistic missile front has really accelerated over the past year," Kelsey Davenport, nonproliferation director at the Arms Control Association told Business Insider. Not only has North Korea tested a greater number, but also a greater range of missile types meant to diversify its arsenal and defeat US and allied missile defenses. But despite the US and UN's best efforts, "North Korea has demonstrated its ability to domestically produce technologies that it's denied by the sanctions regime," said Davenport, who added that overall, "compliance with UN sanctions on North Korea is quite poor." For some small Asian countries, they simply don't have the means to enforce sanctions on North Korea, like searching cargo on ships headed to North Korea or tracking dual use technologies, which have both civilian and military applications. This results in a North Korean state that has covertly become a large supplier of military goods to small nations in the region that can't afford Chinese military goods, or can't get access to US or European arms, which are tightly regulated. A recent joint report from Arms Control Wonk and Reuters detailed how North Korea uses a network of falsified addresses and names to simply confuse countries into doing business with them. North Korean businessmen may take the same name as South Korean businessmen, or they may list their addresses as being in the "Korean Republic" or "PY city," (Pyongyang) according to the report. "The reality is that the UN only works if everyone agrees to make it work," Rodger Baker, director of Stratfor, a geopolitical analysis firm, told Business Insider. "There is no UN police force that enforces everything. It's up to the individual nations." According to Baker, some countries may just not want to enforce sanctions from North Korea, especially China, which "turns intentional a blind eye," and "views the collapse of North Korea as a much greater risk than nuclearization," as a strong, unified and Western-leaning Korea could threaten China's aim to become the regional hegemony. But sanctions are only one, imperfect tool for fighting North Korea's nuclear ambitions. According to Baker, a much deeper misunderstanding has brought about the US's sustained failure to contain North Korea. "For the longest time, the US believed that the North Korean regime would simply fall apart," said Baker, who added that the US thought "the loss of Chinese and Russian support post-Cold war meant that there was no way North Korea would survive." Essentially, Baker says that the US made a huge mistake in thinking North Korea was just like any Easter European state that fell to Communism, and that the government wasn't that respected and the people wanted representation and freedom. When the Kim regime set up their government, they based it on traditional Korean politics and society, according to Baker. "They played off of a long history of Korean nationalism and implemented a system that was probably more Confucian than even China."
Sanctions work best when a country wants to participate in the worldwide economy, but North Koreans have been kept insulated from these desires. "This idea that if we can only keep flying South Korean TV show DVDs and pop songs into North Korea that they're all going to rise up because they want to have what their neighbors have overestimates the draw of material goods over nationalism and national identity," said Baker. Additionally, North Koreans have seen steady improvement in their country over time. The famine is over, money is pouring in from countries who can't or won't comply with sanctions. North Koreans have TVs, radios, and media to enjoy that paints the West as evil and the Kim regime as their savior. Whereas the West has underestimated the Kim regime's internal strength, North Korea has accurately read the West's political will to hit them with anything tougher than sanctions. Meanwhile, the focus of North Korea's nuclear program has shifted from a bargaining chip — something they could trade away for concessions from the international community — to an insurance policy. As North Korea picks up the pace of its nuclear and ballistic missile testing, the US's window for action against the Kim regime will quickly and firmly shut. "North Korea has made such progress now that the US feels that it does not have time anymore," Omar Lamrani, a senior military analyst at Stratfor told Business Insider earlier this month. He added that an ICBM in the hands of Kim would mean the US could no longer credibly threaten North Korea with nuclear force, representing a "point of no return" in multilateral relations. SEE ALSO: North Korea's nukes are nearing the 'point of no return' — and the US may have one last chance to act |
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