How to Deal With a Nuclear North Korea
*Editor’s Note: MacArthur Foundation President Robert Gallucci gave keynote speech at the ASAN Nuclear Forum in Seoul, South Korea on Tuesday, February 19, 2013. The ‘Asan Nuclear Forum 2013,’ hosted by the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, a private South Korean think tank, began on Tuesday for a two-day run to discuss a wide range of nuclear issues including North Korea’s recent third nuclear test, peaceful uses of nuclear energy and nuclear security. “The policy we have pursued over the last 20 years — engagement, containment, whatever — has failed to reduce the threat posed by North Korea to the security of the region,” Robert Gallucci said in a keynote speech during a security forum. Following is Gallucci’s own writing for his keynote at the conference.
I want to thank – Dr. Hahm Chaibong and ASAN for putting together this conference and giving me the opportunity to speak this morning. It is inevitable, with this audience, in this city, at this time, that I would address Northeast Asian Security; particularly the impact on the region of North Korea’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.
Let me begin by observing that we are very close to the 20th anniversary of the beginning of talks to address the first North Korean nuclear crisis in 1993. That crisis, you will recall, arose when the IAEA found the DPRK in violation of its safeguards commitments.
The Security Council then took action and North Korea announced its intension to withdraw from the NPT. The rest, as they say, is history. But now, twenty years later, it is appropriate to begin by asking what has changed over the years, what’s new, and what difference does it make?
I note first that many periods of crisis with North Korea have occurred over the last two decades. The United States has changed Presidents three times since then, and North Korea has changed leaders twice.
So, while there is a déjà vu about today’s situation, there are obviously important differences as well.
One difference is that we have indeed “been here before”, we now have experience with each other and, like experienced judo players, we know each other’s moves and favorite throws.
There are the recurring threats of death and destruction from the North, followed by nuclear explosives and ballistic missile tests, and sometimes by dangerous and provocative military and naval actions.
For our part, we have predictably reacted by intensifying the sanctions regime against the North, increasing its isolation from the rest of the world and probably added to the hardships facing the North Korean people.
In between crises we have had periods of political engagement. The North has more than once committed to eventually giving up its nuclear weapons program. Political and economic contacts between South and North have increased, and the United States has engaged in diplomatic activity, at different times, involving different numbers of parties, from the bilateral at two, to a full house at six.
But before we conclude that “le plus sa change, le plus la meme chose,” let us remember that 20 years ago North Korea had accumulated only a small amount of plutonium, had no uranium enrichment program, and had neither tested nor built any nuclear weapons. And its most sophisticated ballistic missile was the medium range No Dong.
Now, a fair estimate would be that North Korea has accumulated 20 to 40 kgs of plutonium, enough for up to 8 nuclear weapons, conducted three nuclear explosive tests, is increasing its fissile material stocks daily with a modern gas centrifuge enrichment program, and is headed for a robust nuclear weapons program mated to a ballistic missile capability of intermediate and eventually intercontinental range.
But what does all that mean?
First, I think however one characterizes the policy we have pursued over the last 20 years – engagement, containment, whatever – it has failed to reduce the threat posed by North Korea to the security of the region.
What is that threat?
Starkly put, it is that some incident or provocation from the North will result in a significant military or naval engagement on or near the Korean peninsula and, exacerbated by the presence of nuclear weapons in the North, it will lead to a larger conflict and the tragic loss of life on all sides.
The threat is also, of course, that nuclear weapons could be used in such a conflict.
Short of war, the threat is that the growing nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs in the North will lead the governments of other countries in the region to reconsider their commitment to non-nuclear status and the non-proliferation regime will unravel.
The threat is also that, at any moment, North Korea will transfer some sensitive bit of nuclear weapons material or technology to a terrorist group or to a country known to sponsor terrorists. I note that this has already happened, referring here to the plutonium separation plant that North Korea built in Syria and which Israel destroyed by bombing before its completion six years ago.
This particular threat – nuclear terrorism – is the thing we worry about most in the United States. Right now, one analyst, Graham Allison of Harvard, argues that the North Korean nuclear test is sort of an announcement that “the store is open for business,” that the North will sell HEU, nuclear weapons designs or even nuclear weapons to all comers. Not a happy thought if you live in one of America’s cities.
I would ask you all to understand that for Americans this threat is far greater and unlike the threat that may someday be posed by North Korean nuclear weapons delivered by ballistic missiles. That threat may be met first by deterrence, the promise of retaliation against a strike, or even by mounting a defense by denial, a ballistic missile defense which would shoot down an incoming missile.
But the terrorist threat, an improvised nuclear device, delivered anonymously and unconventionally by boat or truck across our long and unprotected borders – is one against which we have no certain deterrent or defensive response. This is why the threat of North Korean transfer is so serious from the American perspective.
The second thing that strikes me as true now is that the dominant, but mostly unspoken question of twenty years ago about North Korea, still plagues us today:
Does the North pursue a nuclear weapons program because it fears an attack from the South, an invasion aimed at regime change by the United States, in other words, because it wants a deterrent for defensive purposes?
