Posted on 12/10/2007 8:00:08 PM PST by AmericanInTokyo
Methinks that's a pretty good bet.
“recognize them and exchange ambassadors?”
“Recognize” what and how?
Re ambassadors, no - we are still officially in the state of armistice, I believe, yet it didn’t stop us from having talks with them about them dismantling their nuclear program. We already have some people on the ground to monitor the progress or lack thereof, with consequences. Are they ambassadors? How do we expect to have anything done with North Korea if we don’t have “contact” with them? Does that mean that they are now our buddies? Of course, not! Do we trust them? Of course, not - if we did, we would not have to go through all this nightmare. But for all intents and purposes, this is the end game - dismantling their nuclear program and this requires a “contact” with their counterparts and negotiating the terms.
Formal surrender of Japan in WW2 on board of USS Missouri two weeks after acceptance of Allied victory and terms took previous “contact”. This time we will not have “surrender ceremony” on board of USS Reagan because we didn’t technically “win the war”, North Korea is free to remain a basket case and museum of communism - yet we are accomplishing our strategic goal - defanging “Little nuclear” Kim, something that would not be possible without deft cool-headed diplomacy.
Thanks for the links.
I think Bush feeling roaney too LOL!
I have disdain for the about-face, as well. However, the larger picture will, I believe, continue to be obscured by the MSM and Democrats because [as with all elections] party lines are getting blurrier.
As per usual AmericanInTokyo, you have nailed it. The Russians seemed like they were showing signs of cooperating with the USA on pressuring Iran until the Israeli bombing of the Syrian ‘weapons’ site on Septemer 7th (or was it 6th?). In any event, after the incident Putin came out and all but told Bush he will back Iran’s continued development of nukes. I have a feeling this about face from Putin is what startled the President out of all of these things surrounding NK, Iran and Syria.
It has revealed Russia’s bad intentions in promoting Iran to build nukes. No doubt these nukes will be used against Israel, the USA and/or the West. Even if they don’t use them a successful nuke test will plummet the global markets sharply downward. This would tickle Russia pink as it means financial collapse of the West and an opening for Russian ambition. Russia is playing game, set match on the dominant position of controlling the worlds economy by controlling the oil. They are not there yet, we have 120,000 troops and a carrier fleet in there way. But the USA has already stated we will be reducing troop deployments in 2008. I think in two or three years we are going to see some really ugly developments unfolding. Our DOD and on the ground intelligence had best get further prepared and FAST considering our policy now appears to be containment. Bad, bad strategy in my opinion.
“Barring Democratic administration, North Koreas days as viable nuclear proliferation threat are over. Its not surprising that Syrias nuclear plant development was bombed shortly after we had our boots on the ground in Pyongyang.”
Uh-huh. We catch them ploliferating plutonium. Did any get into Iran? Probably. The North Korean regime has had 50 years of breaking agreements. Think now they have suddenly changed their ways because we caught them violating yet another agreement? Do you think they take us seriously at all now? Do you think China will go through a massive economic correction? Think China will give Kim millions of tons of food aid to support that big military of his? I believe you are a bit overconfident in this statement of no longer a threat of proliferation. Wonder why guys like John Bolton wanted no part this Administrations’ State Department when it did an about face in 2005?
“Our biggest challenge on Korean peninsula will be managing eventual unification so combined Korea would not become a socialist, China leaning state.””
Our biggest challenge is going to be whether we use nuclear weapons when North Korea attacks South Korea. The catalyst will be no food aid from China means you will either use that army or face violent overthrow from 2 million hungry troops. There is a reason NK is still proliferating. Ever consider they are selling advanced missle teach and raw plutonium to pay for the regime’s massive military expenditure?
Of course. They already tried, they already failed, and it's far easier to monitor and catch them being there (instead of IAEA and UN) and having other parties on our side - we've seen that already. This deal is not based "on trust", like the Clinton / Albright deal was.
Think now they have suddenly changed their ways because we caught them violating yet another agreement?
