WHEN I FIRST WROTE ABOUT THE TRUMP-KIM NON-AGGRESSION PACT, I expressed pessimism but reserved judgment until I knew more about its vague terms. I now wonder if history will record it as the most disastrous international agreement since Molotov-Ribbentrop, one that will put the U.S., South Korea, and Japan forever under the shadow of North Korean nuclear blackmail, forever break the global nonproliferation regime, mark the beginning of the end of South Korea’s experiment with liberal democracy, and put us on the path to an inevitable war that could draw in China or Russia. The latest revelation is that Trump’s talk of complete denuclearization before North Korea gets any concessions may have been little more than that—empty talk.
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No doubt, the nonproliferation twitterers—who don’t know enough about North Korea to understand what it wants nukes for, don’t know why allowing it to keep “just a few nukes” isn’t acceptable, and can’t grasp that its signatures mean nothing—will cheer. But from where I sit, Trump’s North Korea policy just went from the least-bad of my lifetime to easily the most dangerously weak. Much like its predecessors, Agreed Framework III is neither an agreement nor a framework, but a stalling tactic, a sanctions wedge, and a means to extort more incremental concessions to consolidate Pyongyang’s creeping hegemony over Seoul. From Pyongyang’s perspective, it’s working perfectly.
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That Pyongyang would renege was so predictable that some of us predicted it, though this required no clairvoyance and only a cursory understanding of history. Agreed Framework I lasted five years before we learned that Pyongyang had built an undisclosed uranium enrichment program, and not even President Clinton could certify Pyongyang’s compliance with it. Agreed Framework II lasted for about a year and a half before Kim Jong-il balked at verification and even the New York Times declared it a dead letter. The 2005 Joint Statement lasted less than a day before Kim Jong-il declared that it was all conditioned on the completion of two light-water reactors. Barack Obama’s Leap Day Deal lasted about two weeks before Kim Jong-un announced a missile test. Pyongyang’s promises have short half-lives.
Sigh...
...a means to extort more incremental concessions to consolidate Pyongyang’s creeping hegemony over Seoul.
ReplyDeleteDelusional, laughably paranoid neocon nonsense. There is no danger of the North taking over the South. The South Korean populace would never stand for it, nor would the chaebols, and certainly the US would not.
That Pyongyang would renege was so predictable that some of us predicted it...
The Singapore Summit happened less than a month ago. Negotiations have only just begun. Patience is a virtue. Shitting the bed is not.
I find it hard to be optimistic, given the evidence of history, but I admit I'll be happy to be proven wrong. If Trump really does work some voodoo in this matter, then all kudos to him. Time will tell, and patience is indeed a virtue.
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