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U.S. POLICY TOWARD NORTH KOREA IN STRATEGIC CONTEXT Tempting Goliath’s Fate Wade L. Huntley Abstract Since the collapse of the U.S.-North Korea Agreed Framework in 2002, the Bush administration has failed to restrain North Korea’s nuclear weapons ambitions, principally because of the constraints of highly idealized convictions. Resolution of the Korean nuclear crisis now depends on U.S. initiative beyond the boundaries of these predispositions and beyond the terms of the nuclear crisis itself. Keywords: North Korea, United States, nuclear proliferation, security, strategy Introduction Critiques of the Bush administration’s policies toward North Korea frequently highlight the administration’s insufficient responsiveness to the “real” circumstances currently prevailing on the Korean Peninsula and in the East Asian region. But the ideological and sometimes personal predilections driving official North Korea policy are not incidental shortcomings that are easily rectified; rather, they reflect the administration’s deeper, ideationally inspired worldview. Despite the somewhat more practical tone the administration has expressed toward North Korea since early in its second term, ideationally informed outlooks continue to blinker its responses to Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions and growing capabilities. This article first briefly reviews the background and current state of the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue. The collapse of the U.S.-North Korea Agreed Wade L. Huntley is Director, Simons Center for Disarmament and Nonproliferation Research at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Asian Survey, Vol. 47, Issue 3, pp. 455–480, ISSN 0004-4687, electronic ISSN 1533-838X. © 2007 by The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Please direct all requests for permission to photocopy or reproduce article content through the University of California Press’s Rights and Permissions website, at http://www.ucpressjournals.com/reprintInfo.asp. DOI: AS.2007.47.3.455. 455 456 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 Framework in 2002 not only initiated a new crisis but also qualitatively altered how North Korea’s nuclear ambitions bear on regional security relations, complicating any resolution. To better appreciate the context of the Bush administration’s reactions to the crisis, this article examines U.S. responses to the threats that North Korea’s nuclear ambitions pose to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and to the wider array of global nonproliferation efforts that the treaty spearheads. This examination indicates how the administration’s approaches to nuclear proliferation evince a particular global outlook rooted in an ideational conception of American grand strategy in the post-Cold War world. Drawing on this understanding, the article focuses on the implications of the agreement emerging from the Six-Party Talks on September 19, 2005, and of the collapse of the talks’ momentum in the wake of the agreement. This episode underscores concerns that so long as the Bush administration’s approach to North Korea remains overshadowed by more general ideational predispositions, a complete resolution of the current crisis is unlikely. The article concludes that the goal to prevent the emergence of a nuclear North Korea still can be achieved. But a permanent resolution will require more thoughtful and farsighted responsiveness to current constraints and opportunities—i.e., more “realism”—than administration officials have yet demonstrated.1 A permanent resolution will also require a comprehensive approach dealing with all facets of East Asian regional security, within which the nuclear confrontation with North Korea is embedded. North Korea’s nuclear test on October 9, 2006, underscores the salience of this conclusion. The further North Korea progresses down the road to becoming a full-fledged nuclear-armed state, the more any success at rolling back that capability depends on progress toward developing a cooperative security environment in the wider region.2 The confrontation between North Korea and the United States reflects metaphorically the Biblical parable of David and Goliath. In the parable, the boy David, armed only with a slingshot, fells the giant Goliath with a single stone. David prevails because, fearless despite his evident inferiority, he finds and then exploits weaknesses Goliath didn’t realize he himself had. Goliath’s hubrisfed faith in his own strength blinded him to his vulnerabilities. The United States, facing a North Korean regime correspondingly weak but uninhibited by 1. A peaceful resolution of the confrontation will also require the Pyongyang regime to equivalently subordinate its own ideational fixations to prudent responsiveness. This article focuses on U.S. policy because, as discussed below, the status quo now favors North Korea, necessitating U.S. initiative. Also, U.S. policy choices can shape certain outcomes regardless of North Korean responses. 2. Because this article was in final preparation when the test occurred, its implications are considered mainly in a new section, with changes to the rest of the article kept to a minimum. WADE L. HUNTLEY 457 U.S. potency, needs to remain aware and circumspective enough to avoid an equivalent fate.3 David’s Aim North Korea, like David, expresses unshakable faith in its own convictions and its eventual victory, despite its evident inferiority. North Korea likely views its nuclear weapons potential much as David viewed his slingshot—as the sole instrument for confronting and exploiting the vulnerabilities of a gigantic adversary. The paltry achievements of North Korea’s nuclear weapons programs underscore the aptness of this analogy. North Korea’s nuclear aspirations have been problematic since the country first joined the NPT in 1985. By the time Pyongyang accepted a safeguards agreement in 1992, it was already suspected of having extracted up to 10 kilograms of plutonium from its research reactor at Yongbyon, enough to produce one or two nuclear weapons. Subsequently, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) officials witnessed the discharging of almost 8,000 irradiated fuel rods in the reactor’s core, containing an estimated 27–29 kilograms of plutonium. An escalating confrontation over the inability of the IAEA to verify North Korea’s non-nuclear status was resolved only by direct U.S. intervention, culminating in the 1994 U.S.-North Korea Agreed Framework, under which North Korea shut down the Yongbyon reactor and its nearby plutonium separation plant and stored the fuel rods in sealed canisters monitored by the IAEA.4 Although the 1994 Agreed Framework successfully froze North Korea’s plutonium-based nuclear program, it never succeeded in resolving questions about past Pyongyang’s activities nor in removing known spent fuel from the country, as ultimately intended. These shortcomings loomed when, in October 2002, the Bush administration confronted North Korea with charges that it was undertaking a second, uranium-based nuclear program. Escalating reactions led eventually to North Korea’s ending cooperation with IAEA safeguards and withdrawing from the NPT, marking the collapse of the Agreed Framework.5 3. The point of this analogy is not to portray North Korea as the “righteous” party but to express how the self-images of the two interlocutors shape their interaction. On the capacity of leadership to function as a power resource in international relations, see Daniel L. Byman and Kenneth M. Pollack, “Let Us Now Praise Great Men: Bringing the Statesman Back In,” International Security 25:4 (Spring 2001), pp. 107–46. 4. Joseph Cirincione, Jon Wolfsthal, and Miriam Rajkumar, Deadly Arsenals: Tracking Weapons of Mass Destruction (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2002), pp. 244–49. 5. For the author’s own assessment of the breakdown of the Agreed Framework, see Wade L. Huntley, “Ostrich Engagement: The Bush Administration and the North Korea Nuclear Crisis,” Nonproliferation Review 11:2 (Summer 2004), pp. 81–115. 458 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 In early 2003, North Korea restarted the Yongbyon reactor and began reprocessing the plutonium stored at the Yongbyon site. Pyongyang is now believed to have reprocessed most of the 8,000 fuel rods, yielding between 20 and 28 kilograms of weapons-usable plutonium. In April 2005, North Korea again shut down the reactor to collect a new supply of spent fuel that could have been reprocessed by mid-2006, potentially providing up to 15 kilograms more of weapons-usable plutonium. Taken together, this current stock of separated plutonium is enough to make from four to 13 weapons.6 Meanwhile, in February 2005, just months before the 2005 NPT Review Conference, North Korea for the first time stated explicitly that it possessed nuclear weapons. Subsequently, surveillance detected North Korean preparations for a possible nuclear test, which North Korean officials suggested might come at any time. The fourth round of the Six-Party Talks, convened in August 2005 after a year’s interruption and then again suspended for several weeks, finally produced a last-minute “agreement on principles” on September 19. But the scope of the agreement became immediately subject to diverging unilateral interpretations. The November 2005 round of talks made no progress in moving from principles to details; by Spring 2006, the negotiation process was once again completely stalled. The disintegrating situation reached new lows with North Korea’s missile tests on July 5 and nuclear test on October 9. Collapse of the Agreed Framework The collapse of the Agreed Framework in 2002 created a critical watershed. Many analysts, whether supporting greater confrontation or greater engagement, fail to recognize