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South Korea claims that North Korea has miniaturized a nuclear warhead to fit on the tip of a missile. They are probably right.
I have been very careful in my analysis not to exaggerate the threat posed by the North Korean nuclear program. There is no hard proof of a functioning nuclear warhead. But the circumstantial evidence is now overwhelming. North Korea likely has a nuclear weapon that could hit South Korea or Japan. Here is what North Korea has, in order of certainty.
None of these factors is proof of North Korea's capabilities, but taken together they create strong evidence that the nuclear threat from Pyongyang is now very serious. "Our studied skepticism of North Korea's capabilities is not in our long-term interest," says Lewis, "We should be in the business of seeking moratoria in North Korea on nuclear and missile tests, not daring Pyongyang to do more." The prudent assumption is that South Korea's analysis is correct and we should plan accordingly. But there is no need for panic. North Korea still lacks key components of fully operational nuclear-armed missiles that can hit the United States.
But the North Koreans are working on all of this. And if we have learned anything about this regime, it is that they are persistent. Sooner or later they will achieve their goal. We need a new approach. Ignoring North Korea has not worked. Sanctioning North Korea has not worked. Trying to get China to solve the problem for us has not worked. When we don't talk to them, they advance; when we do talk to them, they pause. As odious as it may seem, it is time to re-engage with the regime. "While there are currently no good or viable options to rolling back the North's nuclear program," writes my colleague Philip Yun, "a multilateral diplomatic approach that addressed some of its strategic interests has a chance of at least freezing activity." We must stop North Korea before they demonstrate, beyond doubt, that they have a fully functioning nuclear-armed missile. -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |