On the day that the two Koreas talk peace this is the considered opinion of the magazine “Foreign Policy”
It’s Time to Bomb North Korea
Destroying Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal is still in America’s national interest.
Foreign Policy,
8 January, 2018
Nothing can be known about this week’s talks between North and South Korea other than their likely outcome. As in every previous encounter, South Korea will almost certainly reward North Korea’s outrageous misconduct by handing over substantial sums of money, thus negating long-overdue sanctions recently imposed by the United Nations Security Council. Meanwhile, the North will continue to make progress toward its goal of deploying several nuclear-armed, mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles, having already tested nuclear-explosive devices in October 2006, May 2009, February 2013, January 2016, September 2016, and September 2017
Each
test would have been an excellent occasion for the United States to
finally decide to do to North Korea what Israel did to Iraq in 1981,
and to Syria in 2007 — namely, use well-aimed conventional weapons
to deny nuclear weapons to regimes that shouldn’t have firearms,
let alone weapons of mass destruction. Fortunately, there is still
time for Washington to launch such an attack to destroy North Korea’s
nuclear arsenal. It should be earnestly considered rather than
rejected out of hand.
Of
course, there are reasons not to act against North Korea. But the
most commonly cited ones are far weaker than generally acknowledged.
One
mistaken reason to avoid attacking North Korea is the fear of direct
retaliation.One mistaken reason to avoid attacking North Korea is the
fear of direct retaliation. The U.S. intelligence community has
reportedly claimed that North Korea already has ballistic missiles
with nuclear warheads that can reach as far as the United States. But
this is almost certainly an exaggeration, or rather an anticipation
of a future that could still be averted by prompt action. The first
North Korean nuclear device that could potentially be miniaturized
into a warhead for a long-range ballistic missile was tested on
September 3, 2017, while its first full-scale ICBM was only tested on
November 28, 2017. If the North Koreans have managed to complete the
full-scale engineering development and initial production of
operational ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads in the short
time since then — and on their tiny total budget — then their
mastery of science and engineering would be entirely unprecedented
and utterly phenomenal. It is altogether more likely that they have
yet to match warheads and missiles into an operational weapon.
It’s
true that North Korea could retaliate for any attack by using its
conventional rocket artillery against the South Korean capital of
Seoul and its surroundings, where almost 20 million inhabitants live
within 35 miles of the armistice line. U.S. military officers have
cited the fear of a “sea of fire” to justify inaction. But this
vulnerability should not paralyze U.S. policy for one simple reason:
It is very largely self-inflicted.
When
then-U.S. President Jimmy Carter decided to withdraw all U.S. Army
troops from South Korea 40 years ago (ultimately a division was left
behind), the defense advisors brought in to help — including myself
— urged the Korean government to move its ministries and
bureaucrats well away from the country’s northern border and to
give strong relocation incentives to private companies. South Korea
was also told to mandate proper shelters, as in Zurich for example,
where every new building must have its own (under bombardment,
casualties increase dramatically if people leave their homes to seek
shelter). In recent years, moreover, South Korea has had the option
of importing, at moderate cost, Iron Dome batteries, which are
produced by both Israel and the United States, that would be capable
of intercepting 95 percent of North Korean rockets headed to
inhabited structures.
But
over these past four decades, South Korean governments have done
practically nothing along these lines. The 3,257 officially listed
“shelters” in the Seoul area are nothing more than underground
shopping malls, subway stations, and hotel parking lots without any
stocks of food or water, medical kits or gas masks. As for importing
Iron Dome batteries, the South Koreans have preferred to spend their
money on developing a fighter-bomber aimed at Japan.
Even
now, casualties could still be drastically reduced by a crash
resilience program. This should involve clearing out and hardening
with jacks, props, and steel beams the basements of buildings of all
sizes; promptly stocking necessities in the 3,257 official shelters
and sign-posting them more visibly; and, of course, evacuating as
many as possible beforehand (most of the 20 million or so at risk
would be quite safe even just 20 miles further to the south). The
United States, for its part, should consider adding vigorous
counterbattery attacks to any airstrike on North Korea.
Nonetheless,
given South Korea’s deliberate inaction over many years, any damage
ultimately done to Seoul cannot be allowed to paralyze the United
States in the face of immense danger to its own national interests,
and to those of its other allies elsewhere in the world. North Korea
is already unique in selling its ballistic missiles, to Iran most
notably; it’s not difficult to imagine it selling nuclear weapons,
too.
Another
frequently cited reason for the United States to abstain from an
attack — that it would be very difficult to pull off — is even
less convincing. The claim is that destroying North Korean nuclear
facilities would require many thousands of bombing sorties. But all
North Korean nuclear facilities — the known, the probable, and the
possible — almost certainly add up to less than three dozen
installations, most of them quite small. Under no reasonable military
plan would destroying those facilities demand thousands of
airstrikes.
Unfortunately,
this would not be the first time that U.S. military planning proved
unreasonable. The United States Air Force habitually rejects one-time
strikes, insisting instead on the total “Suppression of Enemy Air
Defenses.” This is a peculiar conceit whereby every single
air-defense radar, surface-to-air missile, airstrip, and combat
aircraft in a given country must be bombed to destruction to
safeguard U.S. pilots from any danger, instead of just bombing the
targets that actually matter. Given that North Korea’s radars,
missiles, and aircraft are badly outdated, with their antique
electronics long since countermeasured, the Air Force’s
requirements are nothing but an excuse for inaction. Yes, a more
limited air attack might miss a wheelbarrow or two, but North Korea
has no nuclear-warhead mobile missile launchers to miss — not yet.
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