Denny Roy,
Senior Research Fellow at the East-West Center, argues that "An ROK
nuclear weapons capability would impose a meaningful penalty on the DPRK
for its nuclear weapons program."
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"The
announcement would also signal to Beijing that the cost of failing to
discipline their client state is rising dramatically."
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Analysis
South Korea: Give Nukes a Chance
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By Denny Roy
It
is only a matter of time before North Korea fields an actual
nuclear-tipped missile that works. With the persistent security threat
from North Korea seemingly worsening, recent public opinion surveys show
that a majority of South Koreans favor getting their own nuclear
weapons. There is no doubt that South Korea is capable of making its own
nuclear weapons, probably within a year. Indeed, the Republic of Korea
(ROK) has explored this possibility occasionally since the 1970s, each
time backing off under outside pressure.
There are some good
reasons why, in principle, the world is better off with a smaller,
rather than larger, number of nuclear weapon states. Nevertheless, there
are two additional principles that apply here. First, nuclear weapons
are a powerful deterrent; they are the main reason why the Cold War
remained cold. Second, there may be a specific circumstance in which the
introduction of a new nuclear weapons capability has a constructive
influence on international security--call it the exception to the
general nonproliferation rule.
Given the ROK's present
circumstances, Washington and Seoul should seriously consider the
following policy change. Seoul gives the required 90 days notice
required for it to withdraw from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty,
which allows for de-ratification in the case of "extraordinary events"
that threaten national security. The ROK announces its intention to
begin working toward a nuclear weapons capability, with the following
conditions: (1) the South Korean program will match North Korea's
progress step-by-step towards deploying a reliable nuclear-armed
missile; and (2) Seoul will commit to halting and shelving its program
if North Korea does the same. For its part, Washington announces that US
nonproliferation policy is compelled to tolerate an exception when a
law-abiding state is threatened by a rogue state--in this case North
Korea--that has both acquired nuclear weapons and threatened to use them
aggressively. Pyongyang has repeatedly spoken of using its nuclear
weapons to devastate both the ROK and the United States.
This
policy change is necessary because US, ROK and (half-hearted) Chinese
efforts to get North Korea to denuclearize are not working. The Kim
Jong-un regime appears committed to keeping its nuclear weapons despite
the incentive of improved economic and diplomatic relations offered by
both Washington and Seoul. The insecure Kim regime fears absorption by
South Korea and attack from the United States. Nuclear weapons equalize
the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's (DPRK) struggling
conventional forces, demand that the outside world takes it seriously,
and boost the regime's domestic legitimacy. If Kim Jong-il gave his
country the Bomb, his youngest son, Kim Jong-un, who desperately needs a
signature accomplishment, can hope to claim credit for a reliable
nuclear missile that could change the game between the DPRK and its
adversaries.
An ROK nuclear weapons capability would impose a
meaningful penalty on the DPRK for its nuclear weapons program. Aside
from the sanctions ordered by the United Nations Security Council, which
have proved no more than a nuisance and are amply compensated for by
the growing economic relationship with China, Pyongyang has suffered no
significant negative consequences for acquiring nuclear weapons. A South
Korean nuclear capability would change that. The North Koreans would
understand that their act brought about an outcome they very much do not
want, and that to reverse this outcome they must close down their own
nuclear capability.
ROK nukes, furthermore, will help deter
North Korean provocations. A capacity to attack a neighbor with nuclear
weapons provides North Korea with cover for limited conventional
attacks. Pyongyang has established a pattern of using quick, sharp jabs
against South Korea. The goal is to rattle Seoul into accommodating
North Korean economic and political demands. Seoul insists that future
North Korean attacks will result in military retaliation by South Korean
forces. Since South Korea has not hit back after previous incidents, it
is uncertain whether this pledge will deter Pyongyang from trying this
tactic again. A DPRK nuclear weapons capability worsens this already
dangerous situation. North Korean planners might conclude that Seoul
would not dare retaliate against a DPRK strike out of fear that the next
step would be a nuclear attack on the ROK. A South Korean nuclear
capability, however, would redress this imbalance. If ROK conventional
military capabilities are superior to the DPRK and equal or superior at the nuclear level, deterrence against a North Korean attack is stronger.
South
Korean nukes would close the credibility gap in the US-ROK alliance.
The "umbrella" of America's nuclear arsenal covers South Korea and
theoretically negates the DPRK nuclear threat. However, South Koreans
have always questioned the reliability of this commitment which
potentially puts a US city at risk in order to protect a South Korean
city. The doubts are growing more acute now that a North Korean
capability is apparently close to realization. An ROK nuclear arsenal
would remove this strain on the alliance and give the South Koreans a
sense of greater control over their own destiny.
Pyongyang
would not be the only target audience for Seoul's announcement of intent
to deploy nuclear weapons. Like the North Koreans, the People's
Republic of China (PRC) is deeply opposed to an ROK nuclear capability.
The announcement would also signal to Beijing that the cost of failing
to discipline their client state is rising dramatically. The Chinese are
already debating whether the status quo of a rogue DPRK has become so
adverse to Chinese interests that China must pressure Pyongyang more
heavily even at the risk of causing regime collapse. South Korea's
imminent--and reversible--acquisition of nuclear weapons would
strengthen the argument that the PRC must get tougher with the DPRK.
To
be sure, this policy change would create its own problems. An ROK
nuclear capability would pressure Japan to follow suit. A US-friendly,
stable, law-abiding, liberal democratic country getting nukes is not
necessarily a bad thing. But if so, the solution is for Washington and
Seoul to emphasize that South Korea's nuclear capability would be
temporary and contingent, so Tokyo can remain non-nuclear. Thankfully,
there are precedents for middle-sized states giving up their nuclear
weapons.
South Korea's security situation is deteriorating and
for the ROK's leadership, national security is job number one. It is
now time to get past the visceral opposition to proliferation and
recognize that in this case, a conditional change of South Korea's
status to nuclear-weapon state can help manage the dangers created by a
heightened North Korean threat. |
About the Author
Denny Roy is Senior Research Fellow at the East-West Center. He can be contacted via email at royd@eastwestcenter.org.
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