In an underground tunnel at Hwaderi, Kim Jong Il has tested
not only a possible nuclear weapon, but also the mettle of
the international community. Will it mount effective action
to confront and reverse Pyongyang’s threat, or will it
splinter and sputter with empty rhetoric?
If confirmed, Pyongyang’s nuclear arms allow it to threaten
– and deliver – vast devastation against any foe. The
delivery system could be as crude as a truck or a tramp
steamer. The North may escalate with further nuclear or
missile tests to intimidate – or extract concessions from –
its neighbors. The resulting political and economic
instability – possibly including a new nuclear arms race –
could spread through Asia and beyond. The Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, already battered by Iran’s nuclear
adventures, will further erode as the cornerstone of global
efforts to stop the bomb’s threat.
Perhaps most chillingly, North Korea now boasts a tested
nuclear weapon design that it could transfer to states or
terrorists hostile to the United States and its allies,
especially if the regime becomes desperate or unstable.
What to do now? The North Korean test should not alter US
objectives: a Korean peninsula that is free of nuclear
weapons, stable and secure. For too long, the world has
allowed Kim Jong Il to develop nuclear weapons without
taking any action that could undermine his confident grip on
political power. The test at Hwaderi may now galvanize the
international community to force North Korea to choose
between its nuclear ambitions and its political stability.
The universal condemnation Pyongyang’s defiance has inspired
– including from Presidents Hu Jintao and Putin – may now
support the imposition of Chapter 7 sanctions by the UN
Security Council, which can be implemented by force if
necessary. The sanctions may start modestly and gradually
increase.
In order to succeed, the sanctions need full support over a
sustained period, especially from the two countries with
greatest leverage over North Korea: China and South Korea.
The Hwaderi test may persuade both governments that failure
to respond firmly to the nuclear challenge will stoke rather
than abate the instability that North Korea’s neighbors
understandably wish to avoid. Were Beijing to curtail oil
shipments or Seoul to suspend economic support for
Pyongyang, the effects would be felt directly by the
military and elite groups in North Korea that need to be
convinced to change course.
But China and South Korea will not join a strategy that
involves only isolation and pressure on the North. In
exchange for imposing meaningful sanctions, Beijing and
Seoul will expect an up-front commitment that Washington
will respond positively if North Korea verifiably abandons
its nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs. The
United States should therefore agree now to participate
fully in implementing the statement of principles agreed by
the six parties in September 2005, should North Korea uphold
its end of the bargain. Under that statement, in exchange
for North Korean disarmament, the other parties – including
the United States – would provide security assurances,
economic and other assistance (possibly including nuclear
power stations) and a path toward normalization of relations
between Pyongyang, Tokyo, and Washington.
This approach requires a clear sense of priorities. While
the United States must not abandon its support for human
rights and opposition to missile proliferation, only the
North Korean nuclear program threatens millions of American
lives. We must therefore provide an “escape hatch” from
sanctions if North Korea reduces the nuclear threat that
justifies sanctions in the first place. Pyongyang needs a
face-saving way to say “yes” to the offer, if sanctions so
weaken the regime as to loosen its attachment to nuclear
weapons.
To spell out this choice clearly and credibly enough to
arrest Pyongyang’s march toward greater nuclear weapon
capabilities will be extremely difficult. But the job will
only get harder the longer we wait, and the more nuclear
capability we allow North Korea to develop. And the
consequences of failure are so grave that we must bend every
effort to avoid it.
Daniel Poneman, a Principal in The Scowcroft Group,
served on the National Security Council staff under
Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton. Michael
Green, Associate Professor at Georgetown University and
Japan Chair and Senior Adviser at the Center for Strategic
and International Studies, served on the National Security
Council staff under President George W. Bush.