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Wednesday, June 03, 2009
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Cooling North Korea's Reactors
by Ed Feulner
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Will Congress pass Obamacare by the end of the year?

Politics, they used to say, “stops at the water’s edge.” Not anymore. That changed in 2003 -- just two years after the Sept. 11 attacks -- when former Vice President Al Gore hammered the Bush administration. He claimed its response to international terrorism had “recklessly put our country in grave and unnecessary danger” and “exploited public fears for partisan political gain and postured themselves as bold defenders of our country while actually weakening -- not strengthening -- America.”

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Yet history has vindicated the Bush approach. Our country hasn’t been attacked since 2001, and the Obama administration (rhetoric aside) has continued using virtually all the Bush anti-terror policies.

The more important point, often ignored by Gore and others on the left, is that our enemies are determined to act. Al Qaeda had been preparing its 2001 attack for years. They were determined to carry it out no matter who occupied the White House.

That’s a lesson President Obama has also learned -- the hard way. During his presidential campaign, he called for greater “engagement” with our enemies. He supported a decision, late in the Bush administration, to remove North Korea from the list of terrorist-supporting nations.

The rogue nation has reacted to this olive branch by … fast-tracking its nuclear and missile research.

“Since the beginning of 2009 North Korea has initiated a rapid-fire series of provocations against the U.S., South Korea and Japan without allowing time for diplomatic outreach,” notes Heritage Foundation Asia expert Bruce Klingner. What Pyongyang wants are strategic technological capabilities -- missiles and nukes. The country is interested in acquiring power, not getting attention or leverage.

Simply put, North Korea is determined to go nuclear, and no change in American domestic politics or direct political engagement will stop it from trying. But there are reasonable steps the U.S. should take.

First, America and our allies need to move forward with missile defense. North Korea’s missiles, whether nuclear or conventional, pose a special danger to countries that cannot defend themselves. To prevent Pyongyang from being able to hold our friends in Asia hostage, South Korea and Japan should work with the U.S. military to deploy a multi-layered missile shield. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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One more thing
"China considers N. Korea to be a client state."

100% false. It doesn't want to see the DPRK with nuclear weapons anymore than anyone else does. But China has very little influence on the DPRK which was proven in 2006 when the PRC basically begged the DPRK not to test and the DPRK promised the PRC it wouldn't and then it did so anyway. But the PRC also doesn't want to see thousands of refugees sitting in Changchun or Shenyang either or have US troops sititng across the Yalu Jiang or have the DPRK wipe Seoul off the map. If you think China has the control over the DPRK that the Soviets had on Eastern Europe you are sadly mistaken.

No one controls the DPRK and that includes China.

DPRK
"Embargos start now. Test again and we start bombing."

Being as isolated as it is embargos will have no impact unless China plays their card and as I said they won't for very good reasons. An attack by the US will not be supported by the PRC, ROK or Japan and such an attack would cause the DPRK to go through with its "Rain of Iron" leveling much of Seoul, killing thousands and destroying the economies of much of NE Asia and perhaps even sending a nuclear-armed missile into Okinawa or into Seoul.

Easy to talk tough when you don't know anything or the consequencies of your proposals.

China has very little control over the DPRK and the nuclear option for China--cutting fuel and food and rail links--would at best cause the DPRK to collaspe sending hundreds of thousands of refugees into Jilin and Liaoning and at worse a suicide attack on Japan or the ROK or even China.

India and Australia are quite nicely armed and Australia and China have very close ties (especially with the current pro-Chinese, Mandarian speaking PM, Kevin Rudd the PRC has no concerns with a buildup by the Australian Army.

Japan could build up its own military quite nicely and no need for help from the US and the SDF is already one of the best armed militaries in Asia. Japan with just a little effort could build a military that would compare with the US including a blue water navy and nuclear weapons and the systems to deliever them, but there would be no political support in Japan for re-arming to a level that would upset China--that being offensive weapons.

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