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HORIST: Regime change in North Korea now a viable option

<p>For decades&comma; a centerpiece of U&period;S&period; foreign policy has been that we will not accept a nuclear North Korea &ndash&semi; no way&comma; no how&period; &nbsp&semi;We were told that by virtually every president since the 1952 Armistice putting the Korean War on hold&period; &nbsp&semi; Three generations of the Kim dynasty summarily ignored this direct demand of the international community&period; &nbsp&semi;They even ignored the big stick of military intervention that President Teddy Roosevelt metaphorically expressed as the alternative to talking softly&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Diplomacy is much like a chess game where an objective does not seem obvious in early moves&period; &nbsp&semi;The Trump administration has repeatedly stated that we are seeking de-nuclearization&comma; not regime change &nbsp&semi;&ndash&semi; and this could happen if Kim Jong Un suddenly decided to scrap his nuclear program&period; &nbsp&semi;That is not happening&comma; however&comma; and seems unlikely to happen&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There are a few more diplomatic moves to be made before regime change becomes the only option&period; &nbsp&semi;We might call them the &ldquo&semi;little sticks&period;&rdquo&semi; &nbsp&semi;There is tough talk&comma; and more resolutions by the pin striped pants crowd at the UN &ndash&semi; although that has seldom achieved much in any crisis&period; &nbsp&semi;We can still offer North Korea &ldquo&semi;economic assistance&rdquo&semi; in return for ending its bomb making hobby&period; President Clinton&comma; under the guidance of then former President Carter&comma; already brandished that little stick and we saw how well that worked&period; &nbsp&semi;There is also room for more severe sanctions&period; &nbsp&semi;They have not worked in the past&comma; and Kim Jong Un has indicated that no matter how severe&comma; he will not let sanctions stop him in the future&period; &nbsp&semi;One cannot help but wonder why there are still so damn many tough sanctions that have not been already imposed&comma; but that is another issue&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It should be noted that during all these years of little stick diplomacy&comma; the Kim regimes were not just developing atomic and hydrogen bombs to put atop their intercontinental missiles&period; &nbsp&semi;As our country was leading from behind&comma; North Korea was building a monstrous conventional weapons capability&period; &nbsp&semi;This has become as much a threat to the citizens of Seoul as the A-bomb&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is now the North Korean big stick that intimidates us and the world&comma; and Kim Jong Un does not even have the courtesy of speaking softly&period; &nbsp&semi;He is winning the diplomatic battle&period; &nbsp&semi;After decades of promising that the will be no nuclear North Korea&comma; the old guard internationalists&comma; channeling Neville Chamberlain&comma; suggest that there is no way to stop one of the world&rsquo&semi;s most dangerous regimes from being part of the nuclear family of nations&period; &nbsp&semi;We must now refocus our diplomacy to d&eacute&semi;tente&comma; they say&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They naively believe that a nuclear build up in North Korea would only produce a stand off &ndash&semi; the belief in mutually assured destruction that kept the U&period;S&period; and the old Soviet Union from lobbing atomic bombs at one another&period; &nbsp&semi;But Kim Jong Un is not as rational as Nikita Khrushchev &ndash&semi; as bad as he was&period; &nbsp&semi;Such appeasement would not stop Kim&rsquo&semi;s ever-expanding military programs&period; &nbsp&semi;He would quickly surpass such nuclear states as India&comma; Pakistan and Israel to rise to the rank of Russia&comma; China and the U&period;S&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We also need to understand that North Korea is already exporting military equipment to every terrorist group that can come up with the money &ndash&semi; or not&period; &nbsp&semi;It is more than likely that Kim would happily provide nuclear technology in the future&period; &nbsp&semi;Not only would that make North Korea a major sponsor of anti-American&comma; anti-European terrorism&comma; but the leading proliferator of nuclear weapons throughout the despotic world&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>With each new missile launch and earth shattering atomic test&comma; the big stick option becomes more dangerous&comma; with thanks to the incompetent execution of western foreign policy for too many years&period; &nbsp&semi;While the old guard continues to say that military intervention is not a viable option&comma; it may soon become the only option&period; &nbsp&semi;We have no choice but to brandish the big stick in a credible manner &ndash&semi; and that means the real possibility of using it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Trump has made it clear that he is sticking to the old policy of not allowing North Korea to stay nuclear&period; That is not a political policy&comma; but a necessary security policy&period; &nbsp&semi;Secretary of Defense Mattis made that perfectly clear in his statement as he exited the White House after a briefing session with the president&period; &nbsp&semi; He said we do not want to annihilate North Korea&comma; but in the same breath said we could&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Of course&comma; the weak-kneed adherents of the old policy see the only choice as between letting Kin Jong Un rule over one of the biggest and more unstable military powers in the world &&num;8212&semi; and hope he does not use it &&num;8212&semi; or engage in a nuclear holocaust that will kill millions of people in South Korea&comma; Japan&comma; Guam and possibly the American west coast&period; &nbsp&semi;However&comma; Secretary Mattis correctly noted that we have many military options short of going nuclear&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Maniacal as Kim Jong Un may be&comma; he surely understands that unleashing such carnage would most certainly result in the end of the Kim dynasty&period; &nbsp&semi;At the bottom line&comma; we can&comma; as even President Obama said&comma; &ldquo&semi;wipe North