No, I don't. Shipments to Syria wouldn't have been very recent. Like I said, it's not based "on trust" anymore, same way Soviet Union's deal to reduce nuclear stockpiles were not based "on trust" - "Trust but verify" (Ronald Reagan). That's what we are trying to do, to de-nuke them. And yes, China is very interested in "more stable" non-nuclear North Korea, as soon as they were made to understand and appreciate that it presents much bigger threat to them then it is to us. So did some people in South Korea, who previously had an appeasement full-out "sunshine policy". That's what turned it around, not assurances from Kim, like in Clinton / Albright kiss-and-forget deal that relied on UN to verify, while we paid the ransom.
Of course, we have the seemingly only other, "John Bolton option" - just nuke the bastards now, so we don't have to nuke them later, is it his option? Fine, but that's not State Department's call, and not Condi's call - that would be President's and DoD. If that's not John Bolton's option, what is? What options did he suggest when he was right hand of Condi in State Dept (not DoD), and she was making every effort to keep him there despite boneheaded GOP Senators like Voinovich from Ohio who put a hold on him? Is there any agreement that could be considered verifiable that he / we could agree to, that would not be subjected to the same criticism and questions?
Like I said, there is not going to be a "surrender" signing ceremony on USS Reagan... Oh well, I am starting to repeat post #22.
I am striving but having a hard time recalling a single public statement from Putin, ever, indicating he was on our side in anything. All I can come up with is the rosey scenarios of hopeful pundits and Bush's initial crush on him just because iirc he wore a cross his mother gave him. Oh yeah, and that "look into his soul" thingie
Why?
Because the Clinton approach was clearly assailed by the Bush Administration on a point by point basis in the first five years of his rule.
He, however, came over the fence, and you hear no such criticism of the Clinton approach out of this Administration. Conversely, you hear no criticism of the new approach of Bush, by the Clinton Administration veterans of those policy issues. Again, because essentially they are indistinguishable.
In case of the "Axis of Evil" Bush NK Policy, hated by our enemies abroad and in the United States: isolation, (diplomatic and economic), ridicule, resistance to engage in bilateral talks, no carrots but just sticks, freezing of assets and the like--is now "Version 2.0".
Everyone around that is or was plugged in, including Ambassador John Bolton, know that the 2006-2007 shift by Bush/Condi has just about everything to do with Administration "legacy" in the closing days, and not necessarily a strategic shift to our benefit or indicative of a strong position on our point, but rather, from one of patent perceived, if not de-facto, weakness.
The challenge here is to establish, enumerate, and expand upon any patent differences between the Clinton Administration DPRK policy of December 1999 and the Bush Administration DPRK policy of December 2007.
The differences are few and far between, and this point is well known and well talked about in knowledgeable South Korea, Japanese and American (conservative) policy circles.
Thank you, q5, for your good comments and kindness as well.
BTTT
Well, it's kind of late for that, it had been done over and over and it would be a waste of time carping on what Clinton / Albright did as everybody already knows that. Now it's time not to talk about Clinton but to actually put machinery that de-nukes North Korea with the help of coalition, so that if we have a Dem administration in 2009 they would have to follow it and not able to screw it up (while, of course, blaming Bush and taking credit for success themselves).
Conversely, you hear no criticism of the new approach of Bush, by the Clinton Administration veterans of those policy issues.
What can they criticize - a success in foreign policy that they themselves have failed to achieve? To bring attention, once again, to one of their many glaring failures in foreign policy? What for?
Everyone around that is or was plugged in, including Ambassador John Bolton, know that the 2006-2007 shift by Bush/Condi has just about everything to do with Administration "legacy" in the closing days, and not necessarily a strategic shift
One, neither Bush nor Condi give a darn about "legacy" - they have proved it time and again and it's obvious for anyone to see, except MSM or the writers of fictional letters from Bush to Kim, i.e. the people who always and only care about their own and someone else's "legacy" - that's all they talk about.
Two, there was no shift, strategic or other, in a policy - Kim was squeezed until he agreed to the conditions that would allow us to make sure he is de-nuked, through carrots and sticks approach, which was there from the beginning. Clinton / Albright had only carrot and carrot, which was an acceptable diet for Kim. Bolton wants sticks and sticks, which was not working, was not and is not going to work, as there was no incentive for either Kim or China to comply and we would have problems with not only them but also from our allies in the region - lots to talk about, but would only lead to occasional escalations and distractions to WOT, with no progress in what we really want to achieve - de-nuked North Korea.