that the status quo has shifted fundamentally. Until 2002, North Korea’s nuclear ambitions were mainly contained. The research reactor was shut down and the worrisome spent-fuel stockpiles, although not yet removed from North Korea, were sealed and under IAEA safeguards. By most public accounts, the suspected uranium-based program was (and remains) much further from producing usable fissile material than the plutonium program. Since 2003, however, no direct restraints have existed on North Korea’s plutonium-based program. Moreover, by withdrawing from the Agreed Framework and the NPT without suffering any meaningful sanction, North Korea 6. David Albright and Paul Brannan, “The North Korean Plutonium Stock Mid-2006,” Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), June 26, 2006, http://www.isis-online.org/publications/ dprk/dprkplutonium.pdf; Robert S. Norris and Hans M. Kristensen, “North Korea’s Nuclear Program, 2005,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 61:3, May/June 2005, http://www.thebulletin.org/ article_nn.php?art_ofnmj05norris. This estimate for the number of weapons North Korea could generate from its presumed plutonium stocks assumes North Korea (1) has only low technological capability, equivalent to the U.S. at the creation of its first plutonium devices, and (2) is developing a relatively larger number of lower-yield weapons. WADE L. HUNTLEY 459 successfully stepped past several implicit “lines in the sand” that cannot now credibly be redrawn. Absent such restraints, North Korea is probably pushing its programs as hard as it can. The rates of expansion of North Korea’s fissile material stocks, its capability to fashion a warhead capable of riding a missile, and progress on other enabling technologies all remain open questions. But the October 9 nuclear test eliminated any doubt that fabrication of a nuclear explosive device is within its technical competence. Beyond material limitations, China is the only meaningful restraint North Korea now faces in advancing its nuclear programs. Beijing holds several powerful coercive instruments, if it chooses to wield them. However, there are limits to North Korea’s sensitivity to Chinese coercion, as demonstrated by Pyongyang’s defiance of many of Beijing’s entreaties as the Six-Party Talks unfolded. There are limits as well to China’s willingness to utilize the tools it does have on behalf of the American priority to deny North Korea a nuclear explosive, especially when Beijing’s own priority probably is to prevent the country itself from exploding. Fathoming Pyongyang The reshaped status quo has likely reinforced North Korean core goals and bolstered its confidence and self-assuredness in pursuing them. North Korea’s strengthened position will make a “new deal” harder to reach: 1990s-style engagement was premised on patience, but now time is allowing North Korea’s nuclear program to advance, giving Pyongyang incentive to obfuscate and procrastinate. Yet, with increased stocks of reprocessed plutonium likely having been dispersed from the Yongbyon nuclear site, the use of force to end North Korea’s nuclear program is less feasible than ever. Achieving a nonnuclear Korean Peninsula now requires rolling back an existing capacity; many prior strategies to curtail North Korea’s nuclear weapons development are not up to this qualitatively greater challenge. Despite the new status quo, most policy analysis remains framed by the familiar question: is North Korea prepared to reach an agreement entailing surrender of its nuclear capability? Engagement advocates tend to answer “yes,” asserting that North Korean belligerence is, in the main, a means of maneuvering for bargaining position. Confrontation advocates usually answer “no,” purporting that North Korean accommodation is merely a tactic to assuage its neighbors and buy time. But framing the question so simply obscures the real challenges. Given the opacity of the North Korean regime, its real motivations are almost indiscernible; hence both camps base their expectations of Pyongyang’s responsiveness more on conjecture than evidence. Moreover, there is a third possibility: it 460 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 may be the case (as is true for any government facing a complex decision) that North Korea’s leadership has not made up its mind. The Pyongyang regime, although highly centralized and monolithic, has its internal factions and divided interests. Indeed, President Kim Jong-il himself may not now know exactly what agreement terms he would accept, and may not come to decide unless and until, like Reagan at Reykjavik, the choice is at hand.7 Assumptions of any specificity concerning the nature of the ruling regime in Pyongyang are a poor basis for other countries’ crucial policy decisions. Instead, policy should be aimed to shape the international environmental conditions within which North Korea must promulgate its actions. As a weak country, North Korea is heavily constrained in its choices by these external conditions— how much is hard to determine, but any shaping of these constraints will narrow the range of possible outcomes regardless of Pyongyang’s own dispositions. The stale antinomy of “engagement” versus “confrontation” that still dominates policy debate obstructs this more contextual approach. Efforts to shape North Korea’s policy context should aim at rolling back the country’s nuclear weapons capacity. This would also help dampen their demonstration effect elsewhere. Both these goals point to the need to build better cooperation among key interested parties and to enhance mechanisms of regional security cooperation and global nonproliferation compliance. A comprehensive contextual approach substantively bolstering regional security cooperation would also serve to mitigate the impact if a negotiated solution to the problem of North Korea’s nuclear ambitions is not forthcoming. Goliath’s Game Throughout its first term the Bush administration made no apparent effort to shape its North Korea policy on the basis of extant conditions. Instead, Bush officials based policy fundamentally on assumptions about the Pyongyang regime’s character, stemming from broader predispositions concerning the extent of U.S. power and the rectitude of the administration’s overarching global vision. As those assumptions proved specious, the administration’s policy floundered, increasing strains with other regional governments, including ally South Korea.8 But the inflexibility of many Bush officials’ overarching 7. On the Reagan administration’s internal divisions over the role of the Strategic Defense Initiative in arms control negotiations with the Soviet Union, see Frances FitzGerald, Way Out There in the Blue: Reagan, Star Wars, and the End of the Cold War (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000). 8. See “Korea Backgrounder: How the South Views Its Brother from Another Planet,” International Crisis Group (ICG) Asia Report, no. 89, ICG, Seoul/Brussels, December 14, 2004, pp. 21–23; and Kim Sung-han, “Coping with the North Korean Nuclear Problem: A South Korean Perspective,” paper presented to the workshop America in Question: Korean Democracy and the Challenge of Non-Proliferation on the Peninsula, Seoul, ROK, May 10–11, 2005. WADE L. HUNTLEY 461 predispositions impinged on the administration’s ability to adapt an ineffective policy to changing circumstances. In the parable, before David stepped to the fore, Goliath had easily intimidated all adversaries, fueling his sense of invincibility. Similarly, the United States emerged from the Cold War as the planet’s preeminent power, most dramatically in military terms but also across many other measures of national capability. The Bush administration has embraced the objective of sustaining U.S. invincibility into the indefinite future and, despite warning signs of asymmetric vulnerability,9 coupled this goal to an activist global program premising the universality of American values. The administration’s approach to the challenge of global nuclear proliferation and to North Korea’s impact on the global nonproliferation regime reflects this orientation. Nukes Don’t Kill People . . . The Bush administration’s responses to the contemporary challenge of nuclear proliferation stem from its particular conception of the role of nuclear weapons in global relations, including in any future U.S. military posture. As Pentagon strategists absorbed the implications of the end of the Cold War, U.S. military planning throughout the 1990s increasingly expressed the aim of military “dominance” and foresaw a continuing role for U.S. nuclear weapons in this posture. But the Bush administration’s nuclear weapons policies superseded even this ambition, mapping out intentions for new nuclear capabilities linked to new strategies that tie these capabilities to an aspiration for global political “primacy.” Seminal strategic documents issued early in the administration’s tenure clearly express its new “grand strategy” to revive pre-Cold War notions of the American mission to deliver a safer world through virtuous exercise of unchallenged American power.10 In its second term, the Bush administration has reaffirmed the core tenets of this strategy. President Bush dedicated his second inaugural address to the 9. As the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks exemplify, the United States (and other countries) can be hurt by lesser actors (state or non-state) exploiting weaknesses that traditional forms of state power cannot defend. The parable of Goliath, and even more the parable of Achilles’ heel, conveys the fatefulness of ignoring such asymmetric vulnerability. 