Should Japan and South Korea Go Nuclear?

Guest Post by Patrick J. Buchanan

By setting off a 100-kiloton bomb, after firing a missile over Japan, Kim Jong Un has gotten the world’s attention.

What else does he want?

Almost surely not war with America. For no matter what damage Kim could visit on U.S. troops and bases in South Korea, Okinawa and Guam, his country would be destroyed and the regime his grandfather built annihilated.

“The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting,” wrote Sun Tzu. Kim likely has something like this in mind.

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His nuclear and missile tests have already called the bluff of George W. Bush who, in his “axis of evil” speech, declared that the world’s worst regimes would not be allowed to acquire the world’s worst weapons.

Arguably the world’s worst regime now has the world’s worst weapon, an H-bomb, with ICBMs to follow.

What else does Kim want? He wants the U.S. to halt joint military maneuvers with the South, recognize his regime, tear up the security pact with Seoul, and get our forces off the peninsula.

No way, says President Trump. Emerging from church, Trump added, “South Korea’s … talk of appeasement with North Korea will not work, they only understand one thing!”

On Monday, South Korea was accelerating the activation of the high-altitude missile defense implanted by the United States. Russia and China were talking of moving missile forces into the area. And Mattis had warned Kim he was toying with the fate of his country:

“Any threat to the United States or its territories, including Guam or our allies, will be met with a massive military response.”

As the United States can only lose from a new Korean war in which thousands of Americans and millions of Koreans could perish, the first imperative is to dispense with the war talk, and to prevent the war Mattis rightly says would be “catastrophic.”

China has declared that it will enter a new Korean conflict on the side of the North, but only if the North does not attack first.

For this and other reasons, the U.S. should let the North strike the first blow, unless we have hard evidence Kim is preparing a pre-emptive nuclear strike.

But if and when we manage to tamp down this crisis, we should ask ourselves why we are in this crisis. Why are we a party to this frozen conflict from 1953 that is 8,000 miles away?

The first Korean War ended months into Ike’s first term. Our security treaty with Seoul was signed in October 1953.

That year, Stalin’s successors had taken over a USSR that was busy testing missiles and hydrogen bombs. China was ruled by Chairman Mao, who had sent a million “volunteers’ to fight in Korea. Japan, still recovering from World War II, was disarmed and entirely dependent upon the United States for its defense.

What has changed in six and a half decades?

That USSR no longer exists. It split, three decades ago, into 15 nations. Japan has risen to boast an economy 100 times as large as North Korea’s. South Korea is among the most advanced nations in Asia with a population twice that of the North and an economy 40 times as large.

Since the KORUS free trade deal took effect under President Obama, Seoul has been running surging trade surpluses in goods at our expense every year.

The world has changed dramatically since the 1950s. But U.S. policy failed to change commensurately.

The basic question that needs addressing:

Why do we still keep 28,000 troops in South Korea as a trip wire to bring us into a second Korean war from its first hours, a war that could bring nuclear strikes on our troops, bases, and, soon, our nation?

We cannot walk away from our Korean allies in this crisis. But we should look upon the North’s drive to marry nuclear warheads to ICBMs as a wake-up call to review a policy rooted in Cold War realities that ceased to exist when Ronald Reagan went home.

Consider. North Korea devotes 25 percent of GDP to defense. South Korea spends 2.6 percent, Japan 1 percent. Yet these mighty Asian allies, who run annual trade surpluses at our expense, require us to defend them from a maniacal little country right next door.

After this crisis, South Korea and Japan should begin to make the kind of defense effort the U.S. does, and create their own nuclear deterrents. This might get Beijing’s attention, as our pleas for its assistance with North Korea apparently have not.

Already involved in land disputes with a nuclear-armed Russia and India, China’s dominance of Asia — should Japan and South Korea acquire nuclear weapons — begins to diminish.

“As our case is new,” said Abraham Lincoln, “we must think anew and act anew.”

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12 Comments
carnac the insignificant
carnac the insignificant
September 5, 2017 8:17 am

Thailand has better whores. Japan makes better cars and tvs. Fuck korea.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
September 5, 2017 8:52 am

Of course Japan and South Korea should go nuclear. Taiwan probably should, too.

