If Pyongyang Goes Bad
Dread of a DPRK collapse at Belmont prompts Westhawk to rally the six nations for an intervention.
I have described reasons why China, South Korea, and the U.S. could get sucked into the North Korean tar pit in spite of the risks and costs of doing so. With all sides having strategic interests in the problem and obvious reasons for wishing to minimize their own costs and risks, it would seem to make sense for China, South Korea, the U.S., Japan, and others to cooperate now on planning for a post-Kim North Korea.
Although strict defenders of national sovereignty will object to the idea of a group of countries scheming over the collapse of another, the case of North Korea is too dangerous to ignore. Cooperative planning now might prevent a chaotic response later.
But even if these countries provide a smooth response to the collapse of the Kim regime, the strategic conflicts described above will still occur. A coordinated international relief expedition could provide humanitarian relief to North Korea, maintain order, prevent a refugee crisis, control the WMD stockpiles, and begin reconstruction. Yet it will take another level of diplomacy to prevent strategic conflict in the region, even after all of this important work is done.
And, US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill (for the conservative rebuttal, read OFK) responded to US Senator Joseph Biden's query about a Northeast Asian security arrangement with a feeble affirmation.
In contrast, I side with the Chinese.
Chinese analysts widely assert that the North Korean system remains stable and they are confident that it will remain so for at least several years absent the sudden death of Kim Jong Il or external interference aimed at destabilizing the regime. In the long run, however, sustainable development through economic reform remains an essential prerequisite for stability, and North Korea's ability to move down that path is not yet assured.
No amount of wishful thinking will change this.
Sphere: Related Content







Write a comment
If you want to add your comment on this post, simply fill out the next form:
You have to be logged-in to write a comment: (Log-in).
No comments
Be the first to write a comment on this post.
1 trackback
To notify a mention on this post in your blog, enable automated notification (Options > Discussion in WordPress) or specify this trackback url: http://www.radicalcontrapositions.com/left_flank/2008/02/12/if-pyongyang-goes-bad/trackback/