On Jan. 29, I wrote a piece
that described North Korea's strategy as a combination of ferocious, weak and
crazy. In the weeks since then, three events have exemplified each facet of
that strategy. Pyongyang showed its ferocity Feb. 12, when it detonated a
nuclear device underground. The country's only significant ally, China, voted
against Pyongyang in the U.N. Security Council on March 7, demonstrating North
Korea's weakness. Finally, Pyongyang announced it would suspend the armistice
that ended the Korean War in 1953, implying that that war would resume and that
U.S. cities would be turned into "seas of fire." To me, that fulfills
the crazy element.
My argument was that the three
tenets -- ferocity, weakness and insanity -- form a coherent strategy. North
Korea's primary goal is regime preservation. Demonstrating ferocity --
appearing to be close to being nuclear capable -- makes other countries
cautious. Weakness, such as being completely isolated from the world generally
and from China particularly, prevents other countries from taking drastic
action if they believe North Korea will soon fall. The pretense of insanity --
threatening to attack the United States, for example -- makes North Korea
appear completely unpredictable, forcing everyone to be cautious. The three
work together to limit the actions of other nations.
Untested Assumptions
So far, North Korea is acting
well within the parameters of this strategy. It has detonated nuclear devices
before. It has appeared to disgust China before, and it has threatened to
suspend the cease-fire. Even more severe past actions, such as sinking a South Korean
ship in 2010, were not altogether inconsistent with its strategy. As
provocative as that incident was, it did not change the strategic balance in
any meaningful way.
Normally North Korea has a
reason for instigating such a crisis. One reason for the current provocation is
that it has a new leader, Kim Jong Un. The son of former leader Kim Jong Il and
the grandson of North Korea's founder Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Un is only 30 years
old, and many outside North Korea doubt his ability to lead (many inside North
Korea may doubt his ability, too). One way to announce his presence with
authority is to orchestrate an international crisis that draws the United
States, Japan, China, Russia and South Korea into negotiations with North Korea
-- especially negotiations that Pyongyang can walk away from.
The North Korean regime
understands the limits of its strategy and has been very sure-footed in
exercising it. Moreover, despite the fact that a 30-year-old formally rules the
country, the regime is a complex collection of institutions and individuals --
the ruling party and the military -- that presumably has the ability to shape
and control the leader's behavior.
It follows that little will
change. U.S. analysts of North Korea will emphasize the potential ferocity and
the need for extreme vigilance. The Chinese will understand that the North
Koreans are weak and will signal, as their foreign minister did March 9, that
in spite of their vote at the United Nations, they remain committed to North
Korea's survival. And most people will disregard Pyongyang's threat to resume
the Korean War.
Indeed, resuming the Korean
War probably is not something that anyone really wants. But because there are
some analysts who think that such a resumption is plausible, I think it is
worth considering the possibility that Pyongyang does want to restart the war.
It is always worth examining an analysis based on the assumption that a given
framework will not hold. For the record, I think the framework will hold, but I
am simply examining the following hypothetical: This time, North Korea is
serious.
To assess Pyongyang's
sincerity, let's begin with two untested assumptions. First, assume North Korea
has determined that it is unable to develop a deliverable nuclear weapon within
a meaningful time frame. Either there are problems with constructing the device
or its missiles are unreliable. Alternatively, assume it has decided that any
further development of weapons will likely lead to attacks by the United States
against its nuclear facilities. In other words, assume it expects to lose its
nuclear capability because it cannot move forward or because moving forward
will invite attacks against nuclear facilities.
The second assumption, more
likely accurate, is that North Korea has realized that the strategy it has
followed since the 1990s is no longer working. The strategy has lost its
effectiveness, and North Korean ferocity, weakness and insanity no longer impress
anyone. Rather than generating financial and other concessions, the strategy
has simply marginalized North Korea, so that apart from sanctions, there will
be no talks, no frightened neighbors, no U.S. threats. Kim Jong Un would not
announce himself with authority, but with a whimper.