Stucky
Stucky
  Iska Waran
September 5, 2017 9:59 am

Why stop there?

How about encouraging EVERY country in the world to acquire multiple nukes. That would be fun.

I hope you were just kidding. More nukes in the hands of flawed fuknut humans can’t be a good thing.

unit472
unit472
  Stucky
September 5, 2017 10:04 am

Allowing North Korea to get away with its nuclear program is an invitation to exactly what you fear. Every two bit dictator in the world will seek to build a nuclear shield to protect them… or if they don’t have the means to DIY buy it from North Korea!

Stucky
Stucky
  unit472
September 5, 2017 12:13 pm

Where would these tin pot dick tators get the money and technology to build a bomb and delivery system. NK surely needed gobs of help from outside sources, probably China and Ukraine.

Your opinion is neocon-ish fear mongering.

Anyway, I did not know you are on dialysis. Wow. I’m so sad to read that. FWIW, I hope and pray (in my own way) that you find a way to keep yourself SAFE from Irma. Keep us informed, will you?

MMinLamesa
MMinLamesa
  Stucky
September 5, 2017 1:14 pm

None the less, that’s the way it looks like things are heading.

unit472
unit472
  Iska Waran
September 5, 2017 10:01 am

Taiwan going nuclear is the “Trump” card. Nothing else would wake Xi Jinping up like having the nuclear shoe on the other foot and allowing Taiwan to forever be independent of Beijing.

The logic of this is so ineluctable one almost wonders when Taiwan will announce it has conducted a nuclear test!

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
September 5, 2017 11:49 am

Ya agreed…… arm them, then walk away! I don’t believe for a moment that the Nork’s are acting alone. China is in on this one big time!

Tony
Tony
  Fiatman60
September 5, 2017 12:17 pm

Sure, what could possibly go wrong!?!

Soup Nazi
Soup Nazi
September 5, 2017 12:32 pm

NO! Next question.

GilbertS
GilbertS
September 5, 2017 7:13 pm

I like Korea and Koreans. They’re some of the hardest-working, most innovative people in the world. Anyone in the military knows Koreans are the ultimate camp followers, providing troops with anything, anywhere in the world, no matter what the risks. If we ever send troops to Mars, Koreans will be there when they land, ready to polish boots, cut hair, and sew patches on space suits.
They’re also one of the biggest powerhouses in the world.
I think it might be time to go home and let the Koreans seek their own future. At this point, South Korea is probably capable of standing on its own and our presence there isn’t really doing much for them anymore. I think we’re probably in Korea more as a threat to China and as a source of sinecure positions for field grade officers, just like NATO and Germany.

If we left, I don’t think North Korea could afford to invade, because they would be exposing their ignorant comrades to a massive, wealthy nation of educated free people who would quickly shatter the cultivated ignorance of the North Korean population. They would be a bigger destabilizing influence inside the North Korean borders than they are now. South Koreans would literally tear apart North Korea from the inside.

At this point, i think Un is trying to develope nukes to ensure the world only interacts with the DPRK on his terms. Actually launching them in a war wouldn’t serve Un’s interests.

I believe our best strategy to deal with UN and the NORKs is to foster the infiltration of truth and pro-Western propaganda to the North Korean peasants. Once radios, DVDs, laptops, cameras, cell phones, porn, CNN and Fox, The Avengers and Family Guy are in every peasant’s hands, the Party is doomed. Once we’re flooding them with US movies and South Korean pop and BBC news, the game is up. The South Koreans do it privately, with civilians donating money to causes who fill balloons with electronics and media and sending them over the border to the NORKs. Send them the Food Network. We could do more to damage the North by dropping Thanksgiving Dinners on them than nuclear weapons.
In this war, TRUTH is our greatest weapon.

rhs jr
rhs jr
September 6, 2017 12:00 am

Fat Boy would be a rotting carcass without his missiles; we need to shoot down every one he launches. If our technology needs an upgrade, do it because it is needed on every ship and at every base too. Help the Seoul Koreans build bomb shelters and buy automatic targeting artillery. When Fat Boy has no missile power, his ships, fighters and infrastructure could all have “accidents” and Fat Boy and NK might implode.