Trump administration officials keep painting themselves into a corner on North Korea and its nuclear arsenal:
U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said he didn’t see a scenario in which the U.S. would accept North Korea as a nuclear power, even after a year of dramatic advances for North Korea’s weapons program.Mr. Mattis, speaking at a press briefing Saturday in Seoul with his South Korean counterpart at the end of a three-country swing through Asia, reiterated the longtime U.S. goal of denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula.“I cannot imagine a condition under which the U.S. would accept North Korea as a nuclear power,” Mr. Mattis said.
The administration seems to have finally settled on a consistent position on North Korea, but it is the most irresponsible position they could possibly take under the circumstances. Denuclearization of North Korea is not a realistic or achievable goal. Short of a major war that would likely claim millions of lives, it is impossible. Secretary Mattis ought to understand that better than most of the other people in the administration. The cost of denuclearization is far too high, and the price that South Korea, Japan, the U.S., and the surrounding region would pay is absolutely unacceptable. The insistence that North Korea must give up something that they consider essential to their regime’s survival is an obvious non-starter.
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