The crisis over North Korea's nuclear programme deepened when US
President Donald Trump underscored his threat to rain "fire and fury" on
Kim Jong-un's regime by saying his apocalyptic warning perhaps "wasn't
tough enough."
The latest escalation in the stand-off has set the world on edge,
with stock markets down and jittery observers now openly pondering
whether the risk of nuclear conflict is real.
![]() |
The United States of America President, Donald Trump and the North Korean President Kim Jung-un |
Here's a look at some of the possible scenarios for how the crisis might play out:
Military intervention
Experts caution that military intervention in North Korea remains unlikely - at least for now.
Ely Ratner, a senior fellow for China studies at the Council on
Foreign Relations said Mr Trump's language was "irresponsible." but
added: "I don't think we are on the brink of nuclear war".
"There's very little indication that what the president said reflects
an actual policy decision within the White House to pursue pre-emptive
war."
Still, the Pentagon has detailed plans for a potential conflict with
North Korea and has spent decades rehearsing some of these with South
Korean counterparts.
Options range from limited surgical strikes on nuclear targets to a
pre-emptive "decapitation" attack to take out Mr Kim or force a popular
uprising that would lead to regime change.
Mr Trump has boasted that the US nuclear arsenal is more powerful
than ever before while his Defense Secretary Jim Mattis has said that
North Korea would find itself "grossly overmatched" in the event of a
full-fledged conflict.
But any sort of military confrontation against a country that has
more than one million serving troops would carry enormous risks.
The United States has 28,500 troops in South Korea and Seoul is only
about 55km from border with the North, along which Kim has amassed
artillery units.
Even limited shelling and rocket fire would likely lead to mass
casualties in the city of 10 million and experts warn that any conflict
would quickly escalate, risking upheaval of the global economy and huge
death tolls.
Mr Mattis has repeatedly warned of devastating consequences, saying
it would be "like nothing we have seen since 1953," referring to the end
of the Korean War.
The prospect of Mr Kim unleashing one of his nuclear devices only makes the potential outcomes more dire.
The reclusive regime has said it is developing a plan to fire rockets close to US territory Guam.
China and economic pressure
The UN Security Council at the weekend passed a new set of sanctions
against Pyongyang over its weapons programme, including bans on the
export of coal, iron and iron ore, lead and lead ore as well as fish and
seafood.
The measures were approved unanimously - including by Russia and China, the North's sole major ally.
Their fate hinges largely on China, which accounts for 90% of trade
with North Korea but is suspected of failing to enforce past UN
measures, even after voting in their favour.
Mr Trump has repeatedly tried to pressure China into taking a harder
line on North Korea, but Beijing is fearful of a collapse of Mr Kim's
regime.
Ely Ratner said the North Korea issue is front and centre in Beijing
and suggested China is "probably more willing to evolve (than) where
they've been in the past."
Back to the negotiating table
North Korea has reportedly produced a nuclear warhead small enough to
fit on its rockets, leading some to say the time for military action
has already passed.
"There's no room for anything else other than diplomacy," said
Jeffrey Lewis, arms control expert at the Middlebury Institute of
International Studies.
The window to attack them or convince them not to (develop the weapons) has closed
Through the 2000s, six-party talks among China, Russia, Japan, South
Korea, North Korea and the US appeared to draw Pyongyang, then under the
rule of Kim's father Kim Jong-Il, toward some level of outside nuclear
monitoring and a possible slowdown in its programme.
But that process collapsed in 2009.
In recent years Pyongyang has said it was willing to talk without
preconditions, while Washington has demanded it first take tangible
steps towards denuclearisation.
North Korea says it will never put its weapons programmes up for
negotiation unless the United States drops what it calls its "hostile
policy" against it.
No comments:
Post a Comment