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January 13, 2003,
U.S. Edition

Morality Is Not A Strategy The
crisis is not that Kim has suddenly become more evil. It is that North
Korea will, within months, become a plutonium factory
By
Fareed Zakaria
President
Bush is right about one thing--North Korea's Kim Jong Il is an evil man
who runs one of the most barbaric regimes in the world, suppressing and
starving its own people. In the back-and-forth of diplomacy around the
current crisis we should not forget this fundamental fact. The problem,
however, is that in foreign policy you need not just moral clarity, but
also strategic clarity. Right now on North Korea we have moral clarity
but strategic incoherence.
Let's start at the
beginning. What is the goal of our policy toward North Korea--nuclear
disarmament or regime change? President Bush has repeatedly hinted that
it's regime change. Most recently he explained to Bob Woodward that while
there are those who worry about the fallout of overthrowing the regime,
he did not. "Either you believe in freedom... or you don't," he explained.
But we have no way
of achieving this goal. A military attack on North Korea is impossible,
not because it may have one or two crude nuclear weapons, but because
it will retaliate by obliterating a large part of South Korea. Seoul is
35 miles from the North Korean border. Our options are constrained not
by nukes, but by geography. Without the means to do it, regime change
is not a policy, but a daydream.
And the crisis at
hand is not that Kim Jong Il has suddenly become more evil. It is that
North Korea will, within months, become a plutonium factory. A nuclear
North Korea will overturn the strategic landscape of East Asia, weakening
deterrence on the Korean peninsula. It might make Japan go nuclear, which
would push China and Japan into a nuclear-arms race. In other words, very
bad stuff. That's why our primary short-term concern has to be disarmament.
Harvard professor
Ashton Carter, one of President Clinton's senior defense aides, puts it
sharply: "We told the North Koreans that we were not out to topple them
but we would not tolerate their going nuclear. The Bush administration
is doing the opposite. For two years it signaled that it was out to get
them, but now that they're going nuclear, it says that's not a crisis.
For American interests, this gets things backwards."
So much for goals.
Now, what tools can we use to make North Korea disarm? The big divide
between the United States and its allies is that the Bush administration
wants to use sticks, while the allies want to use carrots.
Partly, this reflects
differing perceptions of the threat. For Washington, the main danger posed
by North Korea is nuclear proliferation. For the Chinese and South Koreans,
the paramount danger is chaos. They worry that using too much pressure
will spark a war or a North Korean implosion--and they would have to deal
with the resulting bloodshed, instability, refugees and bills.
What little leverage
exists is wielded by our allies. China supplies food aid to North Korea.
South Korea does some trade with it. The North's biggest fear, that Japan
will go nuclear, is not something Washington can credibly threaten. (Remember,
making loose threats is what got us into this situation in the first place.)
The reality is that no one has much leverage. North Korea is one of the
two or three most isolated regimes in the world. Its people are eating
grass for food. Economic sanctions are unlikely to force change.
That's why the Clinton
administration settled on a bargain that gave the North Koreans fuel in
return for assurances that they would stop making plutonium. Republican
hard-liners railed against this "appeasement" and for two years we have
had a policy of cheap rhetoric and cheap shots--except it suddenly isn't
so cheap anymore. As a result, the chest-thumping machismo from the hard-liners
has now morphed into sophisticated realism. The situation is very complex,
you see. Soon the administration will return to a version of the Clinton
policy it condemned. Senior officials have already told CNN that while
they will not "negotiate" with North Korea, they could well "talk." I
suppose it all depends on what the definition of the word "negotiate"
is.
At the next National
Security Council meeting Colin Powell should ask that the group all hold
hands and repeat after him, "Diplomacy is not appeasement," swallow its
pride and get to work. If the administration negotiates well, using a
mixture of sticks and carrots, it could significantly improve on the Clinton
deal, which had some flaws and blind spots. We don't just need to cap
but to reverse North Korea's nuclear program. Ronald Reagan said of Gorbachev's
Russia, "Trust but verify." With the North Koreans, I suggest a simpler
motto, "Verify and verify."
Eventually this
grotesque regime will fall and President Bush will be well remembered
for speaking plainly of its evil. But between now and then we do need
a policy.
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