I wonder how much pressure the Obama administration brought on the Ecuadorian government to cut off Juilian Assange’s access to the Internet in the Ecuadorian embassy in London. I don’t particularly like Assange or the fact that the Russians are meddling in the American election, but it also indicates that the US Government is putting its finger on the scales of the election. Of course, Obama campaigns for Hillary, but in theory he does that as a leader of the Democratic party, not as President of the United States. Obama’s use of the US foreign policy apparatus to support Hillary reinforces the view that the government is corrupt and that the electoral system is corrupt.
Wednesday, October 19, 2016
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Should the US or China Stop North Korea?
I was pleased to see a New York Times op-ed by Joel Wit on North Korea. Sometimes he is the PBS News Hour expert, but
this time, PBS turned to some other other experts. I worked with Joel Wit off and on for several
years. In my previous
blog about the North Korean nuclear test, I complained that the US
government would not fund its obligations under the Korean Peninsula
Development Organization (KEDO). As I
result, as the embassy science officer in Rome I had to ask the Italy and the
EU if they would provide the funds that the US Congress would not. If the US did not fund its obligations, it
gave North Korea a perfect excuse to withdraw from KEDO and resume its nuclear
weapons program. Joel was back in
Washington, and was at the other end of these instruction cables to ask the
Europeans for money.
It was not Joel’s fault that the US Congress would not
appropriate the money for KEDO. He was
left scrambling to find the money. I
think I heard him say at least once that the US had never defaulted on its
obligations. Apparently he and his
associates found the money after I retired, since KEDO continued on for years, but
even if they did, it was an indication of bad faith on America’s part.
In his op-ed, Joel says that the US cannot count on China to
rein in North Korea’s nuclear program; only the US can. To do this the US will have to escalate
sanctions and keep the door open for negotiations. He thinks that there may be something that
North Korea wants enough to resume talks.
I am not optimistic.
Looking at the past history, North Korea swings back and forth so much
it’s hard to tell if they are serious about any negotiations. They have actually entered into agreements
that actually restricted their activities like any normal country that was
giving up a military nuclear program.
But then they suddenly change their mind and withdraw. Nevertheless, it’s better to try to rein in
the program than just let them do anything they want.
After KEDO, six-party talks produced various attempts at
agreements to stop North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, but they all failed
in the end. Off and on the North Koreans
agree to certain restrictions on their programs, which they ultimately
renounced.
The
Arms Control Association website provides a timeline. North Korea first undertook to restrain its
nuclear program in 1985, when it signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), but
it did not implement the safeguards agreement required by the NPT. In 1992 it finally signed a safeguards agreement
under the NPT with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Agreement on KEDO is reached in 1994, under
which the US, South Korea and Japan promise two commercial light water reactors
in return for North Korea’s dismantling of its plutonium production
reactors. In 1996 talks the US suggested
that North Korea joining the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), which I
played a role in creating. (North Korea
did not join.) In 1998 Japan suspended
its participation in KEDO. In 1999 KEDO
signed a contract to build the two power reactors. In August 2002 KEDO poured the first concrete
for the power reactor construction.
During an American visit in October 2002, North Korea admitted that had
a clandestine nuclear enrichment program in violation of its agreements. In November 2002 KEDO announced that it was
suspending its delivery of heavy fuel oil under the agreement. The US provided funding in 2003 to wind down
the organization, which announced that it was suspending reactor construction. In 2006 the KEDO board announced the formal termination
of its power reactor construction project.
KEDO was succeeded by
another agreement based on a 2005 joint statement at six-party talks including
North Korea, the US, South Korea, Japan, China and Russia. In November 2007 a US team travelled to North
Korea to begin disablement of Yongbyon nuclear facilities under an October
agreement reached in the six-arty talks.
During 2008 Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill meets with
North Koreas on compliance with the agreement.
By December 2008 the US has delivered 550,000 tons of heavy fuel oil
under the agreement. In April 2009,
North Korea says it will no longer be bound by the six-party talks agreement
and ejects IAEA and US monitors. In May
North Korea conducted its second underground nuclear test.
In December 2011 Kim Jong Il dies and is replaced by Kim
Jong Un. In December 2012, North Korea
successfully launches a satellite. In
February 2013, North Korea conducts another underground nuclear test. In January 2016, North Korea announces a
fourth nuclear test. It conducted its
fifth nuclear test on September 9, 2016.
Sunday, September 11, 2016
North Korea and the MTCR
North Korea’s test of a nuclear device has prompted
discussion of its missile program. When
I was at the State Department, I spent years working on the creation of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR). I am disappointed that I have not seen it mentioned
in connection with North Korea’s development of missiles. Before the North Korean test, the “Bulletin
of the Atomic Scientists” published several articles dealing with missile
proliferation and the MTCR: “Missile
proliferation: Treat the disease,” and “Too late for
missile proliferation?” as well as several other articles that were part of
a debate about how to deal with missile proliferation.
The MTCR is basically an export control agreement for
nations capable of supplying missile hardware and technology. By joining the MTCR they agree not to supply
items or knowledge to proliferating countries that could be used to build
nuclear capable missiles. It is not an arms
control agreement that prohibits the proliferation of missile technology. It is more like the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG)
than the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
As proliferating countries become more capable of producing
missiles on their own, the export restrictions of the MTCR have less
effect. The MTCR probably did slow down
North Korea’s development of missiles, but now it is less effective. However, building missiles is “rocket science,”
and there are some very difficult technologies involved. Therefore, the MTCR may still play a role in
limiting or slowing down the ability of North Korea to build more powerful and
more accurate missiles, but at this point, slowing down is about the best it
could do. Press articles seem to agree
that North Korea could build strategic nuclear missiles that could reach the US
by 2020, e.g. a
New York Times article says, “Military experts say that by 2020, Pyongyang
will most likely have the skills to make a reliable intercontinental ballistic
missile topped by a nuclear warhead.” However,
the MTCR might still help restrict the accuracy and the size of the warhead for
such a missile by 2020. It might mean
that North Korea could be able to hit somewhere in the greater Washington
metropolitan area with a bomb the size of the one the US used on Hiroshima,
rather than one that could reliably hit Pennsylvania Avenue and destroy both
the White House and the Capitol, as well as most of the city. Neither of these outcomes is acceptable, but
the greater the chances that a missile might misfire, go off course or fail to
detonate, the better.
Of course it would be better to have in place a strong
treaty that prohibits missile proliferation like the NPT does for bombs, but
that is unlikely. One reason the MTCR is
so weak is that it is all that even the friendliest countries, like the UK,
France, or Japan, would agree to.
Furthermore the NPT has not been successful in limiting nuclear proliferation
by the most threatening countries, such as North Korea. As in most areas of life, laws constrain
decent people, but criminals commit crimes despite the laws against it.
One advantage of the NPT is that it has its own police
force, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has performed its
job well in a number of cases, discovering and reporting prohibited activities
by member parties. However, the IAEA has
no authority in countries that are not parties to the NPT, which includes most
of the worrisome countries, such as North Korea. There are countries that have joined the NPT,
but then have gotten off the track, perhaps after a change of government. This happened in Iran. The IAEA has worked successfully in Iran and
is a key component of the US-Iran deal to limit Iran’s nuclear program.
Saturday, September 10, 2016
North Korean Nuclear Test
North Korea’s nuclear test reminds me of my last days in the
Foreign Service around 1996-97. I was
the American Embassy’s science officer in Rome, working on nuclear
non-proliferation issues, as well as a number of other matters, such as the
environment.
At that time, Italy held the rotating presidency of the
European Union, so that I dealt with the Italian government both on bilateral
issues and on issues for the whole European Union. The first agreement intended to rein in North
Korean nuclear proliferation was in effect, the Korean
Peninsula Energy Development Organization, under which the US, Japan and
South Korea were to provide North Korea with certain things in return for North
Korean nuclear restraint. In the short
term we were to provide North Korea with fuel oil to keep its conventional
electric power plants running, and in the future with nuclear electric power
plants that did not use or produce materials that could be used in a bomb.
I don’t remember all the details, but the US was obligated
to pay several million dollars for the fuel oil to be supplied to North
Korea. The US Congress refused to
appropriate those funds, which meant that we could not meet our obligation
under the KEDO agreement. It became my
job to go to the Italians and the EU and ask them to provide funding for the
fuel oil that the US Congress would provide.
I found this very unpleasant, although the Italians were
very polite and listened patiently. I
thought that the US should meet its obligations under the agreement, and not
provide North Korea with an excuse, US noncompliance, to renounce the agreement
and resume its nuclear bomb program. This
was probably the straw that broke the camel’s back, and I retired from the
Foreign Service and returned to the US.
In addition to the KEDO fiasco, a number of other things had
gone badly for the issues for which I was responsible. Almost the day after I arrived, the State
Department was sued by four environmental groups for failing to force Italy to
implement UN resolutions regarding the use of driftnets to catch swordfish in
the Mediterranean. As I recall the groups
were the legal arms of Greenpeace, the Humane Society, the Sierra Club, and one
or two other groups. The State
Department lost the case, and in effect a Federal judge assumed control of
US policy regarding Italian use of driftnets.
What would happen if some policy issue arose was that the judge would
consult the environmental groups, and they would consult with a Greenpeace activist,
who was really the only person on the spot.
He would visit fishing boats, inspect their nets and their catch and
report back to his colleagues in the US, who would report back to the judge,
who in turn would approve (or not) whatever policy proposal was on the
table. This meant that in effect my
office worked for the Greenpeace representative on this issue. One of my last acts was to accompany the
Ambassador to meet with the Italian Agriculture Minister on this issue because
Sicilian fishermen had hired Mafia hit men to kill fisheries enforcement personnel
if they harassed the fishermen.
Supporters of the fishermen were also blocking streets in downtown
Rome. The main message I had for
Ambassador was that he could not agree definitively to any proposal from the
Minister, because it would have to be approved by the Federal judge back in the
US. The Ambassador was not happy about
that.
In addition, the Space Shuttle had flown an Italian tethered
satellite, the TSS-1R, which was to be extended on the tether about 20 km
from the Shuttle and reeled back in. The
tether broke and the satellite drifted off into space. The crew of the Columbia’s STS-75 mission came
to Italy to meet with the Italians about the mission. Unfortunately, because of the loss of the
satellite, the visit became something of an apology tour, which I was
responsible for organizing.
Another somewhat unfortunate, space-related incident
occurred at a cocktail party given to celebrate the launch by the US of an
Italian telecommunications satellite. At
the party, I met a man who worked for the telecommunications company whose
satellite was being launched. He said
something like, “You Americans must really hate me, since you won’t let my
daughter go to Disney World.” I was
taken aback. He said his daughter had
applied for a visa to go to Disney World, but the Embassy had refused to give
her one because her father worked for the telecommunications company. Apparently the company had some tenuous
connection with Cuba, and the Helms-Burton Act prohibited us from issuing visas
to employees or their families. I went
to see the Consul General, who is in charge of visas, the next day. She told me that what he said was correct and
there was nothing she could do about it.
At some point, I had read Herman Wouk’s Winds of War books. In them,
the heroine, a Jewish mother, wants to leave Italy to go to Israel. She is told that she can go, but her child
cannot; they will not give the child a visa.
It seemed too similar. It was Rome;
it was a child’s visa. Why should the US
punish children for the sins of their parents?
Even the Bible Old Testament says, “In those days they shall say no
more, The fathers have eaten a sour grape, and the children's teeth are set on
edge.”
There were probably some other things that led to my
retirement, but a diplomat is to some extent a salesman for his country. As an Army Vietnam veteran, the son of a
veteran of World War II and Korea, the grandson of a veteran of the
Spanish-American War and World War I, and the great-grandson of a veteran of
the Civil War, I loved my country, but I felt that it was not living up to its
reputation and was not upholding its honor.
I was old enough and had served long enough to retire; so, I did. I didn’t have to explain any more why it
looked like North Korea was honoring the KEDO agreement and the US was
not, giving them a perfect excuse to resume their nuclear program. I did not have to explain how we
lost Italy’s satellite. I did not have
to explain why the US punished children for the sins of their fathers.
Good diplomats do a lot of things that they may not like
doing. I often lied to protect
intelligence or to protect negotiating positions. If I had not been eligible for retirement, I
probably would not have fallen on my sword and resigned. I wish I had left under better circumstances,
but I have many good memories of my career.
It seemed, however, that no matter how high you rose, you always could
end up responsible for policies that you disagreed with. Even the Secretary of State has to do what
the President wants. Ask Hillary about
Syria or Libya.
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