The following is taken from a new Carnegie study, Universal
Compliance: A Strategy for Nuclear Security. This draft report offers
a blueprint strategy for strengthening efforts to prevent nuclear terrorism
and proliferation.
North Korea has an active nuclear weapons program and may now possess several
nuclear weapons. U.S. troops, allies in the region, and strategic interests
are directly threatened by North Korea's growing nuclear capability, which has
been pursued in violation of Pyongyang's commitments under the Non-Proliferation
Treaty and other agreements. Given North Korea's economic strains, it is conceivable
that for a high price Pyongyang might sell nuclear materials or weapons to other
states or even terrorist groups, taking a regional threat to a global level.
Such a scenario is so grave that U.S. policy makers could soon face a truly
appalling choice between acquiescing in North Korea's transfer of its weapons
technology and fighting a full-fledged war on the Korean peninsula.
Short of war, a failure to resolve the North Korean nuclear threat would badly
undermine the cause of nuclear nonproliferation and would increase incentives
for regional states, including South Korea and Japan, to consider their own
nuclear options. It would pose an unprecedented regional and global security
risk.
The United States and its partners in dialogue with North Korea must determine
whether and under what conditions North Korea is willing to relinquish its nuclear
capabilities. Finding Pyongyang's bottom line will either allow the United States
and its allies to negotiate a verifiable end to North Korea's nuclear program
or improve the prospects for building a consensus to respond to the threat posed
by North Korea's suspected nuclear weapons.
The creation of a regional six-party negotiating mechanism has enabled the
United States to more closely tie China to the issue of North Korea's nuclear
future, but it remains unclear how far Beijing can or is willing to go in pressuring
North Korea to abandon its program. China may not have an interest in a nuclear
North Korea on its border, but it is also averse to regime collapse or a war
between the United States and North Korea that could result in U.S. troops being
placed on the Chinese border. All in all, China may find the status quo tolerable,
and the United States cannot assume that China will be able or willing to deliver
North Korea's consent or compliance with a denuclearization agreement.
North Korea's apparent willingness to create crises in order to extract maximum
negotiating leverage cannot be discounted. In comparison to military con?ict
or unchecked proliferation, many negotiated settlements become attractive.
If a negotiated solution that eliminates North Korea's nuclear program is possible,
now is the time for a determined, comprehensive effort. At the same time, the
United States and its allies must prepare for the possibility that Pyongyang
will not abandon its nuclear program, forcing them to take appropriate steps
to reinforce deterrence and the norm of nonproliferation in the region.
To test whether North Korea is prepared to eliminate its program under effective
verifcation, the United States needs to:
- Develop an international consensus through the Security Council that North
Korea's actions are a threat to international peace and security and that
North Korea's attempt to withdraw from an agreement it has violated is unacceptable.
- Test the will of North Korea to fully, verifiably, and irreversibly dismantle
all its nuclear weapon capabilities in exchange for a fundamentally different
relationship with the United States, including diplomatic relations and peaceful
reconstruction assistance.
- Further enhance U.S. alliances with South Korea and Japan to broaden support
for U.S. security objectives in the region, including the absence of nuclear
weapons.
- Pursue rapid and ongoing negotiations with North Korea with a presidentially
appointed envoy. This person must be fully committed to the negotiations,
prepared and empowered to make serious progress, and meet with North Korean
counterparts of suffcient rank to make progress.
- Prepare for the possibility that North Korea will not abandon its nuclear
capabilities by reinforcing diplomatic and military capabilities in the region
to enhance deterrence and stability on the Korean peninsula and reduce incentives
for other countries to follow North Korea's nuclear lead.
- Make clear that any attempt by North Korea to export nuclear materials or
weapons will be considered an act of war against the United States resulting
in the end to the Korean War cease-fire.
The regional security consequences of an ongoing North Korean nuclear weapon
capability are dire. So too are the implications of allowing North Korea's violations
of the international treaty regime to go unpunished. By violating and then attempting
to withdraw from the NPT, North Korea has undermined the fundamental premise
of the regime-that the international community is prepared to hold countries
to their commitments. The Security Council presidential statement of January
1992 found the proliferation of nuclear weapons a threat to international peace
and security. Thus, Security Council members have a responsibility to respond
to North Korea's actions. Yet even now, the Security Council has yet to respond
to North Korea's violations and withdrawal. If, after a determined good-faith
effort, the United States and the other partners fail to achieve a negotiated
agreement, then the United States must convince the Security Council that North
Korea's violations are a threat to international peace and security and that
its withdrawal from the NPT was invalid. The United States must then prepare
for the consequences.