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Horist: No Nukes for North Korea … or else

<p>Despite the avalanche of criticism and fear-mongering from the left&comma; it appears that President Trump&rsquo&semi;s tough talk about North Korea is starting to pay off&period; &nbsp&semi;He has gotten China to both publicly back away from supporting its neighbor and traditional ally should Kim Jong Un provoke a war with the west and to squeeze the NK economy by cutting off billions of dollars in purchases&period; &nbsp&semi;This latter action was as a result of the new UN sanctions against NK &ndash&semi; sanctions China supported in a reversal of normal policy&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>These may have been the diplomatic dominoes that forced the murderous dictator to abandon his reckless promise to shoot missiles into the waters of Guam&period; &nbsp&semi;This is not a resolution of the problem&comma; but the best start we have seen since the Korean War was put on hold in the early 1950s&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In terms of foreign policy&comma; one of my most enlightening friendships was with former Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger&comma; who&comma; along with President Reagan&comma; was the architect of the fall of the Soviet Union&period; &nbsp&semi;In discussions over several years&comma; he described the threat of North Korea with a warning prescience that went largely unappreciated and unheeded by successive presidents&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Clinton approved a deal that gave North Korea billions of dollars in return for a pledge to end its nuclear ambition&period; &nbsp&semi;As so often is the case with Democrat foreign policy&comma; symbolism was more important than reality&period; &nbsp&semi;Without any enforcement&comma; the late-North Korean dictator Kim Jon il proceeded unfettered to establish a nuclear program&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Bush fully endorsed his predecessor&&num;8217&semi;s red line&comma; making a nuclear North Korea unacceptable&period; &nbsp&semi;In the same breath&comma; however&comma; the United States assured the world and Kim Jon il that we would never use force despite the overused claim that &ldquo&semi;nothing is off the table&period;&rdquo&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Obama doubled down on the already failed strategy of empty threats&comma; endless unsuccessful negotiations and ineffective sanctions&period; &nbsp&semi;He underscored a policy of silent surrender by a strategy of global military withdrawal&comma; including a reduction in the size of the armed forces&period; &nbsp&semi;His retreat under a euphemistically named policy of &ldquo&semi;leading from behind&rdquo&semi; set off worldwide aggression by American adversaries&comma; resulting in the rise of ISIS&comma; the expansion of Russian influence and the acceleration of North Korean militarization&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>According to Weinberger&comma; war is never avoided by appearing weak or being unwilling or incapable of successfully engaging in war&period; &nbsp&semi;He repeatedly warned that to maintain world leadership&comma; the United States had to have a &ldquo&semi;two war capability&rdquo&semi; since one conflict&comma; such as in the Middle East&comma; would result in aggressive moves by other adversaries &ndash&semi; and his prime example was always North Korea&period; &nbsp&semi;Without doubt&comma; America has by far the most powerful military force in the world&comma; but unless a threat to use it is credible&comma; it means nothing &ndash&semi; and for decades our threat has not been credible&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For a threat to be perceived as real&comma; it must incorporate a real possibility of overwhelming military action&period; &nbsp&semi;In language similar to that of President Trump&comma; President Harry Truman gave a stern warning to the Japanese&comma; and when they failed to heed his warning he brought the war to an end with the atomic bomb&period; &nbsp&semi;President Jack Kennedy backed down the Soviet Union when they threatened America with nuclear missiles in Cuba&period; &nbsp&semi;His threat to take military actions was successful because it was credible&period; &nbsp&semi;President Ronald Reagan proved the worth of his threats by ordering the Air Force to bomb the Libyan capital in retaliation for the terrorist attack on a Berlin caf&eacute&semi; and in view of the nation&rsquo&semi;s efforts to become a nuclear power&period; &nbsp&semi;The result was the end of Libyan state-sponsored terrorism&period; &nbsp&semi;President Trump appears to have blocked further use of chemical weapons with a surgical bombing of the Syrian military