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NORTH KOREA: How to Disarm North Korea
By Charles Wolf Jr.
To persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear ambitions, the United States must collaborate with China, South Korea, Japan, and Russia. By Charles Wolf Jr.
The United States is often criticized for favoring a
multilateral approach in the six-party talks
aimed at reversing North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons. Never mind that many of those critics repeatedly castigated
Washington for supposedly spurning the
multilateral approach in favor of unilateral action in Iraq; consistency is
hardly to be expected in these matters.
When it comes to North Korea, the critics favor what
they call a bilateral approach but what in reality amounts to a unilateral one. Under
this scenario, the United States would
engage in direct negotiations with Kim Jong Il’s regime, relegating
the other four parties—China, South Korea, Japan, and Russia—to
a more passive role. Even in its more nuanced form, the critics’
argument is that the six-party talks are no more than a facade and that any
serious progress toward ending North Korea’s nuclear programs can
only come through unilateral negotiations with Washington.
Yet the reality is very different. North Korea poses a
serious threat to the vital interests of each of the five other parties. It
already possesses sufficient plutonium and highly enriched uranium to
make—or already have made—anywhere from six to eight nuclear
weapons and has the missile capability to launch these over distances of up
to 5,500 miles. Still more worrisome is the prospect that North Korea might
sell nuclear materials to al Qaeda or other financially well-heeled
terrorist groups. According to recent reports, North Korea may already have
engaged in such transactions with Libya. Kim Jong Il’s regime is so
badly strapped for cash that its survival may depend on rapid access to
substantial outside funding.
The case for a multilateral approach rests on the fact
that the burden of dealing with that threat should be shared by the five
countries because their separate and vital national interests are all at
stake—China, Japan, South Korea, and Russia, in addition to the
United States.
China’s interests in a non-nuclear North Korea
focus on preventing nuclear proliferation elsewhere in
Asia—especially Japan, South Korea, and possibly
even Taiwan. All might be tempted to move in this direction if faced by a North Korean nuclear
threat. In addition, China has its own battle with Muslim extremists in the far western
province of Xinjiang, and the last thing Beijing
wants is for there to be any danger of Uighur terrorists obtaining nuclear
materials from a proliferating Pyongyang.
Russia too fears that North Korean nuclear material
might find its way into the hands of Muslim militants—in its case the
Chechnya separatists whose willingness to resort to any means, no matter
how horrific, was demonstrated by the massacre of more than 300 children in
Beslan last September 1. U.S. interests in preventing proliferation by
Pyongyang are thus closely linked to Chinese and Russian concerns that
North Korea might become a channel for leaking nuclear materials to Muslim
terrorists.
Japan’s interests in a non-nuclear North Korea
are equally strong. Tokyo is keenly aware of the ingrained Korean
resentment and hostility toward Japan. A North Korea with nuclear weapons,
coupled with its ability to deliver them, might lead Japanese policymakers
to doubt the adequacy of the U.S. protective nuclear umbrella. That could,
in turn, prompt growing pressure for Tokyo to acquire its own nuclear
deterrent, something that it already has ample technical and financial
means to accomplish.
Even in South Korea, where many believe they would not
be the target of North Korean nuclear weapons, the predominant view in the
policy community is that a nuclear Pyongyang would profoundly disrupt
Northeast Asia’s security balance and thus imperil the stability on
which South Korea’s continued progress and economic growth depend.
The other four nations in the six-party
talks—China, Japan, South Korea, and Russia—thus have their own
interests in stopping North Korea’s nuclear programs, which are at
least as strong as those of the United States. Where a jointly favored or
collective benefit is sought by a group of countries, the crucial bottom
line for their collaborative efforts is how the burden of securing this
shared benefit should be shared. Multilateral management of the effort to
halt and reverse North Korean nuclear development is essential. Whether and
how much to use carrots and sticks requires collective, multilateral
decisions.
For example, whether to use carrots in the form, say,
of trade liberalization with and by North Korea or credit installments
extended to North Korea and collateralized by claims on its mineral
resources, is a decision that must be arrived at multilaterally. Similarly,
whether sticks, in the form of inspecting and monitoring possible North
Korean nuclear installations and strengthening the Proliferation Security
Initiative to encompass surface and air surveillance and interdiction of
suspected exports of nuclear materials and weapon-system components, should
be invoked is a decision that also needs to be reached collectively.
Securing a collective benefit—in this case, a
non-nuclear North Korea—entails a collective burden. That’s why
it’s only right to expect China, Japan, South Korea, and Russia to
play their part and wrong to leave the entire burden on the United States.
This essay appeared in the Wall Street Journal on February 16, 2005.
Available from the Hoover Press is The Gravest Danger: Nuclear Weapons, by Sidney Drell and James Goodby. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Charles Wolf Jr. is a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is also a senior economic adviser and corporate fellow in international economics at the RAND Corporation.
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