10. The 2001 Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) and the 2002 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) map out a fundamental shift from a “threat-based” to a “capabilities-based” approach intended to “extend America’s asymmetric advantages well into the future.” The 2002 National Security Strategy (NSS) articulates these ambitions, determining to “create a balance of power that favors human freedom” and “extend the peace by encouraging free and open societies on every continent.” The QDR is available at http://www.defenselink.mil/pubs/qdr2001.pdf. The NPR was first publicly summarized at a Department of Defense briefing on January 9, 2002; the classified review was subsequently obtained by news media, and substantial excerpts are available at http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/policy/dod/npr.htm. The 2002 NSS is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss/2002/. All links accessed December 14, 2006. 462 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 proposition that “it is the policy of the United States to seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.”11 In early 2006, the administration’s long delayed update of the NSS emphasized this core intention even more forcefully than did its 2002 predecessor, identifying as its two foundational pillars the aims of “promoting freedom, justice and human dignity” and “leading a growing community of democracies.”12 Although much media attention focused on the new strategy’s reaffirmation of preemptive attack as a counterproliferation option, the true thrust of the strategy is to establish that promotion of democracy overseas is as central as ever to the administration’s definitions of U.S. global purpose.13 This vision of virtuous American global leadership based on dominant military power harkens back to a nineteenth-century idealist internationalism underpinned by the security of broad oceans. The Bush administration’s embrace of a globalized reincarnation of this vision on the basis of U.S. military inviolability represents the reascendance of idealism over realism in shaping American grand strategy. But this articulation also marks the dominance of a specific form of idealism. The active promotion of overseas democratization, by force if necessary, pushes aside aspirations to constitute a society among heterogeneous states, aiming instead to challenge the prerogative of state sovereignty itself. President Bush’s repudiation of the Yalta Agreements concluded at the end of World War II evinces this viewpoint.14 More akin to the ambitions of Theodore Roosevelt than the aspirations of Woodrow Wilson, the administration’s emergent grand strategy represents a triumph for emancipatory militant idealism over liberal international idealism.15 The Bush administration’s response to spreading nuclear capabilities, driven by this emancipatory militant idealism, focuses less on general nonproliferation than on preemptive counterproliferation to eliminate specific 11. President George W. Bush, Inaugural Address, January 20, 2005, http://www.whitehouse. gov/news/releases/2005/01/print/20050120-1.html. 12. The 2006 NSS is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss/2006/, accessed December 14, 2006. 13. As one measure, the word “preemption” appears only five times in the document, while the terms “freedom” and “democracy” appear over 200 times. Ralph A. Cossa, “2006 National Security Strategy: It’s All About Democracy,” PacNet 13, March 27, 2006, http://www.csis.org/media/ csis/pubs/pac0613.pdf. 14. Speech by President George W. Bush, Small Guild Hall, Riga, Latvia, May 7, 2005, http:// estonia.usembassy.gov/freedom.php. 15. For a more detailed exposition of this interpretation, see Wade L. Huntley, “Threats All the Way Down: U.S. Nuclear Initiatives in a Unipolar World,” Review of International Studies 32:1 (January 2006), pp. 49–67. For a similar distinction between contending strains of U.S. foreign policy idealism, see Jonathan Monten, “The Roots of the Bush Doctrine: Power, Nationalism, and Democracy Promotion in U.S. Strategy,” International Security 29:4 (Spring 2005), pp. 112–56. WADE L. HUNTLEY 463 adversaries’ capabilities before they are realized.16 U.S. counterproliferation planning includes possible nuclear weapons use, driving calls in the Nuclear Posture Review for development of nuclear capabilities applicable to such roles. In this view, increased U.S. reliance on nuclear threats is actually part of the nonproliferation solution, and greater American commitment to nuclear disarmament is irrelevant. Thus, Assistant Secretary of State Stephen Rademaker, head of the U.S. delegation to the 2005 NPT Review Conference, stated on the eve of the meeting that America’s disarmament record is “excellent” and that plans to use the conference to focus attention on North Korea and Iran were fully appropriate: “This notion that the United States needs to make concessions in order to encourage other countries to do what is necessary in order to preserve the nuclear nonproliferation regime is at best a misguided way to think about the problems confronting us.”17 In the value system underlying emancipatory militant idealism, there is no contradiction in threatening nuclear attack to thwart nuclear proliferation. From this perspective, nuclear weapons themselves are not really the problem; the presence of nuclear weapons in the hands of bad states is the problem. The viewpoint is the international equivalent of American conservatives’ credo opposing domestic gun control: guns don’t kill people; bad people with guns kill people. . . . Bad States with Nukes Kill People Appreciating these ideational roots of the Bush administration’s nuclear weapons and nonproliferation policies elucidates its approach to North Korea. The administration’s distaste for engaging North Korea diplomatically expresses a deeper conviction that the current Pyongyang regime is an international miscreant that does not deserve the prerogatives of sovereignty. North Korean antipathy to the United States drives but does not explain the administration’s tenacious support for “regime change” as the ultimate solution to the nuclear crisis. Persistent anti-diplomatic rhetoric emphasizing that North Korea cannot be “rewarded for bad behavior” evinces the posture of a parent or a sheriff, not a sovereign equal.18 One does not negotiate with children or outlaws. 16. The Bush administration’s National Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) (White House, December 2002), www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/12/WMD Strategy.pdf, offers only a single paragraph on the role of “active nonproliferation diplomacy,” which simply reiterates the need for “a full range of operational capabilities” if the efforts fail (p. 4). See also National Strategy for Combating Terrorism (White House, February 2003), www.white house.gov/news/releases/2003/02/counter_terrorism/counter_terrorism_strategy.pdf. 17. Testimony to Congress, cited in Carol Giacomo, “U.S. Rules out Concessions to Shore up Nuclear Pact,” Reuters, April 28, 2005. 18. On the framing of public policy choices in terms of familial metaphors, see George Lakoff, Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think, 2nd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002). 464 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 The Bush administration’s ideational strategic posture also shapes its views on the implications of North Korea’s nuclear ambitions. The wider regime of norms and expectations surrounding the NPT has become as important to global arms control and nonproliferation as the treaty itself. North Korea’s nuclear weapons development poses several challenges to the nonproliferation regime: the potential East Asian regional repercussions, the corrosive impact on the NPT itself, and the possible proliferation of nuclear materials and expertise. The Bush administration’s responses to these concerns evince its preoccupation with particular nuclear aspirants rather than proliferation as a systemic problem per se, expressing the ideational predispositions shaping officials’ outlook on global nuclear challenges. First, in East Asia a steadily (if slowly) growing arsenal of nuclear weapons in North Korea will aggravate tensions and uncertainties. If these tensions reach certain breaking points, North Korea’s actions could trigger a nuclear proliferation “domino effect” in East Asia. Such developments would shake the nonproliferation regime at its foundation. Some observers worry especially that North Korea’s ambitions might spur Japan to obtain nuclear weapons of its own. Japan sustains a peaceful nuclear power program that generates high-grade plutonium, a space launch capacity providing advanced ballistic missile capabilities, and the technical expertise to reorient these activities into a sophisticated nuclear weapons development effort if Tokyo chose to do so.19 Senior Japanese leaders (including those under former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi) have occasionally opined on Japan’s capacity to exercise this option.20 Even prior to October 2006, it was clear that a North Korean nuclear test would dramatically emphasize the specific threat to Japan, a threat that many in Japan increasingly perceive North Korea as posing, and would likely fuel incipient Japanese opinion favoring an independent nuclear capability. But Japan may be less prone to soon pursue nuclear weapons than it appears. Japan’s government has long recognized that obtaining nuclear weapons would not advance its strategic interests either vis-à-vis North Korea or in the East Asia region more broadly.21 U.S. nuclear-girded security guarantees 19. See Selig S. Harrison, ed., Japan’s Nuclear Future: The Plutonium Debate and East Asian Security (Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1996). 