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US and allies have limited options to 'deter' N Korea

This article is 2 years old

The prospect of a new North Korean nuclear test underscores the limited options for Washington and its allies, who have embraced “deterring” Pyongyang through major military drills that some current and former officials say may exacerbate tensions.

South Korea said in October that a new nuclear test would face an “unparalleled” response from the allies - but it’s unclear what measures would not retread old ground.

Years of sanctions, diplomatic pressure, and shows of military force have not prevented North Korea from developing and expanding an arsenal of nuclear weapons and long-range ballistic missiles that could reach the United States.

Now that the North’s nuclear weapons are mature and deployed, the United States and its allies are looking to simply dissuade the North from military action.

South Korean Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup said last week the focus of efforts to deal with North Korea should be shifted from curbing nuclear weapons development to deterring their use.

“We plan to expand the scope of our involvement in intelligence sharing, planning, exercises, and drills,” he told a panel of lawmakers.

People watch a TV broadcasting a news report on North Korea’s launch of three missiles which appeared to have involved an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), in Seoul, South Korea, May 25, 2022.

A ministry official told Reuters that Lee was not throwing his support behind the idea of acknowledging North Korea as a nuclear state, but rather was emphasising the immediate need to prevent North Korea from using the weapons.

“Lee is saying out loud what policy makers in Seoul and Washington are thinking — namely that while denuclearisation is the ultimate goal, deterring North Korea is the here-and-now priority,” said Daniel Russel, a former senior US diplomat.

Focus on deterrence

The United States and South Korea are in “lockstep” in their efforts to seek the “complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula,” a spokesperson for the US National Security Council said when asked about Lee’s comments.

“We continue to prioritise diplomacy, but simultaneously continue to jointly strengthen deterrence and work to limit the advancement of (North Korea’s) unlawful weapons programmes,” the spokesperson said.

Some analysts saw Lee’s comments as the latest sign that Washington and Seoul are facing the reality that North Korea is a nuclear state.

But they noted the focus so far has remained on deterrence rather than risk reduction, such as negotiating to cap the number of North Korean weapons and prevent them from proliferating.

US State Department spokesperson Vedant Patel declined to specify what measures Washington would take if North Korea tested a nuclear bomb for the first time since 2017, but cited sanctions and military drills as examples of tools it can use to “hold North Korea accountable”.

A missile launch is seen at an undisclosed location in North Korea, in this undated photo released on Oct 10, 2022 by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

Observers expect China and Russia would condemn a new nuclear test, but are unlikely to back new sanctions, which they say have failed and only harm ordinary North Koreans.

The newly released US Nuclear Posture Review says Kim Jong Un’s regime would be annihilated if it ever attacked with nuclear weapons.

‘Turn the volume down’

In early October, the commander of the US Navy’s 7th Fleet said the rare deployment of an aircraft carrier to South Korea “probably precipitated” part of a “tantrum” from Kim Jong Un.

Another major drill began yesterday with hundreds of South Korean and US warplanes, including a rare deployment of American F-35B fighters.

The drills, a centrepiece of the allied response, have been met with new rounds of missile tests or military exercises by North Korea.

A TV broadcasting a news report on North Korea firing a ballistic missile towards the sea off its east coast, in Seoul, South Korea, Sept 25, 2022.

Patel has called suggestions that the drills are exacerbating tensions “baloney”. Duyeon Kim, with the US-based Center for a New American Security, noted that rising tensions are not always correlated with drills.

“Normalising combined drills strengthens readiness and publicising them again is intended to deter North Korea and reassure the South Korean people,” Kim said.

One senior former US defence official told Reuters that although the stepped-up drills ensure readiness, the publicity and chest-beating surrounding them can be counterproductive.

“They’re doing it because they want to send a message to North Korea, hey, we mean business,” he said. “But it’s not helping.”

When political leaders said drills had been scaled back in previous years to enable diplomacy, that often meant that the exercises were just not being publicised, the former official said, adding that current rhetoric seems to have gone too far in the other direction.

“A way to reduce tension is to sort of turn the volume down a little bit, and see if that helps.”

- Reuters