airport&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The peace-at-all-costs progressives continue to reject military intervention as a viable option&comma; and they criticize President Trump for what they call &ldquo&semi;bombastic language&period;&rdquo&semi; &nbsp&semi;They now openly abandon the long-standing doctrine that a nuclear North Korea is unacceptable and proffer arguments that it is inevitable and we should adjust accordingly&period; &nbsp&semi;Least they allow the apocalyptic fantasies to run away with them&comma; I would console the pacifist left by noting that if Trump&rsquo&semi;s threats were not perceived as credible to them&comma; they would not be perceived as credible to Kim Jong Un&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They mistakenly see the kind of policy of &ldquo&semi;mutual destruction&rdquo&semi; that kept the United States and the old Soviet Union from pulling the atomic trigger&period; &nbsp&semi;But&comma; to compare Pyongyang to Moscow is a mistake&period; &nbsp&semi;A more apt comparison would be Nazi Germany&period; &nbsp&semi;They also fail to understand that even short of nuclear war&comma; the expansion of enemy nuclear states changes the balance of global power&period; &nbsp&semi;America would be subjected to the same sort of nuclear blackmail that we see today &ndash&semi; blackmail the political left seems willing to pay forever&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The hyperventilating anxiety of the appeasement axis is evidence that Trump&rsquo&semi;s current threat is credible and could lead to military action if the Chinese and North Koreans do not end Kim Jon Un&rsquo&semi;s nuclear program&period; &nbsp&semi;More importantly&comma; the threat is now being viewed as credible by the world community&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While a diplomatic solution is still possible and preferred&comma; a military resolution is definitely on the table&period; &nbsp&semi;In fact&comma; a diplomatic solution is far more likely now that the world knows any failure by the diplomats will most certainly lead to military intervention&period; &nbsp&semi;Before we run in panicked helter skelter in anticipation of atomic bombs raining down from the skies&comma; we have to understand that there are quite a number of military options&comma; including cyber and electronic weaponry&comma; that do not require atomic bombs&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While it is true that those in the greatest of harm&rsquo&semi;s way are the citizens of Seoul&comma; South Korea&comma; Tokyo&comma; Japan and our own Guam&comma; even the most limited attack on any of that geography will assure Pyongyang&rsquo&semi;s utter destruction &ndash&semi; or as President Obama promised&comma; they would be &ldquo&semi;wiped off the face of the earth&period; &lpar;Very provocative language that today&rsquo&semi;s anti-Trump media never found troublesome&period;&rpar;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As horrible as that is to even contemplate&comma; the most likely outcome would be a unifying invasion by South Korea&period; &nbsp&semi;There would be both a massive migration into China and&comma; ironically&comma; an embracing of the new leadership by many of the suffering North Korean masses&period; &nbsp&semi;This is the prospect that most terrifies China and will most likely lead to the end of the Middle Kingdom&rsquo&semi;s tolerance of the rogue Kim dynasty&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Unfortunately&comma; it is a far more dangerous option today because of the failed policies of the past &ndash&semi; policies to which Trump critics are too eager to continue&period; &nbsp&semi;It is literally true that the situation becomes even more dangerous with each passing day&period; &nbsp&semi;The era of accepting that which we claim to be unacceptable is over&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Larry Horist is a conservative activist with an extensive background in public policy and political issues&period; Clients of his consulting firm have included such conservative icons as Steve Forbes and Milton Friedman&comma; and he has served as a consultant to the White House under Presidents Nixon and Reagan&period; He has testified as an expert witness before numerous legislative bodies&comma; including the U&period; S&period; Congress and lectured at Harvard University&comma; Northwestern University&comma; Florida Atlantic University&comma; Knox College and Hope College&period; An award winning debater&comma; his insightful and sometimes controversial commentaries appear frequently on the editorial pages of newspapers across the nation&period; He can be reached at lph&commat;thomasandjoyce&period;com&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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