20. Howard W. French, “Nuclear Arms Taboo Is Challenged in Japan,” New York Times, June 9, 2002; Marc Erikson, “Japan Could ‘Go Nuclear’ in Months,” Asia Times Online, January 14, 2003, http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Japan/EA14Dh01.html. 21. In 1995 the Japanese Defense Agency compiled a 31-page secret report reaffirming previous government studies’ conclusion that developing nuclear weapons would damage Japan’s national and regional security interests. The existence of the report was disclosed by the Asahi Shimbun on February 20, 2003, http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/japan/nuke.htm, accessed December 14, 2006. See also Matake Kamiya, “Nuclear Japan: Oxymoron or Coming Soon?” Washington Quarterly 26:1 (Winter 2003), pp. 63–75. WADE L. HUNTLEY 465 are fundamental to Japan’s security posture and U.S. policy has usually adamantly opposed nuclear acquisition by any of its East Asian allies. Japan’s greater interest now appears to be to expand its East Asian and global military presence, which it can do more easily as a non-nuclear state under the auspices of its U.S. alliance than it would be able to as an independent nucleararmed power. With reassurances that the U.S. defense commitment remains unwavering, North Korea’s nuclear test triggered in Japan only a ripple of discussion of the nuclear weapons option. An overtly nuclear-armed North Korea might also spur nuclear ambitions in South Korea and Taiwan. Governments in both Seoul and Taipei have demonstrated nuclear ambitions in the past, which were ultimately restrained by direct U.S. interventions. Public opinion in both South Korea and Taiwan is more favorably disposed to nuclear weapons than in Japan. But the nuclear programs in both cases are far less advanced than Japan’s. In neither case is fast acquisition of nuclear weapons feasible.22 So the North Korean nuclear test is not likely to topple other East Asian dominoes. On the other hand, a collapse in confidence in U.S. security guarantees, especially vis-à-vis developments in Korea, might in the long run prove the crucial tipping point for going nuclear among key Japanese defense planners. The U.S. reaction to the Korean nuclear crisis is the “intermediate domino” mediating Pyongyang’s actions and Tokyo’s prospective responses. The Bush administration has not appeared especially concerned that North Korea’s activities might spur East Asian regional proliferation. Indeed, at one point as the Agreed Framework was collapsing the administration seemed to signal that it might view a nuclear Japan more benignly than previous U.S. governments.23 Such an attitude, if seriously conveyed, could have a pivotal influence on Japanese defense planners. Even absent such an intention in Washington, the reemphasis on nuclear deterrence and strategic defenses in the U.S.-Japan alliance sends a powerful indication to all East Asian states about American intentions in the region: tipping nuclear balances of power in favor of allies and friends is a higher priority than resisting nuclear proliferation. The Bush administration’s full endorsement of Japan’s nuclear practices, despite the latter’s latent nuclear capabilities, and the administration’s decision 22. For overviews of these cases, see David Albright and Corey Gay, “Taiwan: Nuclear Nightmare Averted,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 54:01 (January/February 1998); and Jungmin Kang et al., “South Korea’s Nuclear Surprise,” ibid., 61:01 (January/February 2005). 23. The Asahi Shimbun on March 17, 2003, quoted Vice President Dick Cheney as stating that in response to North Korea’s development of nuclear weapons and missiles, “Japan may be forced to consider whether or not they want to readdress the nuclear issues.” See http://www.globalsecurity. org/wmd/world/japan/nuke.htm, accessed December 14, 2006. The comment came in the context of considerable U.S. discussion spurred by Charles Krauthammer, “The Japan Card,” Washington Post, January 3, 2003. 466 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 to reopen nuclear cooperation with India in part to encourage India to “balance” China, further express this orientation. North Korea’s nuclear ambitions also have consequences for the global nonproliferation regime. North Korea is the first state ever to withdraw from the NPT. Pyongyang has also released itself from the 1992 agreement with South Korea to keep the Korean Peninsula nuclear free as well as from the 1994 Agreed Framework. There currently exist no formal international legal constraints on North Korea’s nuclear activities. North Korea had the legal right to leave the treaty on 90 days’ notice. Although some NPT countries refuse to acknowledge the country’s withdrawal, the U.N. Security Council did not act on the 2003 IAEA referral owing to Chinese resistance, concern for undermining direct negotiations, and other factors. The 2004 NPT Preparatory Conference and the 2005 NPT Review Conference sidestepped the issue—presiding officials diplomatically “placed in their pockets” the placard in front of North Korea’s empty chair.24 Whether or not North Korea’s NPT withdrawal was legally stipulated, its prior NPT noncompliance leaves its withdrawal far short of the “good faith” criterion that is a general principle of international law.25 Hence, the Security Council could still take up the question of North Korea’s NPT noncompliance under the U.N. Charter’s Article VII as a “threat to the peace.”26 But it could have done so just as easily before North Korea’s NPT withdrawal. The U.N. secretary-general’s high-level report on global security recommends that any state’s notification of NPT withdrawal should prompt “immediate verification of its compliance” with the treaty. But the report recommends no sanctions beyond cessation of IAEA support.27 24. Peter Heinlein, “Annan Urges NPT Review Conference to Get Serious,” Voice of America, May 13, 2005, http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/un/un-050513-287d99b8.htm, accessed December 14, 2006; and “Walking the Nonproliferation Tightrope: An Interview with Ambassador Sérgio de Queiroz Duarte, President of the 2005 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference,” Arms Control Today, http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2004_12/Duarte_ACT version.asp. 25. Christer Ahlström, “Withdrawal from Arms Control Treaties,” SIPRI [Stockholm International Peace Research Institute] Yearbook 2004: Armaments, Disarmament, and International Security (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), ch. 19. 26. See Charter of the United Nations, http://www.un.org/aboutun/charter/index.html; cf. George Bunn and John Rhinelander, “The Right to Withdraw from the NPT: Article X Is Not Unconditional,” Disarmament Diplomacy, no. 79 (April/May 2005), http://www.acronym.org.uk/ dd/dd79/79gbjr.htm. 27. “A More Secure World: Our Shared Responsibility,” Report of the Secretary-General’s High-level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change, United Nations Department of Public Information, 2004, p. 45, http://www.un.org/secureworld/report3.pdf. Even if it was not already too late for “immediate” application of this provision to North Korea, the sanction would have been irrelevant insofar as North Korea ejected the IAEA when it withdrew from the NPT. WADE L. HUNTLEY 467 Hence, politics, not legality, will determine whether or not North Korea will be pressed on its NPT noncompliance through formal mechanisms such as the Security Council. At this symbolic level, there are no good options to mitigate the significance of North Korea’s NPT withdrawal. If North Korea remains outside the NPT and suffers no serious consequences, the precedent will erode current NPT compliance norms. But making allowances to gain North Korea’s reaccession to the NPT, especially absolving past noncompliance, would also set a precedent that could induce other NPT parties to bend the rules. The Bush administration rarely expresses worries over such potential impacts of North Korea’s nuclear ambitions on the viability of the treaty or the health of the nonproliferation regime. The silence is striking insofar as the erosion of the NPT regime is the medium through which Korean Peninsula developments drive other proliferation dangers—such as Iranian ambitions, with which the Bush administration is now seized. North Korea’s NPT withdrawal is unlikely to induce Iran to act in kind, but Iranian leaders must be learning important lessons about what consequences Iran might (or might not) suffer by following a similar path and how the repercussions might be managed. Conversely, Iran would resist settling its own disputes on terms any less generous than those North Korea might receive for re-accession, particularly regarding the extent of permissible domestic nuclear power generation technologies. More broadly, however, the administration’s dispassion over diminution of the NPT is hardly surprising, given American officials’ expressed lack of faith in both nonproliferation and international treaties. In particular, the NPT’s Article VI, the only U.S. international legal commitment to complete nuclear disarmament, contravenes the administration’s ambitions to expand U.S. nuclear capabilities and deterrence applications. This explains why officials approached the 2005 NPT Review Conference actively seeking to roll back the disarmament commitments of the 2000 conference.28 A third area of concern is that North Korea’s reinvigorated nuclear program gives it the potential to fuel proliferation by exporting fissile materials, nuclear weapons development technologies and expertise, or even completed operational weapons. This potential is highlighted by the depth of Pakistani nuclear scientist A. Q. Khan’s links to Pyongyang29 and by controversies as to whether uranium discovered in Libya might have originated in North Korea.30 28. Giacomo, “U.S. Rules Out”; cf. Wade L. Huntley, “The NPT at a Crossroads,” Foreign Policy in Focus (Silver City, N. M., and Washington, D.C.), July 1, 2005, http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/144. 