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Title: Why Is North Korea Our Problem?
Source: VDare
URL Source: http://www.vdare.com/articles/why-is-north-korea-our-problem
Published: Jan 8, 2016
Author: Pat Buchanan
Post Date: 2016-01-08 12:40:18 by nativist nationalist
Keywords: None
Views: 499
Comments: 8

For Xi Jinping, it has been a rough week.

Panicked flight from China’s currency twice caused a plunge of 7 percent in her stock market, forcing a suspension of trading.

Kim Jong Un, the megalomaniac who runs North Korea, ignored Xi’s warning and set off a fourth nuclear bomb. While probably not a hydrogen bomb as claimed, it was the largest blast ever in Korea.

And if Pyongyang continues building and testing nuclear bombs, Beijing is going to wake up one day and find that its neighbors, South Korea and Japan, have also acquired nuclear weapons as deterrents to North Korea.

And should Japan and South Korea do so, Taiwan, Vietnam and Manila, all bullied by Beijing, may also be in the market for nukes.

Hence, if Beijing refuses to cooperate to de-nuclearize North Korea, she could find herself, a decade hence, surrounded by nuclear weapons states, from Russia to India and from Pakistan to Japan.

Still, this testing of a bomb by North Korea, coupled with the bellicosity of Kim Jong Un, should cause us to take a hard look at our own war guarantees to Asia that date back to John Foster Dulles.

At the end of the Korean War in July 1953, South Korea was devastated, unable to defend herself without the U.S. Navy and Air Force and scores of thousands of U.S. troops.

So, America negotiated a mutual security treaty.

But today, South Korea has 50 million people, twice that of the North, the world’s 13th largest economy, 40 times the size of North Korea’s, and access to the most modern U.S. weapons.

In 2015, Seoul ran a trade surplus of almost $30 billion with the United States, a sum almost equal to North Korea’s entire GDP.

Why, then, are 25,000 U.S. troops still in South Korea?

Why are they in the DMZ, ensuring that Americans are among the first to die in any Second Korean War?

Given the proximity of the huge North Korean Army, with its thousands of missiles and artillery pieces, only 35 miles from Seoul, any invasion would have to be met almost immediately with U.S.-fired atomic weapons.

But with North Korea possessing a nuclear arsenal estimated at 8 to 12 weapons and growing, a question arises: Why should the U.S. engage in a nuclear exchange with North Korea, over South Korea?

Why should a treaty that dates back 60 years commit us, in perpetuity, to back South Korea in a war from the first shot with Pyongyang, when that war could swiftly escalate to nuclear?

How does this comport with U.S. national interests?

In 1877, Lord Salisbury, commenting on Great Britain’s stance on the Eastern Question, noted that “the commonest error in politics is sticking to the carcass of dead policies.”

Is this not true today of America’s Asian alliances?

North Korea’s tests of atomic weapons and development of land-based and submarine-launched missiles should cause us to reconsider strategic commitments that date back to the 1950s.

President Nixon, ahead of his time, understood this.

As he began the drawdown of U.S. forces in Vietnam in 1969, he declared in Guam that while America would meet her treaty obligations, henceforth, Asian nations should provide the ground troops to defend themselves. Gen. MacArthur had told President Kennedy, before Vietnam, not to put U.S. foot soldiers onto the Asian mainland.

Now that we have entered a post-post Cold War era, where many Asian nations possess the actual or potential military power to defend themselves, something like a new Nixon Doctrine is worth considering.

Take all of the major territorial quarrels between China and its neighbors– the dispute with India over Aksai Chin and Arunachal Pradesh, the dispute with Japan over the Senkaku Islands, with Vietnam over the Paracels, with the Philippines over the Spratlys.

In none of these quarrels and conflicts does there seem to be any vital U.S. national interest so imperiled that we should risk a clash with a nuclear power like Beijing.

Once, there was a time when Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini and Tojo ruled almost all of Eurasia. And another time when a monolithic Sino-Soviet Communist bloc ruled from the Elbe to the Pacific.

As those times are long gone, is it not time for an exhaustive review of the alliances we have entered into and the war guarantees we have issued, to fight for nations and interests other than our own?

Under NATO, we are committed to go to war against a nuclear-armed Russia on behalf of 27 nations, including tiny Estonia.

One understood the necessity to defend West Germany and keep the Red Army on the other side of the Elbe, but when did Estonia’s independence become so critical to U.S. security that we would fight a nuclear-armed Russia rather than lose it?

