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Writer’s view is personal, must not be
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North Korea's bomb
Sender: MARJORIE GIBSON
By: John Chuckman
You might think from all the political noise that something
extraordinary happened when North Korea conducted an
underground nuclear explosion. But let's put the test,
apparently a small-yield, inefficient device, into some
perspective.
The United States has conducted 1,127 nuclear and
thermonuclear tests, including 217 in the atmosphere. The
Soviet Union/ Russia conducted 969 tests, including 219 in the
atmosphere. France, 210, including 50 in the atmosphere. The
United Kingdom, 45, with 21 in the atmosphere. China, 45, with
23 in the atmosphere. India and Pakistan, 13, all underground.
South Africa (and/or Israel) one atmospheric test in 1979.
From a purely statistical point of view, North Korea's test
does seem a rather small event. You must add the fact that my
title, North Korea's Bomb, is aimed at being pithy and is
thereby unavoidably inaccurate. Having a nuclear device is not
the same thing as having a bomb or warhead, much less a
compact and efficient bomb or warhead. North Korea still has a
long way to go.
But North Korea's test is magnified in its effect by several
circumstances. First, war in the Korean peninsula has never
formally ended, and American troops might well be vulnerable
to even a school bus with a nuclear device. Just that thought
is probably horrifying to many Americans who are not used to
being challenged abroad, but I'm sure North Korea has already
been warned that that would constitute national suicide.
Two, the test comes when Bush has been exploring military
means to end Iran's work with nuclear upgrading technology.
There is no proof that Iran intends to create nuclear weapons,
but, being realistic, I think we have to say it's likely. Iran
faces nuclear-armed countries, hostile to its interests, in
several directions. Security of its people is an important
obligation of any state.
I doubt Bush intends invading Iran - invasion's extreme
advocates, neo-con storm troopers like David Frum and Richard
Perle having proved totally wrong about Iraq - but that
doesn't exclude some form of air attack. Iran has deeply
buried its production sites, so the usual American bombers and
cruise missiles will be ineffective. There has been talk of
using tactical nuclear warheads, but I think there would be
overwhelming world revulsion to this. The Pentagon may be
considering non-nuclear ICBMs, there having been talk of
arming a portion of the American fleet with non-nuclear
warheads to exploit the accuracy and momentum of their
thousands-of-miles-an-hour strikes for deep penetration. But
Russia's missile forces are on hair-trigger alert against the
launch of any American ICBM, and the time for confirming error
with shorter-range sea-launched missiles is almost
nonexistent.
Bombardment of Iran may now be more questionable, something we
may regard as a good outcome of the North Korean test. How do
you justify an attack to prevent the development of nuclear
weapons in one country when you have done nothing of the kind
in another that actually has them? This is even more true
because Iran, while not Arabic, is Islamic, and public
relations for America in the Islamic world already are
terrible.
Third, what many analysts fear most from North Korea is its
selling weapons or technology to terrorists. North Korea sells
a good deal of its limited military technology to others,
although this does not make the country in any way special,
the world's largest arms trafficker by far being the United
States. Many would argue that American weapons have supported
terror, those used in Beirut, for example, ghastly
flesh-mangling cluster bombs dropped on civilians. The answer
to this fear about North Korea brings us to the simple human
matter of talking. The U.S. must give up its arrogant,
long-held attitude against talking and dealing with North
Korea, for here it is certainly working against its own vital
interests.
It is an interesting sidelight on North Korea's test that at
least portions of its technology came from A. Q. Kahn's
under-the-table operations in Pakistan, America's great ally
in its pointless war on terror. Perhaps Kim Jong Il should
volunteer troops for Iraq. This would undoubtedly change
America's view of him dramatically. Cooperation won a lot of
benefits for the dictatorship in Pakistan regarded by America
as a rogue nuclear state just a few years ago.
All completely rational people wish that nuclear weapons did
not exist, but wishing is a fool's game.
Efforts for general nuclear disarmament are almost certainly
doomed to failure at this stage of human history. Why would
any of the nuclear powers give up these weapons? They magnify
the influence and prestige of the nations that have them. And
why should other nations, facing both the immense power of the
United States and its often-bullying tactics, give up
obtaining them? Moreover, technology in any field improves and
comes down in cost over time, and it will undoubtedly prove so
with making nuclear weapons.
The entire Western world has conspired to remain silent on
Israel's nuclear arms, even when Israel assisted apartheid
South Africa to build a nuclear weapon. If nuclear weapons are
foolish and useless, why does little Israel possess them? Why
did South Africa want them? Why did the Soviet Union, despite
a great depression and horrible impoverishment after the
collapse of communism, keep its costly nuclear arsenal?
If Western nations can understand the dark fear that drives
Israel, why can they not understand the same thing for North
Korea? The United States has refused for years to talk and has
threatened and punished North Korea in countless ways. When
the U.S., under Clinton, did agree to peaceful incentives for
North Korea to abandon its nuclear work, it later failed
utterly to keep its word.
Bush has treated the North Koreans with the same dismissive
contempt and threatening attitude he has so many others. How
on earth was this approach ever to achieve anything other than
what it now has produced?
We keep hearing that North Korea is irrational and unstable,
but I think these descriptions are inaccurate. A regime that
has lasted for more than half a century can be called many
things, but not unstable. Soviet-style regimes were very
stable. It was when such governments attempted reforms and
loosened their absolute hold on people's lives that they
toppled, but there seems little likelihood of a Gorbachev
assuming power in North Korea.
North Korea has done some bizarre things over the last fifty
years, but I do not think a careful speaker would describe the
nation as irrational. North Korea has been isolated and
ignored by the United States. It is American policy that
frequently has been irrational, Bush's mob having been
especially thick in their behavior towards the country.
I may be exaggerating when I write of bizarre North Korean
acts, for since World War II, what nation has done more
bizarre, damaging things than the United States? Over forty
years of costly hostility and terror against Cuba? The insane,
pointless war in Vietnam? The insane, pointless invasion of
Iraq?
Harsh sanctions against North Korea, already advocated by the
emotionally-numb Bush, are a foolish response. North Korea's
rulers would not suffer any more than did Saddam Hussein under
American-imposed sanctions against Iraq after Desert Storm.
Only ordinary people would be driven to misery and starvation,
just as they were in Iraq where tens of thousands of innocents
died.
How much easier and more productive just to talk.
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"Knowledge is
better than wealth because it protects you while you have to
guard wealth. it decreases if you keep on spending it but the
more you make use of knowledge ,the more it increases . what you
get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but
what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you."MORE
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