29. Khan reportedly claimed that during a trip to North Korea in 1999, he was shown three nuclear devices. See David E. Sanger, “Pakistani Tells of North Korean Nuclear Devices,” New York Times, April 13, 2004. 30. See Dafna Linzer, “U.S. Misled Allies about Nuclear Export,” Washington Post, March 20, 2005; David E. Sanger and William J. Broad, “Using Clues from Libya to Study a Nuclear Mystery,” New York Times, March 31, 2005. 468 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 This is the consequence of a nuclear North Korea that Bush officials take most seriously. The administration has at times seemed prepared to accept a nuclear North Korea as a fait accompli, with the consequential increase in East Asian regional insecurity and pressure on the NPT. But North Korean proliferation of nuclear materials or technologies to other states or non-state actors has apparently emerged as the administration’s genuine “red line.”31 In response to this specific concern, the Bush administration in May 2003 launched the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI), a coalition of countries aiming to combat WMD proliferation through preventive interdiction of shipments of concern by land, sea, or air.32 But the PSI cannot prevent North Korea from smuggling small containers of fissile materials into the global black market if it is determined to do so. Because North Korea perceives the PSI as specifically coercive, the initiative has also become a point of friction in U.S. relations with South Korea, which resists joining the PSI in order to avoid excessively antagonizing Pyongyang.33 As an ad hoc coordination of activities, the PSI has lacked international accountability. Its legitimacy has grown as it has gained more national adherents and the endorsements of the G-8 Global Partnership and the U.N. secretarygeneral.34 But the PSI remains disassociated from multilateral nonproliferation treaty regimes.35 More direct linkages could enhance the accountability and effectiveness of the PSI, whose responsiveness and flexibility in turn could help prioritize achievement over process in multilateral compliance mechanisms. This synergy would have two positive impacts. Practically, it would strengthen the world’s available tools to keep proliferation problems from growing. Politically, it would enhance the nonproliferation regime’s role as the locus for international nuclear nonproliferation cooperation. Multilateral legitimation would also facilitate greater cooperation with the initiative by countries like China and South Korea. 31. “N.K. Nuke Test No Red Line, Former U.S. Negotiator Says,” Chosun Ilbo [Chosun Daily News], April 28, 2005; David E. Sanger, “Bush Shifts Focus to Nuclear Sales by North Korea,” New York Times, May 5, 2003. 32. “Proliferation Security Initiative: Statement of Interdiction Principles,” Fact Sheet, Office of the Press Secretary, White House, Washington, D.C., September 4, 2003, http://www.state.gov/ t/np/rls/fs/23764.htm; see also Mark Valencia, “The Proliferation Security Initiative: Making Waves in Asia,” Adelphi Paper 376 (London: International Institute for Strategic Studies, October 31, 2005). 33. South Korean diplomat, personal discussion, Seoul, Fall 2006. 34. “G8 Action Plan on Nonproliferation,” Sea Island summit 2004, http://www.g7.utoronto. ca/summit/2004seaisland/nonproliferation.html; United Nations, “A More Secure World,” p. 45. 35. For a summary discussion of this linkage, see Joseph Cirincione and Joshua Williams, “Putting PSI into Perspective,” May 3, 2005, http://www.carnegieendowment.org/npp/publications/ index.cfm?faview&id16827. WADE L. HUNTLEY 469 But given the Bush administration’s ambivalence to the NPT, just noted, such strengthening of multilateral nonproliferation mechanisms may in fact be a consequence that induces American officials to resist such linkage. This conclusion points once again to the ideational predispositions coursing through the current administration’s approach to nuclear nonproliferation problems. In sum, the Bush administration’s apparent willingness to abide the regional implications of a nuclear North Korea rather than engage Pyongyang directly arises from its pessimism over cooperative security solutions and its relative disregard of increased incentives for nuclear weapons acquisition by allies Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. Bush officials’ ambivalence toward implications for the NPT further expresses the administration’s pessimism over multilateral approaches to nonproliferation as well as its distaste for the NPT specifically. Although the administration is genuinely concerned over potential North Korean proliferation of fissile materials and technologies, its approach to the problem has again forsworn full-fledged multilateralism in favor of ad hoc efforts such as the PSI. Such lack of faith ultimately stems from the emancipatory militancy at the core of the Bush administration’s “grand strategy” for the U.S. global posture. This viewpoint clearly drives some administration officials’ apparent reticence to abide Pyongyang as a sovereign interlocutor and their implicit (though denied) conclusion that in the end a satisfactory settlement of the nuclear confrontation will require regime change in North Korea. Given such a conclusion, the administration’s relative quietude over the deleterious consequences of a nuclear North Korea may simply express a de facto decision to minimally tolerate extant circumstances until regime change (natural or facilitated) solves the problem. For some of the administration’s most influential figures, near-term success of this strategy to “contain and strain” North Korea is the ultimate hope. David Meets Goliath In the parable, David and Goliath could not negotiate—the divisions were too fundamental. Hence, the post-2002 willingness of the Bush administration to engage North Korea through the Six-Party Talks (also including South Korea, China, Japan, and Russia) represents a departure from the biblical analogy. Although much of the administration’s engagement has been grudging and tactical, in 2005 its approach departed decidedly from an ideationally rigid course. Belligerent rhetoric was replaced by a willingness to give North Korea assurances for its sovereignty and security and to work closely with China and South Korea to fashion plans to address the range of the North’s wider problems. This engagement reflected the greater moderation characterizing the Bush administration’s posture early in its second term.36 36. See Gideon Rose, “Get Real,” New York Times, August 18, 2005. 470 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 The process reached an apex with the joint statement of principles of September 19, 2005. While the accord validated the architects of the Bush administration’s more practical direction, North Korea’s fresh commitment to end all nuclear weapons development also evinced a responsive, welcome reasonableness on Pyongyang’s part.37 The agreement seemed to validate the negotiated approach to the current Korean nuclear crisis that both North Korea and the United States have variously resisted. But the agreement on principles did little to resolve trenchant practical differences. Some obstacles reemerged immediately, as widely divergent U.S. and North Korean national statements exposed continuing deep divisions on several issues (particularly concerning Pyongyang’s retention of civilian nuclear facilities). Such divergence should have been expected—North Korea’s provocative statements mirrored similar previous behavior—and were to a certain extent planned.38 But the divisiveness quickly dampened any momentum from the agreement. The next round of talks in November 2005, aimed at beginning to work through details, produced no progress. Meanwhile, new U.S. economic sanctions designed to curtail alleged counterfeiting of U.S. currency reflected a reassertion of authority over North Korea policy by Vice President Dick Cheney’s office and left the negotiating process deadlocked again. In this climate, North Korea on July 5, 2006, undertook a series of missile tests, triggering widespread alarm and a Security Council condemnation. North Korea’s October 9 test-explosion of a nuclear device elicited an even stronger Security Council reaction, bringing the situation to a new nadir. In retrospect, the September 2005 statement of principles represents a less fortuitous crossroads than it first appeared. A brief review of this recent and apparently failed attempt at a negotiated settlement illustrates the deeper obstructions to a full resolution and indicates the limited range of future courses. The Road Not Taken The September 2005 agreement articulated a consensus on a set of principles addressing both goals and means. North Korea committed itself to end efforts to produce nuclear weapons, give up its “existing nuclear weapons,” rejoin “at an early date” the NPT, and resubmit to IAEA safeguards, including readmission 37. While this essay does not explore the ideational determinants of the policies and strategies of Pyongyang’s ruling regime, these determinants may be even stronger than those prevailing in the Bush administration. 38. To ease U.S. acceptance of the agreement’s language, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice reportedly proposed that each party would issue separate statements describing their understanding of the deal, with whatever additional specificity they chose. “U.S.