Obama's NK Reaction: More Talks
The president sends the wrong messages to Israel and Iran.
Prior to North Korea's launch yesterday of a Taepodong-2 ballistic missile,
President Barack Obama declared that such an action would be "provocative." This
public statement was an attempt to reinforce the administration's private
efforts to urge the Democratic Peoples' Republic of Korea (DPRK) not to fire the
missile.
AP
That effort failed, as have countless other attempts to deal softly with
Pyongyang. Incredibly, U.S. Special Envoy for North Korea Stephen Bosworth
revealed -- just a few days before the launch -- that he was ready to visit
Pyongyang and resume the six-party talks once the "dust from the missiles
settles." It is no wonder the North fired away.
Once the missile shot was complete, the administration's answer was
hand-wringing, more rhetoric and, oh yes, the obligatory trip to the U.N.
Security Council so that it could scold the defiant DPRK. Beyond whatever
happens in the Security Council, Mr. Obama seems to have no plan whatever.
In 2006, when Pyongyang last lit off a volley of missiles and then exploded a
nuclear device, the Security Council responded unanimously with Resolutions 1695
and 1718, which imposed extensive military and some economic sanctions.
Unfortunately, the impact of these resolutions was dramatically undercut by
subsequent Bush administration diplomacy, which effectively let North Korea off
the hook. By re-engaging Pyongyang diplomatically rather than increasing the
external pressure, George W. Bush relegitimized the North and gave it yet more
time to bargain.
Yesterday's launch is attributable to prior failures, but the global
consequences now unfolding are Mr. Obama's responsibility. In fact, Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates is expected to announce today deep cuts in the U.S. missile
defense program, an extraordinarily ill-advised step.
The initial draft Security Council resolution responding to yesterday's
missile launch, written by Japan and the U.S., is weak. It essentially only
reaffirms Resolutions 1695 and 1718, and minimally tightens existing enforcement
mechanisms. Moreover, China and Russia made it plain before the launch they had
no interest in stricter sanctions -- even arguing with a straight face that
Pyongyang was only interested in peaceful satellite communications.
What the Security Council will ultimately produce is of course uncertain --
but resolutions almost never get tougher as the drafting and negotiations
proceed. Even worse than a weak resolution would be a "presidential statement,"
a toothless gesture of the Council's opinion. Either way, North Korea has again
defied the Security Council, gotten away with its launch with the support of
Russia and China, and now will likely confront only pleas by Mr. Obama and
others to return to the six-party talks.
Those talks are exactly where North Korea wants to be. From them ever greater
material and political benefits will flow to Pyongyang, in exchange for ever
more hollow promises to dismantle its nuclear program.
So far, therefore, the missile launch is an unambiguous win for North Korea.
(Although not orbiting a satellite, all three rocket stages apparently fired,
achieving Pyongyang's longest missile flight yet.) But the negative
repercussions will extend far beyond Northeast Asia.
Iran has carefully scrutinized the Obama administration's every action, and
Tehran's only conclusion can be: It is past time to torque up the pressure on
this new crowd in Washington. Not only is Iran's back now covered by its friends
Russia, China and others on the U.N. Security Council, but it sees an American
president so ready to bend his knee for public favor in Europe that the mullahs'
wish list for U.S. concessions will grow by the minute.
Israel must also be carefully considering how the U.S. watched North Korea
rip through "the international community." The most important lesson the new
government headed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should draw is: Look out
for No. 1. If Israel isn't prepared to protect itself, including using military
force, against Iran's nuclear weapons program, it certainly shouldn't be holding
its breath for Mr. Obama to do anything.
Russia and China must also be relishing this outcome. They will have faced
down Mr. Obama in his first real crisis, having provided Security Council cover
for a criminal regime, and emerged unscathed. They will conclude that achieving
their large agendas with the new administration can't be too hard. That
conclusion may be unfair to the new American president; but it will surely color
how Moscow and Beijing structure their policies and their diplomacy until proven
otherwise. That alone is bad news for Washington and its allies.
Mr. Bolton, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, is
the author of "Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United
Nations and Abroad" (Simon & Schuster, 2007).
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