Korea off the face of the earth&period;&rdquo&semi; &nbsp&semi;North Korea cannot reciprocate on the U&period;S&period; &ndash&semi; at least not now&period; &nbsp&semi;And&comma; we should not diddle around until he has a battery of bombs and the missiles to strike every city in America&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The real factor to be weighed is what Kim Jong Un would do in the face of limited military action&period; &nbsp&semi;What if we shoot down one of his missiles flying over Japan or too close to Guam&quest; &nbsp&semi;Or just take one or two out as a warning&quest; &nbsp&semi;What about a cyber attack on the North Korean defense infrastructure&quest; &nbsp&semi;Just enough military intervention to let Kim Jong Un know we mean business &ndash&semi; and let China understand that&comma; too&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If Pyongyang responded to a limited or symbolic military action with ANY assault on anyone&comma; Kim would be signing his own death certificate&period; &nbsp&semi;Even a U&period;S&period; surgical attack on his atomic facilities would make Kim a paper tiger or a dead dictator&period; &nbsp&semi;Kim needs to avoid American military action at all costs&comma; and we should understand that&period; &nbsp&semi;He has an atomic ace in an otherwise bust hand&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>That is in no way meant to minimize the risk or devalue the tragedy that potentially falls upon humanity&comma; including &nbsp&semi;our allies in the region&period; &nbsp&semi;Japan is out of range for conventional weapons&comma; and the one thing North Korea does not have is a powerful air force&period; &nbsp&semi;Seoul&comma; South Korea is in a much more vulnerable situation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Our ace in the hole has been and continues to be China&period; &nbsp&semi;If regime change is the only means of stopping a nuclear North Korea&comma; China has every interest in making sure that such a change does not shift the balance of power by putting a military ally of the U&period;S&period; directly on its border&period; &nbsp&semi;China is also very fearful of a multi-million person migration from North Korea that would most surely occur in the event of a full military conflict on the Korean peninsula&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Kim poses another serious threat to China&period; &nbsp&semi;His build-up will necessitate the emplacement of massive defensive weaponry in Japan and South Korea&comma; which coincidentally diminishes Chinese military capability&period; &nbsp&semi;It would also likely mean Japan and South Korea developing their own nuclear capability&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Of course&comma; an attack on Japan&comma; Seoul or Guam would bring down the full might of the American military&period; &nbsp&semi;It would assure the destruction of the Kim regime&period; &nbsp&semi; Little noticed in Mattis&rsquo&semi; statement&comma; however&comma; was the claim that the U&period;S&period; could respond militarily to a &ldquo&semi;threat&comma;&rdquo&semi; not necessarily an actually attack&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Franklin Roosevelt once noted that if you see a snake threatening to bite&comma; one does not wait for it to do so&period; &nbsp&semi;You destroy the snake before it bites&period; &nbsp&semi;Are Kim&rsquo&semi;s words threatening enough&quest; Is a test missile landing near Guam enough&comma; or another flying over Japan&quest; &nbsp&semi;The Kim regime is a poisonous snake in the world community&period; &nbsp&semi;Can it be coaxed to retreat or must it be destroyed&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>A full military assault by the U&period;S&period; would likely produce a regime change more favorable to the U&period;S&period; &ndash&semi; even the possibility of unifying the Korean peninsula under Seoul&period; &nbsp&semi;Facing that prospect&comma; China and the U&period;S&period; could &hellip&semi; just could &hellip&semi; cut a deal to oust the Kim regime for one that is still allied to China but without the nukes&quest; &nbsp&semi;This would be a regime that the U&period;S&period; and the greater international community could live with&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There should be no illusions about Kim&rsquo&semi;s ambitions&period; &nbsp&semi;He represents an existential threat to America&comma; and that threat will increase exponentially as his military might increases&period; &nbsp&semi;He wants to take over South Korea&period; &nbsp&semi;We need to stop that before he can&comma; and regime change is quickly becoming that only option available&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While the aforementioned scenarios are unsettling&comma; my own limited experience at the White House and with military strategic planning convince me that every one of the aforementioned options is being analyzed and considered&period; &nbsp&semi;In this administration&comma; nothing is off the table &&num;8212&semi; nor can it be&period; &nbsp&semi;At this point&comma; the central question is&colon; What IS left on the table&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>POST SCRIPT&colon;<&sol;strong> The growing tension between the U&period;S&period; and North Korea has gotten the lunatic left thinking we live with a Dr&period; Strangelove administration&period; &nbsp&semi;Numerous of the media&rsquo&semi;s &ldquo&semi;panels of parroting pundits&rdquo&semi; have expressed concern that President Trump may just get pissed off and launch America&rsquo&semi;s nuclear arsenal&period; &nbsp&semi;Be calm&comma; he cannot&period; &nbsp&semi;The President does not have the singular power to launch our nuclear missiles&period; &nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is a complex procedure that requires several levels of authorization&period; &nbsp&semi; An order from the President can be aborted at various stages by various people and even computer software&period; &nbsp&semi;Just how that happens is a closely guarded secret&period; &nbsp&semi;Long ago&comma; legal and technical procedures were established to prevent a launch by a rogue President or general&period; &nbsp&semi;Those who proffer such scenarios are simply ignorant or partisan fear mongers&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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