"When a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight,"
Samuel Johnson observed, "it concentrates his mind wonderfully."
The prospect of a future where Kim Jong Un can put a nuclear weapon on a U.S. city is going to cause this nation to reassess the risks and rewards of the American Imperium.
First, some history.
"Why should Americans be first to die in any second Korean
war?" Pat Buchanan asked in 1999 in "A Republic, Not an Empire."
"With twice the population of the North and twenty times its
economic power, South Korea ... is capable of manning its own defense. American
troops on the DMZ should be replaced by South Koreans."
This was denounced as neo-isolationism. And, in 2002, George W.
Bush declared the U.S. "will not permit the world's most dangerous regimes
to threaten us with the world's most destructive weapons."
Bluster and bluff. In 2006, Pyongyang tested
an atom bomb. Now Kim Jong Un is close to an ICBM.
Our options?
As Kim believes the ability to
hit America with a nuclear weapon is the only certain way he has of deterring
us from killing his regime and him, he will not be talked out of his ICBM. Nor,
short of an embargo-blockade by China, will sanctions keep him from his goal,
to which he inches closer with each missile test.
As for the "military option," U.S. strikes on Kim's
missile sites could cause him to unleash his artillery on Seoul, 35 miles
south. In the first week of a second Korean war, hundreds of thousands could be
dead. If North Korea's artillery opened up, says Gen. Barry McCaffrey, the U.S.
would be forced to use tactical atomic weapons to stop the carnage. Kim could
then give the suicidal order to launch his nukes.
A third option is to accept and live with a North Korean ICBM, as
we have lived for decades with the vast nuclear arsenals of Russia and China.
Now, assume the best: We get through this crisis without a war,
and Kim agrees to stop testing ICBMs and nuclear warheads.
Does anyone believe that, given his youth, his determination to drive
us off the Korean peninsula, and his belief that only an ICBM can deter us,
this deal will last and he will abandon his nuclear program?
Given concessions, Kim might suspend missile and nuclear tests.
But again, we deceive ourselves if we believe he will give up the idea of
acquiring the one weapon that might ensure regime survival.
Hence, assuming this crisis is resolved, what does the future of
U.S.-North Korean relations look like?
To answer that question, consider the past.
In the 1960s the North Koreans routinely infiltrated across the 38th
parallel and killed S. Koreans. We did nothing but strengthen the defenses on the
DMZ.
In 1968, North Korea hijacked the USS Pueblo on the high seas and interned its crew. (Your Watchman was part of a tactical nuclear response group that reacted to the 1968 incidents.) LBJ did nothing.
In April 1969, North Korea shot down an EC-121, 100 miles of its
coast, killing the crew. Nixon did nothing.
Under Jimmy Carter, North Koreans axe-murdered U.S. soldiers at
Panmunjom. We defiantly cut down a nearby tree.
Among the atrocities the North has perpetrated are plots to
assassinate President Park Chung-hee in the 1960s and '70s;
the Rangoon bombing that wiped out much of the cabinet of Chun
Doo-hwan in 1983;
and don't forget the bombing of Korean Air Flight 858, killing all on board in
1987.
And Kim Jong Un has murdered his uncle and brother!!!
Kim will perfect an ICBM. There will be more atrocities creating crises between the U.S. and North Korea. America is being
repeatedly dragged to the brink of a war we do not want to fight.
As Secretary of Defense James Mattis said Sunday, such a war would
be "catastrophic. ... A conflict in North Korea ... will probably be the
worst kind of fighting in most people's lifetimes."
When the lesson sinks in that a
war on the peninsula would be a catastrophe, and a growing arsenal of North
Korean ICBMs targeted on America is intolerable, the question must arise: Why
not move U.S. forces off the peninsula, let South Korean troops replace them,
sell Seoul all the modern weapons it needs, and let Seoul build its own nuclear
arsenal to deter the North?
Remove any incentive for Kim to attack us, except to invite his own
suicide. And tell China: Halt Kim's ICBM program, or we will help South Korea
and Japan become nuclear powers like Britain and France.
Given the rising risk of
our war guarantees, from the eastern Baltic to the Korean DMZ and the paltry
rewards of the American Imperium we are being bled from Libya to Syria, Iraq,
Afghanistan, Yemen and other parts of the world, a true America First foreign policy is going to become
increasingly attractive.
Kim's credible threat to one day be able to nuke a U.S. city is
going to concentrate American minds.
Believe your Watchman, when I say we do not want to fight a war on the ground
on the Asian mailand. The N. Korean are
trapped in a murderous communist regime that is morally bankrupt because of its
godlessness. Friends, N. Korea is a glimpse of the Earth’s post rapture life. Thank Yeshua we are saved and out of here!
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