By Alan
Caruba
Wouldn’t
it be ironic if President Obama—who has shown that his every instinct is to
pull back from any war or military conflict—ends up being a “war President”
thanks to Kim Jung Un, the demented little dictator of North Korea?
I was
about four months’ shy of becoming a bona fide teenager when North Korea
invaded South Korea in 1950. The Second World War had concluded just five years
before and Japan was still occupied by the U.S. military and would not become
independent until September 1951.
One of the
least taught or remembered of our wars, between 1950 and 1953 the U.S. suffered
33,686 casualties for a total of dead and wounded numbering 128,245.
After
World War II the Korean peninsula was divided between the Russians and the
Americans with the 38th parallel as the line of demarcation known
then and now as the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). It is 2.5 miles wide and
the war has never been declared over. The Russians and Chinese backed the then-dictator,
Kim Jung Un’s grandfather. When he died, his father took over. The young
dictator, age 29, has inherited their belligerent attitude, but he’s the first
to actually bring North Korea to the brink of a full-out war. When you tell
diplomats to get out while they can, you are probably not bluffing.
There is
little doubt that the military power of the U.S. can obliterate North Korea’s
capital and other military assets, but it is worth noting that the capitol of
South Korea, Seoul, is just thirty-five miles from the DMZ. It is extremely
vulnerable and home to some ten million Koreans.
Let me
state that I do not anticipate North Korea starting a war. If it did, Obama
will have to be “all in” to destroy the North Korean regime and, of course, the
concern is that it is a satellite of China. In recent times, Chinese think
tanks have been publishing papers denouncing North Korea for its provocative
missile “tests” and its nuclear tests that generated further United Nations
sanctions.
The last
thing China wants are a million North Korean refugees fleeing across its border,
nor does it want to be dragged into a war pitting it against the United States
and other coalition partners. China would actually benefit from a unification
of the two Koreas that would produce a very useful trading partner.
Writing in
the Asia-Pacific Journal, Selig S. Harrison noted that the United States spends more than $40
billion annually to maintain its defense position in East Asia and the western
Pacific.
Suffice to
say the defeat of North Korea would deprive a number of rogue states of a
supplier of missiles, nuclear expertise, and other armaments. The world would
be a safer place.
Fraught
with irony, the U.S. is currently in the midst of its annual joint military
exercises with South Korea and has taken what Pentagon spokesman, George
Little, characterized as “prudent, logical and measured” responses such as
deploying missile defenses closer to North Korea, positioning naval assets
offshore, and a host of other actions that make it clear that it is taking its
threats seriously.
Technically,
we are already at war with North Korea thanks to its announcement that it
regards the armistice agreement null and void.
Obama has
four years of experience in office and, though a defense budget-cutter like
Bill Clinton, it is likely he has gained considerable insight to U.S. military
capabilities. Politically, a short, decisive defeat of North Korea would
briefly bolster his flagging popularity, hovering around fifty percent in the
polls. Being a successful war President has its advantages, but it didn’t help
Bush41 get reelected after the Gulf War in 1990.
I’m
guessing North Korea will do something quite minor from a military point of
view; something not likely to evoke a hellish war and defeat. That’s been his
grandfather’s and father’s game. The U.S. will rebuke North Korea.
(“Inappropriate!” “Unacceptable!” “Not nice.”) Indeed, our presence may be the
only thing keeping South Korea from heading north to give the third generation
of trouble-makers a thorough thrashing.
So the
world waits now to see what Kim Jung Un will do and what Barack Obama will do.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
Thatis a scary thought considering the actors.
ReplyDeleteThat was my thought, too.
ReplyDeleteSeems to me North Korea makes a big noise every spring simply to extort money from the wealthy nations of the world.
ReplyDeleteTrue. Every time the US and S. Korea hold joint military exercises, they complain. They then seek to extort something from the US and, in the past, they've gotten it. As I mentioned in the article, I suspect our troops are there to keep the S. Koreans from attacking the North to end the problem it poses for them.
ReplyDeleteObama will do everything in his power to avoid a war - even if it means paying the NK dictator to go away. If it were me I'd tell the NK's to bring it on. If ONE missile is fired then it would be seen as the start of war. This little punk Kim Jung Un needs to get the beating he clearly didn't get when he was growing up. Enough with his childish tantrums. If he wants to play with the big boys then nows the time.
ReplyDeleteBetter to take care of N. Korea now rather than later as they are going to build a nuclear arsenal. If we wait we will regret it. Time to take that country out.
ReplyDelete