-Korean Deal on Arms Leaves Key Points Open,” New York Times, September 20, 2005. WADE L. HUNTLEY 471 of international inspectors to nuclear facilities.39 This measure appeared to represent the “strategic decision” by North Korea to give up all nuclear weapons capabilities that has been a fundamental Bush administration condition for U.S. accommodation. In the agreement, the United States affirmed explicitly that it has no intention to attack or invade North Korea with either nuclear or conventional weapons and stated formally for the first time that it has no nuclear weapons deployed on the Korean Peninsula.40 South Korea also affirmed the absence of nuclear weapons on its territory and recommitted itself to the 1992 Joint Declaration on Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. These terms satisfy long-standing North Korean demands. The United States, along with the other four parties, “expressed their respect” for North Korea’s asserted right to maintain civilian nuclear energy capabilities and “agreed to discuss at an appropriate time” North Korea’s demand that it receive a light-water nuclear reactor for electric power generation. This was an agreement to disagree: North Korea’s demand to receive light-water reactors as part of any ultimate settlement had threatened to scuttle the process, but the Bush administration has consistently opposed allowing the country any significant civilian nuclear power capability. Few outside North Korea consider large new nuclear power plants to be a viable solution to the country’s desperate energy needs, and the NPT’s provisions for states to acquire peaceful nuclear technology useful for nuclear weapons programs is a real loophole in the regime. North Korea’s civilian nuclear program remains an unresolved issue that will be at the center of future discussions. All six parties agreed “to take coordinated steps to implement the aforementioned consensus in a phased manner in line with the principle of ‘commitment for commitment, action for action’.” This language established a sequential approach under which North Korea would accrue some benefits before it satisfied all its obligations, an apparent softening of the Bush administration position that complete, verifiable, and irreversible North Korean disarmament was a precondition to any further U.S. actions. Finally, both the United States and North Korea agreed “to respect each other’s sovereignty, exist peacefully together and take steps to normalize their 39. United States Department of State, “Joint Statement of the Fourth Round of the Six-Party Talks Beijing, September 19, 2005,” http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2005/53490.htm. All quotations in this section are from this document. 40. The removal of U.S. nuclear weapons in 1991–92 was acknowledged only through the media by unnamed sources. This formal affirmation is one of the few significant exceptions to the U.S. policy to “neither confirm nor deny” specific nuclear weapons deployments. Personal correspondence with Hans M. Kristensen; cf. Kristensen, “The Neither Confirm nor Deny Policy: Nuclear Diplomacy at Work,” working paper, August 2004, http://www.nukestrat.com/pubs/NCND.pdf, accessed December 14, 2006. 472 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 relations subject to their respective bilateral policies.” This provision echoed similar intentions in the 1994 Agreed Framework, lack of progress on which may have been more disappointing in Pyongyang than delays on the material side of the deal. The September 2005 agreement also promised that “the directly related parties will negotiate a permanent peace regime on the Korean Peninsula at an appropriate separate forum.” The Korean Peninsula remains technically in a suspended state of war defined by the terms of the armistice that ended the Korean War in 1953. The agreement thus directly linked resolution of the nuclear crisis to an overarching political settlement. Most provisions in the agreement had been previously articulated, in one form or another, by one or more countries independently.41 The agreement did bring all six parties into concord on a common language but that language remained ambiguous in crucial areas. Indicatively, the agreement reportedly was reached only because the U.S. acceded at the last minute to Chinese and South Korean urging to accept the patchwork terms on the civil nuclear power issue.42 This reticence reflected ongoing tensions within the Bush administration over its more moderate approach. Once the September 2005 agreement had led only to a new impasse, administration hardliners skeptical of any negotiated outcome reasserted influence over North Korea policy, bringing back much of the resoluteness of the administration’s first term (though less of its confrontational tone). Consequently, the ideational presuppositions driving the Bush administration’s global practices regained the upper hand in shaping U.S. responses to the imperatives of the Korean situation. The Road Ahead In September 2005, some sort of accord may have been necessary to keep the Six-Party Talks process from collapsing entirely. But in the short run, the agreement that emerged did more to clarify differences than to stimulate momentum for real progress toward resolving the ongoing crisis. In particular, this episode highlights two considerable sets of hurdles. The most immediate stumbling block is resolution of the scope and nature of any peaceful nuclear program that North Korea might retain. Although divisions on this issue are deep, a practical compromise acceptable to all sides is 41. Ralph A. Cossa, “Six-Party Statement of Principles: One Small Step for Man,” PacNet 41, September 19, 2005, http://www.csis.org/media/csis/pubs/pac0541.pdf, accessed December 14, 2006. 42. Only a week earlier, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, the head U.S. negotiator, had stated that North Korea’s insistence on retaining a civilian nuclear program was “a nonstarter.” Donald Kirk and Howard LaFranchi, “North Korea’s Agreement to Scrap Its Nukes,” Christian Science Monitor, September 20, 2005; Joseph Kahn and David E. Sanger, “U.S.-Korean Deal on Arms Leaves Key Points Open,” New York Times, September 20, 2005. WADE L. HUNTLEY 473 not inconceivable.43 Beyond this immediate problem lies the less noticed difficulty that will be faced in verifying North Korean compliance with whatever stipulations may emerge for dismantling its existing nuclear weapons capabilities and eliminating all capacity for future nuclear weapons development. Achieving the agreement’s goal of “verifiable denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula” will require North Korea to come clean on its alleged second uranium-based nuclear program and accept verification intrusiveness an order of magnitude larger than it has experienced in the past. Putting aside the staunch political resistance such intrusiveness is likely to engender in Pyongyang, the material advancement of North Korea’s nuclear program may now present new technical obstacles to verifying denuclearization at a level satisfying the international community. North Korea will have a hard time proving it is nonnuclear, even if it wants to. Dramatically increased verification challenges will make arranging the timing of other elements of any agreement more difficult as well. Many benefits to North Korea under any final accord are likely to be contingent on achieving such verification. But under the principle of “commitment for commitment, action for action,” North Korea will insist that some benefits begin flowing to it before complete verification of its denuclearization is realized, particularly given the difficulties described above. This result would attract the criticism, as did the 1994 Agreed Framework, that North Korea could accrue enough support to stave off internal crises while never fully forsaking its nuclear programs. The difficulty of these obstacles underscores the importance of the September 2005 agreement’s anticipation of reaching a regional accord wider in scope than the immediate nuclear crisis. U.S. pledges to normalize relations and provide negative security assurances likely carry great weight for a country that has been subjected to cavalier talk of “regime change” since the advent of the Bush administration. Such language was reinforced in North Korean eyes by the U.S. invasion of Iraq as well as inclusion in U.S. planning of North Korea as a potential target for nuclear counterproliferation strikes. Much would need to be worked out to specify the nature and limits of any concrete U.S. negative security guarantees. The presence of U.S. troops in South Korea and the compatibility of commitments to North Korea with existing positive security guarantees to South Korea and Japan are focal challenges. Nevertheless, the costs of early and significant U.S. moves toward normalizing relations are relatively cheap compared to the potential benefits that could accrue in smoothing negotiations over more contentious tangible matters. In this context, the promise offered by the six parties’ mutual commitment to negotiate a permanent peace regime on the Korean Peninsula is particularly 43. For one suggestion, see Rose Gottemoeller, “The Process in Place,” ibid., August 23, 2005. 