
It’s time to deal with North Korea
“Kicking the can down the road” is to put off confronting a difficult issue or making an important decision, typically on a
continuing basis. Basically, it’s postponing the inevitable. It’s one of
the reasons our elected officials won’t fix anything, and why they
haven’t fixed Medicare or Social Security. Or tax reform and illegal
immigration. Or education.
And,
it turns out, “kicking the can down the road” is also how North Korea
developed the capability to produce a nuclear blast twice that of the
bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945.
You
see, it was President Bill Clinton who cleared the way for North Korea
to go nuclear in 1994 by offering them oil, in return for them
abandoning the production of plutonium, which is a key ingredient in
nuclear weapons. President Clinton said, at the time, the agreement
represents "an end to the threat of nuclear proliferation on the Korean
Peninsula." But soon afterwards, North Korea would be cheating on that
agreement by developing highly enriched uranium, and the Clinton
administration ended up “kicking the can” to the next president.
That’s
when President George W. Bush reneged on the oil reserves Clinton had
promised to North Korea, but by then, the nuclear genie was already out
of the bottle.
North Korea now had little incentive to negotiate away its storehouse of plutonium or to stop enriching uranium, and the can was “kicked” to the next president, again.
By the time President Barack Obama was elected, he was implementing his self-styled “strategic patience” policy (or “do nothing” policy) with regards to North Korea, even after learning from U.S. intelligence sources in 2013 that North Korea was capable of constructing miniaturized nuclear weapons that could be used as warheads for missiles. Still, Obama said he did not believe that North Korea could make a nuclear weapon small enough to fit atop a missile.
That ended up being a miscalculation on his part, and he ended up “kicking the can,” too.
So now, here we are with President Donald Trump. Knowing this path from 1994 to 2017 helps explain why Trump said last month that the United States would unleash on North Korea its “fire, fury and frankly power, the likes of which this world has never seen before.” You see, Trump realizes, he has no place to “kick the can,” and has to fix this right now.
Of course, liberals nearly had a conniption fit when he started talking tough about North Korea. They said this proves he is mentally unfit, or is otherwise suffering from a
personality disorder of some kind. This makes it plain, they argue, that
he does not take the advice of experts because he makes brash
statements without regard to official State Department protocol. Some
even say the White House is guided “based what side of the bed Trump got
up on in the morning.”
Of
course, compared to folks like Bill, Hillary, Barack and Bernie, who
all feel that climate change is the greatest threat facing America, it’s
hard for liberals to see Trump’s hawkish comments as anything other
than being completely off the rails.
But what is Trump’s alternative, really?
By
doing nothing, or continuing Obama’s “strategic patience” policy, we
can lose everything – including our country. And yet, many Americans
condemn Trump’s strong words as being the language of a right-wing loon –
they’re afraid of being politically incorrect.
Yet
we have terrorism around the world. Iran is moving ever closer to
nuclear capability and is a state-sponsor of terrorism. Russia is
aligning itself with North Korea, along with anyone who thumbs their
nose at the United States. And China is modernizing its weapons with
fighter jets, developing hypersonic missiles and building ballistic
missile submarines.
Plus,
our own nation’s borders are so porous that even the U.S. Border Patrol
admits that they don’t know who is coming across the border, or whether
they wish us well or ill.
And yet, we have folks worried about Trump’s strong words for Kim Jung Un.
The
bottom line is that the strong words from this president, whether about
North Korea or any other matter, reflect his conviction that we can no
longer “kick the can.” We’re at the end of our road, and without
decisive action from this president, we’re going to end up with more
than just a stubbed toe.
Louis
R. Avallone is a Shreveport businessman and attorney. He is also a
former aide to U.S. Representative Jim McCrery and editor of The Caddo
Republican. His columns have appeared regularly in The Forum since 2007.
Follow him on Facebook, on Twitter @louisravallone or by e-mail at louisavallone@mac.com.