Indeed, how many of the dozens of U.S. war guarantees we have outstanding would we honor by going to war if they were called?

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#1. To: nativist nationalist (#0)

I don't even know why Europe is our problem. Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Phillipines, Australia, NZ, Britain, Israel and France are our friends, but beyond supporting them if they are attacked morally and MAYBE militarily...No way should we be drawing lines and signing treaties where we promise to send our best to die for some other chicken shit culture.

jeremiad  posted on  2016-01-08   14:06:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: nativist nationalist (#0)

Why Is North Korea Our Problem?

Wrong question. The correct one - which country is not?

A Pole  posted on  2016-01-08   14:27:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: A Pole (#2) (Edited)

Wrong question. The correct one - which country is not?

and the answer is not all of them. The point in this piece that is missed is that your military alliances shore up your overwhelmingly onesided trade alliances. Without those alliances nations would be free to change side in their allegiences when shifts in trade followed the realities. By all means examine these treaties and think hard about about how the treaties of other nations embroiled them in a war they could not win in the past. We slavishly follow your whim in embargos and trade sanctions which do nothing for our national interests

paraclete  posted on  2016-01-08   18:36:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: paraclete (#3)

The point in this piece that is missed is that your military alliances shore up your overwhelmingly onesided trade alliances. Without those alliances nations would be free to change side in their allegiences when shifts in trade followed the realities.

oh yeah ;South Korea has really suffered under our alliance ! The sad reality is that without an American presence ,the whole peninsula would have been overwhelmed by the Kim tyranny . That our treaty is of mutual benefit is as it should be.

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

tomder55  posted on  2016-01-08   19:32:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: tomder55 (#4)

That our treaty is of mutual benefit is as it should be.

Not all of your treaties benefit your allies equally. What happened to Japan when you decided that China was a better trading partner than Japan or that South Korea is a better trading partner than Japan. Would that we may have benefited by our car industries being made as competitive as theirs by the lowering of your import barriers. You change your allegiences when ever the wind changes. Now you are a partner to Iran in Iraq while telling the rest of us we have to sanction Iran. I doubt South Korea would have benefited so well from your largess if the Kim's had been defeated rather than contained, in fact those factories would have been in Pongyang if your repeat your history of rebuilding defeated enemies followed the usual patterns. Germany came out of WWII reconstruction much better than Britain

paraclete  posted on  2016-01-08   21:04:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: paraclete (#3)

which country is not?

and the answer is not all of them.

Andorra?

A Pole  posted on  2016-01-09   2:12:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: paraclete (#5)

Would that we may have benefited by our car industries being made as competitive as theirs by the lowering of your import barriers

You know my position on free trade. I would remove most trade barriers except ones dealing with the safety of a product.

"You change your allegiences when ever the wind changes. Now you are a partner to Iran in Iraq while telling the rest of us we have to sanction Iran."

Again ,not a policy I support .

"I doubt South Korea would have benefited so well from your largess if the Kim's had been defeated rather than contained, in fact those factories would have been in Pongyang if your repeat your history of rebuilding defeated enemies followed the usual patterns. Germany came out of WWII reconstruction much better than Britain ".

Britain jumped into the cesspool of socialism immediately after the war. Their economy is their fault. Britain received more than a third more Marshall Plan Aid than West Germany ;$2.7 billion to $1.7 billion. That is on top of all the aid she got during the war with the Lend-Lease program that enabled the Brits to continue their war effort...and a $4 billion loan immediately after the war that Britain used mostly to maintain it's empire.

Britain by far pocketed the largest share of any European nation. The truth is that the Labour Government, freely chose NOT to make industrial modernization the central theme in the use of Marshall Aid. The Germans gave clear priority to investment in reconstructing industry and infrastructure. That's why West Germany became the economic giant it did. It did not waste the aid .The Labour Government used Marshall Aid as a general subsidy for whatever they wished to do.

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

tomder55  posted on  2016-01-09   4:48:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: tomder55 (#7)

The Germans gave clear priority to investment in reconstructing industry and infrastructure

The germans had no choice, any functioning factory was exported to the soviet union or taken over by american industralists. No, like Japan, Germany was constructed to be a bulwark against the soviets, there was no inferstructure worth having and no excuse for restructuring Japan

paraclete  posted on  2016-01-11   17:03:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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