An Unlikely Scenario
Taken together, these
assumptions constitute a threat to regime survival. Unless its neighbors bought
into the three premises of its strategy, North Korea could be susceptible to
covert or overt foreign involvement, which would put the regime on the
defensive and reveal its weakness. For the regime, this would be a direct
threat, one that would require pre-emptive action.
It would be a worst-case
scenario for Pyongyang. We consider it highly unlikely. But assume North Korea
deems it more likely than we do, or assume that, despite the scenario's
improbability, the consequences would be so devastating that the risk could not
be borne.
It is a scenario that could
take form if the North Korean nuclear threat were no longer effective in
establishing the country's ferocity. It would also take form if North Korea's
occasional and incomprehensible attacks were no longer unpredictable and thus
were no longer effective in establishing the country's insanity. In this
scenario, Pyongyang would have to re-establish credibility and unpredictability
by taking concrete steps.
These concrete steps would
represent a dramatic departure from the framework under which North Korea has
long operated. They would obviously involve demands for a cease-fire from all
players. There would have to be a cease-fire before major force could be
brought to bear on North Korea. Last, they would have to involve the assumption
that the United States would at least take the opportunity to bomb North Korean
nuclear facilities -- which is why the assumptions on its nuclear capability
are critical for this to work. Airstrikes against other targets in North Korea
would be likely. Therefore, the key would be an action so severe that everyone
would accept a rapid cease-fire and would limit counteraction against North
Korea to targets that the North Koreans were prepared to sacrifice.
The obvious move by North
Korea would be the one that has been historically regarded as the likeliest
scenario: massive artillery fire on Seoul, the capital of South Korea. The
assumption has always been that over a longer period of time, U.S. air power
would devastate North Korean artillery. But Seoul would meanwhile be damaged
severely, something South Korea would not tolerate. Therefore, North Korea
would bet that South Korea would demand a cease-fire, thereby bringing the
United States along in its demand, before U.S. airstrikes could inflict
overwhelming damage on North Korea and silence its guns. This would take a few
days.
Under this scenario, North
Korea would be in a position to demand compensation that South Korea would be
willing to pay in order to save its capital. It could rely on South Korea to
restrain further retaliations by the United States, and China would be prepared
to negotiate another armistice. North Korea would have re-established its
credibility, redefined the terms of the North-South relationship and, perhaps
having lost its dubious nuclear deterrent, gained a significant conventional
deterrent that no one thought it would ever use.
I think the risks are too
great for this scenario to play out. The North would have to assume that its
plans were unknown by Western intelligence agencies. It would also have to
assume that South Korea would rather risk severe damage to its capital as it
dealt with North Korea once and for all than continue to live under the
constant North Korean threat. Moreover, North Korea's artillery could prove
ineffective, and it risks entering a war it couldn't win, resulting in total
isolation.
The scenario laid out is
therefore a consideration of what it might mean if the North Koreans were
actually wild gamblers, rather than the careful manipulators they have been
since 1991. It assumes that the new leader is able to override older and more cautious
heads and that he would see this as serving both a strategic and domestic
purpose. It would entail North Korea risking it all, and for that to happen,
Pyongyang would have to believe that everything was already at risk. Because
Pyongyang doesn't believe that, I think this scenario is unlikely.
It is, however, a necessary
exercise for an analyst to find fault with his analysis by identifying
alternative assumptions that lead to very different outcomes. At Stratfor, we
normally keep those in-house, but in this case it appeared useful to think out
loud, as it were.
We'd welcome well-thought-out
alternatives. With so many emails, we can't promise to answer them all, but we
make it a practice to read them all.
George Friedman, Founder and Chairman, Stratfor, March 12, 2013
"Considering a Departure in North Korea's Strategy is republished with
permission of Stratfor."
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