By William G. Shipman on 7.27.06 @ 12:07AM
Kim Jong Il knows exactly what he's doing, shaking us down to keep himself afloat in the style to which he's become accustomed.
While we were celebrating the 4th of July, Kim Jong Il, North
Korea's dictator, was enjoying his own fireworks as he launched,
without provocation, seven missiles in the direction of Japan.
Because its intercontinental Taepodong-2 missile failed miserably,
within a minute or so after liftoff, some Western commentators
dismissed the whole show as yet another example of North Korea's
incompetence. And observers interpreted Kim Jong Il's willingness
to risk worldwide ridicule if the missiles failed as additional
evidence that he is driven by an abnormal need for attention, so
intense and pathological that it leads him to deviant behavior. In
short, they say he's nuts. Is he?
North Korea is a poor country, one many have labeled an economic
basket case. Its annual GDP is about $40 billion, or $1,700 per
capita -- by comparison, the U.S.'s is $42,000 -- and shows little
or no growth. Its population of 23 million provides a labor force
of 9.6 million. Its people are starving, poorly educated, and
health care is substandard or non-existent. With no natural gas or
oil production, the North Koreans must import about 25,000 barrels
a day to provide for electricity generation. The rest is provided
by hydro power. The country is isolated from the world, a policy
adopted by Kim's father after his failed attempt to conquer the
South in the early 1950s. Today, when you fly over South Korea en
route to the United States at night, you see below the bright
lights of commerce, and then a little further north, total
darkness. That black hole is North Korea, and seeing it is an
unsettling feeling. This is Kim Jong Il's wholly-owned enterprise,
bequeathed to him by his father, a brutal dictator in his own
right.
As poor as the country is, by most reasonable standards Kim Jong
Il is a very wealthy man. North Korea's resources, however scant,
are his alone. Few men alive, if any, control as many resources as
he. The people, cowered by force, exist solely to serve him. They
must be fed and clothed, of course, so to the extent that North
Korea receives external aid, humanitarian or otherwise, this frees
up resources to satisfy his other desires. We've been quite
accommodating, having provided over $1 billion in foreign
assistance since 1995. The impoverishment of Kim's people is his
personal economic asset. So, too, are his missiles, however
inaccurate, and his nuclear capability, however inchoate.
When North Korea launched its missiles on July 4th, Kim Jong Il
knew that the Taepodong-2 would fail, but he wanted to give notice
that as his technological expertise advances, he could one day be
able to deliver whatever he puts on the tip of missile. Until then,
he'll listen to all offers to stop the R&D. After an initial
period of strong rhetoric denouncing his aggression, the offers
will start. Kim will be bribed, if you will, to give up his efforts
in exchange for greater economic assistance. Most bribes, he won't
accept. Some he will, but only those that meet his needs. He'll be
offered financial aid, and take it, while still keeping his missile
program on track. This is his modus operandi, and it has served him
well.
The Taepodong-2's technological failure was his economic and
strategic success. Had the missile succeeded in reaching, say,
Seattle and landed on U.S. soil or been destroyed by our missile
defenses just beforehand, the party would have been over for Kim.
He understands that it is the prospect of hostility, rather than
hostility itself, that allows him to exact concessions from his
enemies.
Kim's nuclear strategy has the same goal. If he had weapons of
mass destruction and accurate missiles to deliver them, he would
not deploy them unless he were attacked, again, because the moment
he did, the party would be over. The value of his WMDs resides in
their sale rather than their deployment.
From Kim's point of view, the sale of WMDs is a risk worth
taking. Although transporting WMDs on the open seas exposes them to
being found, most likely not all will be found, and that prospect
frightens us even if none actually escapes us. It only requires
that we think one nuke could get loose.
And if some weapons were found, it wouldn't expose North Korea
to unbearable risk. The international community's response likely
would be isolating the country further and imposing economic
sanctions. That wouldn't accomplish anything, because the country
is already isolated and desperately impoverished. Ratchet it up a
bit and Kim Jong Il would still remain wealthy and in power.
An aggressive military response would likely require or involve
international agreement. It is hard to imagine that such agreement
would be forthcoming. But even if it were, or if we went in on our
own, Kim Jong Il would have options. North Korea, with an army of
about one million, has Seoul, South Korea -- with a population of
about 10 million -- in its cross hairs. South Korea is extremely
vulnerable to aggression from the North. That is in part why, even
though bullied by the North, South Korea has provided about $3.5
billion in various forms of aid to Pyongyang since 1995. Although
the South's interests are similar to ours, its vulnerability to
North Korean aggression is infinitely greater. Its rhetoric aside,
South Korea will be passive and, within reason, continue to
accommodate Kim's needs.
China also plays a role in all of this, which could be to our
advantage, but it has other interests as well. China is a rapidly
growing country and one that some believe will be our chief rival
in the future. If the Chinese see the U.S. in similar terms, then
they will use their influence with North Korea to influence our
behavior toward them. To paraphrase, "the adversary of my adversary
is my friend." Beyond their calculus with the U.S., should the
North Korean border with China start leaking, the Chinese will have
a significant people problem. So China is likely to attempt to keep
the peace, even if that requires acquiescing to the continuation of
North Korea's weapons and missile programs. This is a delicate
dance, however, because adversarial issues aside, the United States
is also an important economic partner of China.
We seem to find ourselves between a rock and a hard place. We
are the richest nation on earth, with the most powerful military,
and we are the world's only superpower. And yet we are taunted,
even threatened, by one of the poorest, most backward and most
isolated countries on earth. We have paid the extortionist for
years, and apparently we'll have to pay him some more. No, Kim Jong
Il is not nuts.
topics:
Health Care, Military, North Korea, Oil