{"id":28785,"date":"2016-09-21T11:00:51","date_gmt":"2016-09-21T01:00:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=28785"},"modified":"2016-09-21T09:28:28","modified_gmt":"2016-09-20T23:28:28","slug":"coming-confrontation-north-korea","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/coming-confrontation-north-korea\/","title":{"rendered":"The coming confrontation with North Korea"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
Imagine it is 2020. The director of the CIA requests an urgent meeting with the US president. The reason: North Korea has succeeded in making a nuclear bomb small enough to fit inside the tip of an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of reaching the continental United States. The news soon leaks to the public. High-level meetings to devise a response are held not just in Washington, but in Seoul, Tokyo, Beijing, and Moscow as well.<\/p>\n
This scenario may seem unreal today, but it\u2019s more political science than science fiction. North Korea just carried out its fifth (and apparently successful) test of a nuclear explosive device, doing so just days after testing several ballistic missiles. Absent a major intervention, it\u2019s only a matter of time before North Korea increases its nuclear arsenal (now estimated at 8-12 devices) and figures out how to miniaturise its weapons for delivery by missiles of increasing range and accuracy.<\/p>\n
It\u2019s difficult to overstate the risks were North Korea, the world\u2019s most militarised and closed society, to cross this threshold. A North Korea with the ability to threaten the US homeland might conclude it had little to fear from the US military, a judgement that could lead it to launch a conventional, non-nuclear attack on South Korea. Even if such a war ended in North Korea\u2019s defeat, it would be extraordinarily costly by any measure.<\/p>\n
That said, North Korea wouldn\u2019t have to start a war for its nuclear and missile advances to have real impact. If South Korea<\/a> or Japan ever concluded that North Korea was in a position to deter American involvement in a war on the Peninsula, they would lose confidence in US security assurances, raising the possibility that they would develop nuclear weapons of their own. Such decisions would alarm China and set the stage for a regional crisis or even conflict in a part of the world with the greatest concentration of people, wealth, and military might.<\/p>\n