yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why The Real North Korea Threat Isn't Nuclear Weapons | Michael Desch | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

The United States is remarkably secure. But you wouldn’t sort of get that sense if you listened to our President or the members of Congress who constantly are finding threats out there to America’s security. And I don’t want to be in the position to deny that there are challenges out there, but I’d really strongly urge us to put these challenges in their proper context.

So let’s talk about one of the challenges du jour: The North Korean regime under the odious dictator Kim Jong-un’s frenetic and sustained pursuit of a nuclear capability. There’s no doubt that the North Korean regime is a terrible regime, inflicting suffering mostly on its own people, and I freely concede that the world would be better off if they didn’t have a nuclear capability. And the question then is, “How much of a threat does this pose to the United States?” And my answer, contrary to the hyperventilating that you see in a lot of the discussion of this topic, is that it really doesn’t change things very much.

To begin with, the United States is one of the largest nuclear powers in the world. Currently our arsenal consists of about 4,000 nuclear warheads that are deliverable in a wide variety of very reliable packages. Contrast that with North Korea, which may have 20 to 30 atomic devices that may or may not be deliverable on anything other than short range ballistic missiles. Now most people would concede that the balance is very much in our favor but say, “Look, this is a crazy regime. I mean, couldn’t this be a case in which a madman has his finger on the nuclear trigger?” And I don’t want to defend Kim Jong-un’s rationality or his sartorial choices, but I would say he’s learned the lesson that many other dictators have learned from Saddam Hussein and from Muammar Gaddafi, which is: if you don’t want to be invaded by the United States, build whatever rudimentary nuclear arsenal you can.

Now, you can’t eat nuclear weapons, and a residual nuclear arsenal I think is no guarantee that the North Korean regime won’t collapse of its own internal rottenness. In fact I anticipate that that’s what will happen. And that will present its own set of challenges. But they’re a very different set of challenges than the ones that we’ve been talking about in the general political discourse about the North Korean nuclear threat in our country.

So the question then is what the United States should do about North Korea? The challenge that the United States faces is when the regime goes south—as it invariably will, it won’t be tomorrow, it could be five years, it could be ten years—it’s going to pose to the United States a challenge. And the challenge involves two elements. First of all the United States and the South Koreans will be tempted, if a civil war starts in the north or even if there’s just a large scale social unrest, to intervene. The South to reunify their country, the United States to try to clean up the nuclear capability.

But the problem is that there’s another great power with a big equity in North Korea, and that’s China. And the Chinese are not particularly fond of the Kim regime, but they’re sort of stuck in a dysfunctional marriage with them. They don’t want a reunited Korea under Seoul with nuclear weapons on their border. And so the real problem that we face is how we manage the inevitable endgame of a collapsing North Korea with China. And here the solution is an explicit set of discussions and agreements with the Chinese about what will happen in this context.

And I think we’d be well advised to start now dialoguing with the Chinese about the future. And I think a unified Korea, but also one without nuclear weapons and nonaligned, without a major U.S. military presence could be the deal that would work for everybody.

More Articles

View All
Later stages of the Civil War part 3
So in the last video, we talked about the year 1864 in the American Civil War, and now we’re getting down to the very end of the war. In 1864, William Tuma Sherman had his sort of famous March to the Sea, where he captured Atlanta and then carried on a t…
Weird love advice that works: Be a dog. | Gretchen Rubin | Big Think
When you think about romance and sweethearts and spouses, one of the most striking observations from the research – it’s sad, but it’s true – is that, often, married couples will treat each other with less consideration than they show to their friends, or…
6 STOIC LESSONS FROM SENECA FOR MASTERING MENTAL TOUGHNESS | STOICISM INSIGHTS
Every one of us at some point feels like life is spinning out of control, whether it’s a lost job, a broken relationship, or just the chaotic pace of daily routines. These moments can leave us feeling helpless and overwhelmed. But what if I told you there…
Concrete and abstract nouns | The parts of speech | Grammar | Khan Academy
Hello Garans. So today I’d like to talk to you about the idea of concrete and abstract nouns. Before we do that, I’d like to get into some origins—some word origins or etymology. Um, so let’s take each of these words in turn. I think by digging into wha…
The Risk Behind Netflix's Original Programming Leap | Big Think
Netflix – when House of Cards came – Kevin Spacey and the producers came to them with the idea of House of Cards they said, “We will give you a commitment without doing what every other TV network does which is insist on seeing a pilot, testing it and let…
Would You Vote for a Psychopath? | James Fallon | Big Think
This team of researchers asked the biographers – the really top biographers for all the presidents from the beginning all the way through almost up to the present. And said, rate them on this psychopathic scale. And they did, and right at the top was Tedd…