Negotiate with North Korea.

PositionComment

With all eyes on the Iraq war, we thought we'd look to the next war on Bush's list: the one against North Korea. As grave as the consequences of Bush's Iraq war may be, those from any conflict on the Korean peninsula could be even more ghastly.

The Pentagon has estimated that as many as one million people could be killed in the first five days. Many of these could be U.S. citizens, as the United States has 37,000 troops stationed in South Korea, and more than 100,000 U.S. businesspeople and tourists are in that country.

For South Koreans, the toll would be even higher. Seoul, a city of eleven million, is just a few miles from the border. North Korea's dictator Kim Jong Il has threatened to turn the peninsula into a "sea of fire" and has vowed "total war" if the United States preemptively attacks Pyongyang's nuclear facilities. The North has a million-man army, possibly one or two nuclear weapons already, and a huge arsenal of conventional weapons. "Its artillery is especially fearsome: More than 10,000 guns, along with 2,500 rocket launchers capable of launching 500,000 shells an hour, are positioned within range of Seoul," Seymour Hersh wrote in the January 27 issue of The New Yorker.

This is no idle threat. On top of that, Pyongyang has missiles that can reach Tokyo.

Since the cost of military confrontation between Washington and Pyongyang is so exorbitant, you might think the Bush Administration would be doing everything it possibly could to tone down the rhetoric. But you'd be wrong.

Secretary of State Colin Powell said, "No military option's been taken off the table, although we have no intention of attacking North Korea as a nation." His last three words there suggest to Selig Harrison, author of Korean Endgame (Princeton, 2001), that the United States may have the intention of attacking North Korea's nuclear facilities, however.

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, the clumsiest bully in the Bush Administration, called North Korea a "terrorist regime" in the midst of the current crisis. "Let there be no doubt," Rumsfeld said, that the United States is capable of defeating North Korea, and he ordered twenty-four long-range bombers on alert for possible deployment so as to be within shorter range of North Korea's Yongbyon nuclear facility. That facility may soon be able to produce half a dozen nuclear weapons a year, and the United States fears not only those weapons but the fissile material that North Korea could sell to other...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT