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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Do These Guys Want War With North Korea? John Bolton and Lindsey Graham are saber-rattling as though armed conflict is the only way. No one yet knows if theres going to be a summit with North Korea. But the alternative to a Trump-Kim tête-à-tête should be a different form of diplomacy, not war, as the administration and its cheerleaders have suggested. When Lord Acton coined the phrase power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, he might have had America in mind. Never mind U.S. leaders professed good intentions: possession of extraordinary military power continues to lead otherwise sensible people to pursue dangerous, even monstrous policies. So it is with North Korea. President Donald Trump beat the war drums loudly last year. He sounded a lot like Kim Jong-un when he threatened to visit fire and fury upon the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea. Senator Lindsey Graham led the Greek chorus in support of the administration, amplifying the presidents threats. Never mind the consequences of a Second Korean War. Japan, South Korea, China would all be in the crosshairs of a war if we started one with North Korea, Graham admitted. But that would just be unfortunate collateral damage. If theres going to be a war to stop [Kim], it will be over there. If thousands die, theyre going to die over there. Theyre not going to die here, he explained. Trumps Reckless Rhetoric on North Korea and Libya North Korea and Iran Dont Seem Particularly Intimidated The prospect of a summit between Trump and Kim halted the talk of war. But on May 20, Graham began spewing threats anew. On Fox News he declared that If [the North Koreans] dont show up that means diplomacy has failed. Which in turn puts us back on the path to conflict. It would be time to take American families and dependents out of South Korea. Or if the North Koreans do show up and try to play Trump, and that means military conflict is the only thing left. But, he promised, they will lose it, not us. Thus, President Trump is going to end this problem with North Korea one way or the other, and he should. Shortly thereafter North Korean officials objected to John Boltons talk of the Libya model, which resulted in the ouster of Moammar Gaddafi after he agreed to close his missile and nuclear programs. (Bolton was involved in negotiating the surrender of Gaddafis weapons. In 2011, he publicly called for the U.S. military to take out the Libyan leader.) The implications for Kim were obvioustoo obvious for Bolton not to be aware of, which is why some observers suspect he meant to sink the summit. Yet rather than dismiss Boltons implied menace, the president responded with a threat: If you look at that model with Gaddafi that was a total decimation, we went in there to beat him
that model will take place if we dont make a deal [with Kim] most likely. Vice President Mike Pence followed suit, warning that the North could end up like the Libya model ended if Kim Jong-un doesnt make a deal. Asked if that was a threat, Pence responded: I think its more of a fact. As if this will convince Kim to surrender his deterrent. A day after Trump pulled out of the summit, Graham was again making his rounds, this time on the Today show. If military action is required, theyre going to lose, it will be devastating to the region, and there will be war in Chinas backyard, he proclaimed. American politicians treat as manifest destiny Washingtons capacity to attack any nation on earth. A handful of countries have capable conventional militaries, but only the few nuclear powers have certain deterrents. Otherwise America alone decides when other nations get bombed, invaded, and occupied. Hence the Norths desire for nukes. Consider Libyas experience. In 2003, Libyas Gaddafi surrendered his WMDs in exchange for geopolitical love from America and Europe. For a time he was well-receivedSenators Graham, John McCain, and Joe Lieberman even supped with the seemingly rehabilitated colonel in Tripoli, discussing possible American assistance in the latters battle against al-Qaeda. But when rebellion broke out amid the Arab Spring, most of Gaddafis sunshine friends suddenly backed regime change, after which he suffered a gruesome end. It may be that the presidents talk of war is a grand bluff. But even if thats the case, Trump risks being exposed as a paper tiger. And if its not, his reckless course could result in hundreds of thousands or even millions of casualties, depending on the Norths military capabilities. That would be a heckuva way of protecting the American people. The argument for war is wrong-headed in several ways. First, there is no dangerous new North Korean threat to the U.S. For 65 years, deterrence has prevented the North from attacking South Korea again. Pyongyang now wants a deterrent so it doesnt end up as Libya, just another example of national roadkill run over by the American war machine. There is no evidence that Kim is irrational. To the contrary, he, like his father and grandfather, appears to prefer his virgins in this world. He is not interested in exiting life in a massive nuclear funeral pyre. He knows that the U.S. is capable of destroying his nation multiple times over. He wants to prevent such an event, not trigger it. Deterrence might feel unsatisfactory to many Americans, but it worked against Joseph Stalins Soviet Union and Mao Zedongs Peoples Republic of China. Both were far larger, more powerful, and much scarier than the DPRK. Mao made even nuttier comments than North Koreas rulers, suggesting that his nation could afford to lose millions of people and still prevail. Yet neither country tested Americas ability to destroy them. Second, it would be a massive gamble with other peoples lives to assume that Kim would acquiesce to an American attempt to destroy his most important weapons or decapitate his regime. It would be ruinous for his carefully cultivated image as defender of his people. And he could only assume that it would presage an attempt at regime change. To wait would invite the destruction of his military, meaning it would likely lead to full-scale war. A massive U.S. first strike would be no less risky, since Kim could devastate Seoul and Tokyo with just a portion of his weaponsand he would have no reason to hold back. While Grahamand the president, if Graham is to be believedmight be unafraid of a conflict over there, a quarter of a million Americans live in or visit the Republic of Korea every day. To call Americans home would trigger widespread panic in the ROK and alert Pyongyang that war was imminent, inviting Kim to preempt Americas expected attack. U.S. military personnel would die in combat, as well as from possible missile attacks on Guam and Okinawa, home to additional American forces. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, no liberal defeatist, warned that such a war would be probably the worst kind of fighting in most peoples lifetimes. General Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, predicted a loss of life unlike any we have experienced in our lifetimes. The Clinton administration predicted as many as one million casualties when it considered attacking the Norths nuclear facilities in 1994. And that was more than two decades ago. Assuming that a fair proportion of North Korean latest weapons survived initial U.S. attacks, the DPRK could unleash extensive artillery on the South Korean capital of Seoul as well as missiles topped with biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons against multiple targets, perhaps even including Tokyo. The best case would be horrid. The worst case casualty estimate is in the millions. After working to keep the peace for nearly seven decades, it would be madness to risk triggering such a catastrophe. Third, agreements short of denuclearization may be necessary to have any chance of persuading Pyongyang to disarm, and even limited steps would increase U.S. security. A permanent freeze on nuclear and missile tests would prevent the Kim regime from perfecting its weapons, including building an ICBM that could accurately target U.S. targets. A halt on nuclear weapons production backed by intrusive inspections could cap the Norths arsenal. Reductions in conventional arms could moderate daily military tensions. A peace treaty and diplomatic relations would open communication channels, which are most necessary when the threats are greatest. Indeed, if the administration is serious about convincing the DPRK to abandon weapons so dearly bought, President Trump should offer to withdraw American troops from the ROK in return for full denuclearization. The president said we are going to say that [Kim] will have very adequate protection, but verbal assurances offered no protection for Gaddafi. Kim undoubtedly will require something more. If Washington really wants to eliminate nuclear weapons and build a more peaceful future, it needs to make serious concessions as well. War with Iraq was not the cakewalk that had been predicted, but it would be a cakewalk compared to conflict on the Korean peninsula, no matter what Graham and the president may think. The possibility of military confrontation makes it more important that the summit succeed. But even failure would not warrant unleashing the dogs of war, which would result in the worst horrors imaginable. Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and a former special assistant to President Ronald Reagan. He is author of Tripwire: Korea and U.S. Foreign Policy in a Changed World and co-author of The Korean Conundrum: Americas Troubled Relations with North and South Korea. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Oh, YES they do. They are sick, SICK people -- speshly Flimsey.
There are no replies to Comment # 1. End Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
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