474 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 significant. A peace treaty to end the formal state of war would help constitute a wider East Asian cooperative security regime to supplant the deterrence and balance of power dynamics now dominating regional relations. But this linkage is symmetric: efforts by East Asia’s principal states to forge such broader cooperative mechanisms would reinforce the Six-Party Talks process and bolster prospects ultimately to resolve Korea-specific conflicts. Because the status quo changed following the collapse of the Agreed Framework, resolving the current Korean deadlock now requires significant progress toward regional cooperative security. Many analysts have long called for a bold initiative for dealing with North Korea; most reasoned proposals call for some combination of “carrots” and “sticks.” But with the new status quo now enabling North Korea to grow its nuclear arsenal to the limits of its technological capabilities, anticipating broader regional security cooperation as an outgrowth of the Six-Party Talks process is no longer sufficient. Reversing the trajectory that has taken North Korea across the threshold to becoming a full-fledged nucleararmed state requires a bold initiative reaching beyond Korea itself, setting as a forefront goal the creation of a sturdy East Asian security community. The Bush administration is capable of such thinking: former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld once embraced the principle, articulated earlier by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, that “if a problem cannot be solved, enlarge it.” James Goodby has applied this adage to the Korean confrontation: The nuclear issue can only be resolved within a framework that is as large as the strategic issue of which it is a part. . . . In parallel with [the Six-Party] talks, or independently if the talks are not resumed, [the parties] should work out a mandate for a permanent mechanism to promote security and cooperation in Northeast Asia. . . . The mandate for a security community should be as broad as that of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.”44 So long as Bush administration policymakers sustain their ideational preference for emancipatory militancy over multilateralism, any lasting mechanisms of regional security cooperation will be hard to develop. But a minimalist beginning, oriented around a more realist, problem-solving approach, is feasible and the initial parameters of such security cooperation are straightforward. Regarding North Korea, the United States and China could find common ground in emphasizing both the impracticality of “regime change” and the need for a forceful role for the Security Council, thereby forging the Sino-American concord needed for a lasting solution. But reaching that convergence would require the United States and China to build a more collaborative strategic relationship regarding Northeast Asia more broadly—and to involve the region’s 44. James Goodby, “Enlarge the North Korean Problem,” International Herald Tribune, June 21, 2005. Cf. Huntley, “Ostrich Engagement.” WADE L. HUNTLEY 475 other principal parties, constituting a “small m” multilateralism along the lines of the early nineteenth-century European “Concert of Powers.”45 In this context, the aspiration to negotiate a permanent peace regime on the Korean Peninsula—revived in the September 2005 statement of principles— should move to the forefront. But that peace-building effort now should also expand beyond Korea and aim to establish broader security cooperation on the basis of practical regionwide problem solving (rather than more-ambitious institution-building). The Six-Party Talks have been considered a potential precursor to a wider East Asian cooperative security regime. Now, however, progress toward enduring regional security cooperation has become a prerequisite, not merely a hopeful consequence, for the peaceful achievement of a non-nuclear Korean Peninsula. Nuclear North Korea: Now What? On October 9, 2006, North Korea conducted its first nuclear test. The Punggye nuclear test site, approximately 350 kilometers northeast of Pyongyang, has been under external surveillance for years. Preparations for a possible test were observed in 2005 and again in early 2006. On October 3, North Korea’s Foreign Ministry announced it would “in the future conduct a nuclear test.”46 This warning made North Korea the first state ever to give prior public announcement of its first nuclear test, contrasting particularly with India’s and Pakistan’s efforts in 1998 to conceal their test intentions. North Korea’s nuclear test marks an escalation of the crisis over its nuclear ambitions, but not a transformation. Since the breakdown of the Agreed Framework at the end of 2002, all of the implications of a nuclear North Korea have been at hand: that was the moment the critical threshold was crossed, placing Pyongyang decidedly on the road to becoming nuclear armed. The regime’s subsequent declarations that it has nuclear weapons and requires them for its security—now backed up by its nuclear detonation—all evince how far the country has moved down that road. A Testing Decision North Korea reportedly gave China about 20 minutes’ warning of the exact time and location of the test, indicating the yield would be about four 45. Paul Evans, “Constructing Multilateralism in an Anti-Region: From Six Party Talks to a Regional Security Framework in Northeast Asia?” Conference on Cross Currents: Regionalism and Nationalism in Northeast Asia, Shorenstein Asia Pacific Research Center, Stanford University, May 11–12, 2006, revised July 8, 2006; see also David Capie and Paul Evans, Asia-Pacific Security Lexicon (Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2002), pp. 77–81. 46. “DPRK FM Issues Statement on ‘New Measure’ to Bolster ‘War Deterrent’,” Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), October 3, 2006. 476 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 kilotons.47 Although this is small by historical “first test” standards, it is consistent with judgments that North Korea is probably fashioning smaller devices. But preliminary estimates from seismic monitoring of the explosion’s actual yield ranged from 0.5 to 0.8 kilotons, suggesting that the test was not entirely successful—a fizzle. Speculation that the explosion was merely a large conventional blast was never well grounded: why simulate a failure? Air samples collected a few days later detected radioactive debris, confirming that the explosion was nuclear with a yield of less than one kiloton.48 A more likely explanation for the low yield is that North Korean technicians did not achieve the precise timing needed for triggering a mechanism using the implosion-type design required for plutonium detonation. Another possibility is that North Korea may have deliberately designed a smaller device, seeking to preserve a limited plutonium supply or to ensure that the test site successfully contained the explosion. The more alarming possibility that North Korea successfully tested a refined low-yield missile warhead is unlikely, though not precluded.49 While the nuclear test aggravated the situation, it also—ironically—helped alleviate certain concerns by demonstrating that the nuclear program probably is not as advanced as many feared. Decision makers in Pyongyang must have realized that testing would provide important forensic evidence on the nature of the device and its fissile materials to outside observers. Possibly the leadership judged that the data the scientists would accrue outweighed this concern. But the inevitable exposure, combined with Pyongyang’s bold announcement of its intention to test, together indicate the likely dominance of symbolic over strategic motivations in going forward with the detonation. In this vein, the nuclear test, just like the July missile test and the long list of other North Korean provocations, was almost certainly not merely an effort to get attention. Such explanations pander to easy dismissals of Kim Jong-il as nothing more than a deluded and self-indulgent dictator. Rather, North Korea’s provocative actions probably flow from a calculated strategy of brinkmanship and coercive diplomacy. This strategy anticipates positive effects beyond the short-term rise in tensions and animosity such actions elicit and has brought 47. Siegfried S. Hecker, “Report on North Korean Nuclear Program,” Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University, November 15, 2006, http://iis-db.stanford.edu/ pubs/21266/DPRKreport-Hecker06.pdf. 48. “Statement by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence [ODNI] on the North Korea Nuclear Test,” ODNI News Release, no. 19–06, October 16, 2006, http://www.odni.gov. 49. Anthony Cordesman, “The Meaning of the North Korean Nuclear Weapons Test,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, October 9, 2006, http://www.csis.org/media/csis/pubs/ 061009_cordesman_commentary.pdf; Richard L. Garwin and Frank N. von Hippel, “A Technical Analysis of North Korea’s Oct. 9 Nuclear Test,” Arms Control Today, November 2006, http:// www.armscontrol.org/act/2006_11/NKTestAnalysis.asp. WADE L. HUNTLEY 477 success in the past. The renewed positive negotiating environment with Washington following North Korea’s 1998 missile test, which led to Secretary of State Madeleine Albright’s visit to Pyongyang two years later, is one example. The announced December 2006 resumption of the Six-Party Talks, after more than a year’s suspension in the aftermath of the failed 2005 statement of principles, suggests this approach may once again be working. Responses The eventual consequences of North Korea’s October 2006 nuclear test will be a function less of the country’s own actions and intentions than of the reactions of the other principal governments involved. The U.S. reaction was relatively predictable and probably prepared in advance. While muting its rhetoric and emphasizing the need for a diplomatic solution, the Bush administration also pushed strongly for new, tighter sanctions and creation of an “inspections cordon” to try to seal off North Korean exports of nuclear materials and other military resources—all consistent with a “contain and strain” strategy. China’s reaction was more uncertain and ambivalent. China shares the goal of having a non-nuclear North Korea, for many reasons. China has also invested significant prestige in the Six-Party Talks process and has been visibly perturbed not only by Pyongyang’s actions but by its manner of undertaking them. Beijing termed the test “brazen,” a term usually reserved for adversaries.50 But China’s interests in North Korea are broader than the nuclear issue. China experienced a massive refugee influx during North Korea’s famine in the mid-1990s and thus is particularly sensitive to its neighbor’s wider economic and political stability. From Beijing’s perspective, a collapse of governance there would mean certain chaos on its border and a host of uncertainties as to outcomes. Additionally, China’s broader regional interests make it unwilling to follow all U.S. policy preferences. U.S.