It's not a shift in the Bush policy or change in the game, it's a logical progression to another, final stage of it - the end game.
And again, it really doesn't answer the questions I asked, what would John Bolton do instead, and how would his agreement with North Korea differ from the one now? And how it would be verified differently from the one now? And when would that happen and why? And would we "trust" Kim to abide by the agreement? And how that would be different?
We didn't and don't trust Libya's Qaddafi, yet his nuclear plant is disassembled and we are trading with and buying oil from Libya. Yes, it was a different situation and therefore it took a different method and policy of achieving it, but that's exactly the point - different situation require different solution, not one-size-fits-all foreign policy... Oh, and by the way, after that "unfortunate incident" with Syrian nuclear development, who would be stupid enough to pay Kim to deliver nuclear and/or plant construction materials, knowing that they will be tracked? Kim is now, for all practical purposes, out of proliferation business.
... and this point is well known and well talked about in knowledgeable South Korea, Japanese and American (conservative) policy circles.
Yes, I am sure it is "talked about", which is kind of sad because what's not talked about are any real, tangible, executable, not fantasy-driven, plans and policy proposals.
We are so bitter, we can't even accept one of our own rare diplomatic successes, which came despite the Democrats in Congress, State Dept and other 3-letter agencies apparatus throwing monkey wrenches into the wheels of anything that could actually work to help US become stronger.
Tiger, check this.
He did not do anything of the sort.
You should know better than that.
I will side with the folks I know here in Asia, who are not nitwits, (and I will side with the people of North Korea who have to continue to suffer this dictatorial regime) and say that it was not a foreign policy victory for the Bush team.
Sorry.
We have dramatically different interpretations. And time will prove ultimately whether I or you had the correct one.
With professional respect,
-AiT
Chia Head was watching carefully what the resolve of China and U.S. was. He concluded that they are full of big talks but would not take any action which would really hurt N. Korea. And he was right in retrospect.
The whole saga is full of projection of U.S. desires into the mind of Kim Jong-il. Viewing from his angle was confrontational, inflexible and lacking true insight. Who has true insight now?
Let Bush, Condi, and Foggy Bottom camp next to Chia Heads' nuke and worship it. I won't.
I also remember endless love calls to Beijing. That is another stupid instance of projecting our wishes into their mind. Chinese must be laughing at us.
Bush/Condi/Foggy Bottom deserve Kim Jong-il.
THREAD BOOKMARKED.
To see who's analyses and predictions hit the target.
We are more or less on the same page. Saw quick headline last night of an eruption in South Korea’s House over the failed Sunshine policy and appeasing North Korea. This is a powder keg that is not going to go away without some kind of military intervention from the USA but it doesn’t have to be direct.
A blockade and forced inspections of cargo ships and planes might help but truth is it is relatively easy to put enough KG’s of plutonium on a diplomatic flight to Syria or Iran.
The likely solution is to assist South Korea and arm them with nukes, give the continent there own version of MAD and then withdraw our 20,000 troops on the ground. They are nothing but a speed bump and likely to be annihalated in the first 48 hours of an attack by the North. Once we have armed the South with nukes, we would change our policy to not interfere if there is a conflict. In fact, we should do the same with Taiwan. China and Russia is arming our adversaries with nukes, we should apply the same strategy until Russia and China see the futility of another major arms race or attempting to cripple the West via proxy and then deny culpability.
I don’t recall John Bolton ever talking about nuking North Korea. I also don’t recommend a pre-emptive nuclear strike on North Korea or Iran for that matter, that pretty much insures a thermocnuclear war with Russia and/or China.
I agree with your point. I am simply stating this behavior by Putin was never so boldly or so directly stated to our Administration over Iranian nukes up until very recently. The President has been seeing through this dangerous continuation of Cold War tactics by Russia and China of using Islamic proxies to weaken the West. Too bad the President can’t convince Congress to build more nukes. I fear we are going to need them and supply allies such as South Korea and Taiwan with them. We can’t continue funding our military to provide an entire portion of an allies military any longer.
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