Or, is the North actually unalterably committed to reunifying the peninsula by force, and intent on breaking the South’s alliance with the United States by holding American cities hostage to a ballistic missile strike? Or, in other words, is the North’s nuclear weapons program aimed at deterring the United States for offensive purposes?
Simply put, if the first characterization is correct, there is hope for diplomacy, hope that, over time, the right formula might be found for reducing tensions, de-using the nuclear issue and building trust among all parties.
But if the second proposition is more nearly correct, evolutionary change should not be expected, and perhaps the best that can be achieved is the constant avoidance of armed conflict, but with no genuine reduction in tensions.
Under the circumstances, I conclude now, as I did twenty years ago, that exploring the North Korean position, carefully testing the North to discern its intensions, engaging diplomatically to see if tensions can genuinely be reduced and a political settlement found is the best way to proceed. All, of course, while maintaining military readiness.
The third thing that seems clear to me then, if this is the route we decide to take, is that an exclusive focus in our diplomacy on the one thing that troubles us most, the North’s nuclear weapons program, is not a productive way to proceed. This is the opposite of what I thought twenty years ago. Then, I thought we needed to limit our goal to stopping the North Korean nuclear weapons program. Now I am convinced that our engagement must be broad with the aim to address a range of political, economic, and security issues.
That said, we need to be clear that the end game must envision the North’s abandonment of its nuclear weapons program. We need not, indeed should not, lead with this objective, but there can be no ambiguity about this being a feature of any political process structured to address all parties’ concerns.
This approach resembles more closely the six-party diplomacy of 2007 than the bilateral approach that gave us the Agreed Framework in 1994. To some, this may suggest that for engagement to work, we should resurrect the six-party formulae. I am not so sure. I think at the core is the North Korean concern about survival of its political system. This suggests that Seoul, Washington and Beijing are the essential players, at least initially.
There are probably many reasons why the arrangements of 2007 came undone, but I suspect the failure to reach a clear understanding of how the nuclear issue would be resolved was critical to the failure. We should not repeat that mistake; there will be plenty of opportunities to make new ones.
Three more points need to be made in connection with any proposal to engage the North.
First, there is no basis for successfully dealing with the North absent a solid foundation for policy rooted in the US-ROK Alliance. The North will always look for ways to shake that foundation, but the national security of both our countries and the basis for a political settlement with the North that includes the elimination of nuclear weapons from the peninsula, assumes a strong alliance between Seoul and Washington. That has always been true and will remain so.
Second, China has a legitimate interest in how matters are resolved with North Korea, and can play an important role in shaping outcomes. Consulting with Beijing early in the development of a policy of political engagement will be critical to its success.
Other countries, Japan and Russia, for starters would have to be included as well, of course, before any settlement was concluded.
And, finally, I cannot imagine a protracted engagement with North Korea – and if engagement is to succeed, it will be protracted – which fails to attract sufficient domestic political support in the United States and South Korea. In short, while our diplomacy may begin quietly, it must eventually be open, based on realistic assessments of our national security interests, and reflect neither naiveté nor wishful thinking. We are, after all, democracies.
Among the implications of this proposition is that restraint must be part of a negotiating process. Provocations from the North of the kind we have seen in the past must be understood as incompatible with negotiations, undercutting the domestic support essential to sustain diplomatic engagement.
When I was involved in negotiations with North Korea twenty years ago and visited Seoul for consultations with the government of President Kim Yung Sam, I was often asked by the press if I was pessimistic or optimistic about our chances for success. I never seemed to come up with a satisfactory answer. But if you asked me today, I would say neither word captures the attitude we need to strike. We should all be realists.
Robert L. GallucciJohn D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation/PresidentDr. Gallucci is the president of the John D.and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Previously, he served as dean of Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, for 13 years.He completed 21 years of government service, serving since August 1994 with the U.S. Department of State as Ambassador at Large. In March 1998, the Department of State announced his appointment as special envoy to deal with the threat posed by the proliferation of ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction. He held this position, concurrent with his appointment as Dean, until January 2001.
Dr. Gallucci began his foreign affairs career at the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency in 1974. In 1978, he became a division chief in the Department of State’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research. From 1979 to 1981, he was a member of the Secretary’s Policy Planning Staff. He then served as an office director in both the Bureau of Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs (1982-83) and in the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs (1983-84). In 1984, he left Washington to serve as the deputy director general of the Multinational Force and Observers, the Sinai peacekeeping force headquartered in Rome, Italy. Returning in 1988, he joined the faculty of the National War College where he taught until 1991. In April of that year he moved to United Nations Headquarters in New York to take up an appointment as the deputy executive chairman of the UN Special Commission (UNSCOM) overseeing the disarmament of Iraq. He returned to Washington in February 1992 to be the senior coordinator responsible for nonproliferation and nuclear safety initiatives in the former Soviet Union in the Office of the Deputy Secretary. In July 1992, Dr. Gallucci was confirmed as the assistant secretary of state for Political-Military Affairs. Before joining the State Department, he taught at Swarthmore College, Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies and Georgetown University. He has received fellowships from the Council on Foreign Relations, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Harvard University, and the Brookings Institution. He received a bachelor’s degree from the State University of New York at Stony Brook, followed by a master’s and doctorate in Politics from Brandeis University. |