-China tensions on security issues beyond Korea inhibit fulsome collaboration on the specific problem of Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions. Beijing probably also judges that to be seen to be simply doing Washington’s bidding would undermine what political leverage the Chinese do have in Pyongyang. Thus, as much as Pyongyang’s provocations push Beijing to a harder line, confrontational reactions from Washington exert an opposing pressure. The passage of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1718 six days after the nuclear test, although prompt and unanimous, reflected these trans-Pacific differences. The resolution calls for North Korea to “abandon all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs in a complete, verifiable, and irreversible 50. “North Korea’s Nuclear Test: The Fallout,” ICG Asia Briefing, no. 56, November 13, 2006, www.crisisgroup.org, p. 9. 478 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 manner.” It directs member states to “prevent the direct or indirect supply, sale, or transfer” to North Korea of a wide range of military and non-military goods.51 Unlike in the aftermath of Pyongyang’s July 2006 missile tests, China acceded to invocation of Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter, denoting North Korea’s actions as a threat to global peace, resulting in the U.N. Security Council’s strongest action against North Korea in half a century. However, at China’s urging that invocation referred to Article 41, not Article 42, thereby specifically ruling out the use of armed force as a response. Moreover, immediately following passage of the resolution, U.N. Ambassador Wang Guangya qualified China’s acceptance of the inspections cordon: China does not approve of the practice of inspecting cargo to and from the DPRK [i.e., North Korea]. We therefore have reservations about the relevant provisions of the resolution. China strongly urges the countries concerned to adopt [a] prudent and responsible attitude in this regard and refrain from taking any provocative steps that may intensify the tension.52 Prospects The nuclear test has proven that, as asserted earlier, achieving a non-nuclear Korean Peninsula now requires rolling back an existing capacity. Although North Korea still has very far to go before it is a full-fledged nuclear power, no country has ever given up a publicly demonstrated nuclear weapons capability. The only two cases of nuclear rollback—South Africa and the former Soviet republics—involved governments that had not embraced nuclear weapons in their security policies. And both rollbacks were triggered by dramatic regime change. The goal of rolling back North Korea’s nuclear weapons acquisition should not be surrendered. But the international community also must take measures to prevent a nuclear North Korea from fueling regional security conflict and global nuclear proliferation. Both these goals point to the need for security cooperation among the key interested parties, particularly the United States and China, encompassing the full context of the North Korean nuclear crisis, not merely the crisis alone. More than ever, enduring regionwide security cooperation is a prerequisite to peaceful achievement of a non-nuclear Korean Peninsula. Conclusion The descent of circumstances from the September 2005 statement of principles to the October 2006 nuclear test underscores the necessity now of addressing 51. United Nations Security Council, Resolution 1718, October 14, 2006, http://daccessdds. un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/572/07/PDF/N0657207.pdf. 52. “Explanatory Remarks by Ambassador Wang Guangya at the Security Council after Taking Vote on Draft Resolution on DPRK Nuclear Test,” Permanent Mission of the People’s Republic of China to the U.N., October 14, 2006, http://www.china-un.org/eng/smhwj/2006/t276121. htm. WADE L. HUNTLEY 479 the wider context of the nuclear crisis. Despite the trenchant material obstacles to resolving the Korean nuclear confrontation, the greatest challenges are political and symbolic. This is a major reason why future prospects are overshadowed by the ideational predispositions that the Bush administration brings to its engagement of this problem—not to mention the ideational blinkers of Kim Jong-il’s regime. None of the parties to the talks, least of all North Korea and the United States, appears ready to act decisively to expand the scope and stakes of engagement in the manner now required to generate a real solution. The United States has the most latitude for enterprise. But neither the passion of the Bush administration’s emancipatory militancy nor the ostensible sobriety of the administration’s critics is a sufficient basis for the initiative, innovation, and imagination—in a word, the idealism—that building an East Asian security community requires. The Bush administration is right to base U.S. security policy on a vision for a better world. And it is right to see a link between North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and the character of Pyongyang’s regime. But this linkage does not make seeking (or passively hoping for) regime change a basis for policy. Liberalization within states is rarely achieved through means that widen the divides between states. Neither a peaceful nonproliferation solution in Korea nor peaceful liberalization of the Pyongyang regime are promoted through confrontation; they require engaging not only North Korea but also the complex tensions throughout East Asia and the systemic dynamics of global nuclear proliferation. The Bush administration often alludes to the “democratic peace” in justifying its stark confrontations with autocratic regimes and ambitions for global democratization. But how administration officials interpret the implications of the finding that democratic countries tend not to fight wars with each other is at best partial. Many in Asia, particularly in South Korea, have concluded that the United States is avid in promoting democratic development in other countries but loathe to accommodate the divergences from U.S. desires that may emerge when such democratization is realized.53 This kind of accommodation is a necessary concomitant of the “democratic peace”; the Kantian conception of a structure of peace through the spread of republican governments also premises genuine cooperation among these governments, not rote allegiance to the strongest of them.54 This conception further appreciates that sturdy liberal government rises from a foundation of genuine self-determination, not the merely 53. Workshop Report, “America in Question: Korean Democracy and the Challenge of NonProliferation on the Peninsula,” East Asia Institute, Seoul, May 10–11, 2005, http://www.eai.or. kr/english/. 54. For an expansion on this point, see Wade L. Huntley, “Kant’s Third Image: Systemic Sources of the Liberal Peace,” International Studies Quarterly 40:1 (March 1996), pp. 45–76. 480 ASIAN SURVEY, VOL. XLVII, NO. 3, MAY/JUNE 2007 formal exercise of democratic instruments under the shadow of foreign military occupation. More broadly, emancipatory militant idealism is no protection from the asymmetric threats emanating from the seamy side of globalization. Such thinking offers false promise instead of real preparation for the threats to the United States and the challenges to the global security system that are likely to emerge in coming decades. Among these, the old and new dangers of nuclear proliferation are at the forefront. Evangelical bravado by the world’s most powerful state, backed by a military budget approaching that of all other nations combined, will instead exacerbate those threats and distract attention and resources from the practical efforts that might successfully cope with them. But greater “realism” is not the only alternative to emancipatory militancy. The United States could also follow an alternative “grand strategy” oriented more toward collaborative international community building. This approach would appreciate how security globalization leaves the United States simultaneously dominant and vulnerable. It would, accordingly, articulate a vision of the U.S. world leadership that prioritizes improved global governance to address a wide range of interrelated challenges. Such a strategy would draw on internationalist thinking and community-building ideals just as immanent in the American idealist tradition as cowboy diplomacy. Even modest reorientations in such new directions are unlikely while the Bush administration remains in office. In the meantime, successfully confronting the challenges to the global nonproliferation regime, and specifically the North Korean nuclear crisis, will remain grueling tasks. Over the long term, achieving a more productive reorientation in U.S. global strategy necessitates current critics to demand more than just greater “realism” in Washington. Such critics need to be prepared to engage in a proactive global dialogue on common ideals and on the appropriate long-term leadership role of the United States in realizing those ideals. Goliath, so confident in his strength that he willingly bore the fate of his entire army on his own shoulders, each day pridefully challenged his adversaries, who cowered in intimidation. Then one day the impertinent David felled the giant with a single stone, defeating the giant’s army as well. Less blinded by hubris, Goliath might have easily deflected that stone. All attendants to U.S. policy-making on global affairs would do well taking to heart the classic lessons of this parable: overwhelming power obscures asymmetric vulnerabilities, and pride goeth before the fall.