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CALLING NORTH KOREA'S HAND - The Time for a Cold-War-Style Confrontation is Now

Since North Korea’s recent successful nuclear weapon and ballistic missile tests, Kim Jong-Il has been behaving a like spoiled child throwing a temper tantrum. He warns that any actions taken against him in response to past or future tests would spark a nuclear war. At the same time, North Korea prepares for the test of a 4,500-kilometer range Taepodong-2 missile he plans to launch toward Hawaii on or about July 4. Increasingly, it appears that we’re going to have to call Kim’s hand with a Cold-War-style confrontation or admit there’s nothing we can do about his nuclear weapons and missile programs. The longer we postpone that confrontation the greater the risk.
 
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CONFRONTING NORTH KOREA

Since North Korea's most recent nuclear weapon and missile tests, Kim Jong-Il is behaving like a spoiled child throwing a temper tantrum. He warns that any sanctions on North Korea are a declaration of war.

UN resolution 1874 authorizes inspection of air and sea cargoes suspected of containing materials used for the development of nuclear weapons or ballistic missiles. Unfortunately, it fails to authorize the use of force to inspect ships and aircraft that resist inspection.

Unless the US and other countries halt these shipments, however, the UN sanctions will have little effect. We either do what's necessary to enforce the sanctions, or we accept that North Korea may build and sell all the nuclear weapons and missiles it wishes. Like the Cuban Missile Crisis, with the threat of force comes risks. The question we have to ask is, is that risk now worth preventing the uncontrolled proliferation of nuclear weapons and missile technology later?
 
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MAKE THE EARTH STAND STILL

Arnoud de Borchgrave, writing in the June 1 edition of the Washington Times, asks the question “Is the world more dangerous today than it was at the height of the cold War?” Citing North Korea’s recent misbehavior, Iran’s nuclear program, the insecurity of Pakistan’s growing nuclear weapons stockpile, and nuclear proliferation, he gives the obvious answer that it is. For those of us who once thought of ourselves as cold warriors, that’s a frightening thought. Like most Americans we worried about nuclear annihilation during times like the Cuban missile crisis. But we always had the comfort of knowing that our Soviet adversaries had no more desire to go up in a mushroom cloud than we did. Good old mutually assured destruction (MAD) kept both sides’ fingers off the trigger. Today, however, countries and groups that don’t mind going up in the mushroom cloud with us are on the verge of possessing nuclear weapons. Any good oddsmaker will tell you that sooner or later one of them is going to use one. It’d be nice if, like in the 1951 movie The Day the Earth Stood Still, a wise man from another planet landed in a flying saucer and put the fear of God in everyone so we’d do something about it. Unfortunately, since that won’t happen, we have to figure out how to do it ourselves.
 
Read my weekly columns and my current daily comment at http://ewross.com
Previous EWRoss Dailies http://ewross.com/EWRoss_Daily.htm
Previous EWRoss weekly columns http://ewross.com/archive.htm
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