North Korea's nuclear policy is not irrational at all

We are heading towards another pre-emptive war and Japanese nuclear
weapons unless pressure for disarmament revives

Dan Plesch
Tuesday October 10, 2006
The Guardian

North Korea's nuclear test is only the latest failure of the west's
proliferation policy. And it demonstrates the need to return to the
proven methods of multilateral disarmament. Far from being crazy, the
North Korean policy is quite rational. Faced with a US government that
believes the communist regime should be removed from the map, the
North Koreans pressed ahead with building a deterrent. George Bush
stopped the oil supplies to North Korea that had been part of a
framework to end its nuclear programme previously agreed with Bill
Clinton. Bush had already threatened pre-emptive war - Iraq-style -
against a regime he dubbed as belonging to the axis of evil.

The background to North Korea's test is that, since the end of the
cold war, the nuclear states have tried to impose a double standard,
hanging on to nuclear weapons for themselves and their friends while
denying them to others. Like alcoholics condemning teenage drinking,
the nuclear powers have made the spread of nuclear weapons the terror
of our age, distracting attention from their own behaviour. Western
leaders refuse to accept that our own actions encourage others to
follow suit.

North Korea's action has now increased the number of nuclear weapon
states to nine. Since 1998 India, Pakistan and now North Korea have
joined America, China, France, Russia, Israel and the UK.

The domino effect is all too obvious. Britain wants nuclear weapons so
long as the French do. India said it would build one if there were no
multilateral disarmament talks. Pakistan followed rapidly. In Iran and
the Arab world Israel's bomb had always been an incentive to join in.
But for my Iranian friends, waking up to a Pakistani bomb can be
compared to living in a non-nuclear Britain and waking up to find
Belgium had tested a nuclear weapon.

East Asia is unlikely to be different. In 2002 Japan's then chief
cabinet secretary, Yasuo Fukuda, told reporters that "depending on the
world situation, circumstances and public opinion could require Japan
to possess nuclear weapons". The deputy cabinet secretary at the time,
Shinzo Abe - now Japan's prime minister - said afterwards that it
would be acceptable for Japan to develop small, strategic nuclear
weapons. [It seems that no-one in Washington is upset. They seem to
have put up with Japan accumulating enough nuclear fuel and know-how
that it could have nukes in a few monts.]

It was not supposed to be like this. At the end of the cold war,
disarmament treaties were being signed, and in 1996 the big powers
finally agreed to stop testing nuclear weapons for the first time
since 1945. The public, the pressure groups and the media all breathed
a great sigh of relief and forgot about the bomb. Everyone thought
that with the Soviet Union gone, multilateral disarmament would
accelerate.

But with public attention elsewhere, the Dr Strangeloves in
Washington, Moscow and Paris stopped the disarmament process and
invented new ideas requiring new nuclear weapons. A decade ago,
Clinton's Pentagon placed "non-state actors" (ie terrorists) on the
list of likely targets for US nuclear weapons. Now all the established
nuclear states are building new nuclear weapons.

The Bush administration made things worse. First, it rejected the
policy of controlling armaments through treaties, which had been
followed by previous presidents since 1918. Second, it proposed to use
military - even nuclear - force in a pre-emptive attack to prevent
proliferation. This policy was used as a pretext for attacking Iraq
and may now be used on either Iran or North Korea. More pre-emptive
war will produce suffering and chaos, while nothing is done about
India, Israel and Pakistan. So we are left with a policy of vigilante
bravado for which we have sacrificed the proven methods of weapons
control.

Fortunately, there is a realistic option. Max Kampelman, Ronald
Reagan's nuclear negotiator, has proposed that Washington's top
priority should be the elimination of all weapons of mass destruction
on earth, including those possessed by the US. At the ongoing
disarmament meetings at the UN, the vast majority of nations argue for
a phased process to achieve this goal. They can point to the success
of the UN inspectors in Iraq as proof that international inspection
can work, even in the toughest cases. The Intermediate Nuclear Forces
Treaty that removed the missiles from Greenham is an example of an
agreement no one thought possible that worked completely. This, and
other legacies from the cold war, can and should be applied globally.

A group of Britain's closest allies, including South Africa and
Ireland, are trying to broker a deal on global disarmament.
Tragically, Britain won't be helping. Political parties and the media
are deaf to these initiatives. The three main parties all follow more
or less the US approach. They know that no US government will lease
the UK a successor to Trident if London steps out of line on nuclear
weapons policy. [horrors!] The media almost never report on UN
disarmament debates. Disarmament has become the word that dare not be
said in polite society.

Do we have to wait for another pre-emptive war or until the Japanese
go nuclear before the British political class comes to realise that
there can be a soft landing from these nuclear crises?

ยท Dan Plesch, a fellow at the School of Oriental and African Studies
and Keele University, is the author of The Beauty Queen's Guide to
World Peace [!!]

--
Jim Devine / "You can't say that civilization don't advance, however,
for in every war they kill you in a new way." -- Will Rogers

Reply via email to