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UPI Editor at Large Washington (UPI) Jun 23, 2006 The old saw that the U.S. government can only handle one foreign crisis at a time still holds true and, mercifully, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said we wouldn't get his reply to the latest Western carrots-cum-sticks proposal till Aug. 25. Which allows the Bush administration to focus on the latest made-in-North Korea crisis over the refueling of a Taeopodong-2 missile that the U.S. believes is a two-stage ICBM. It could hit Alaska, even north California, said Pentagon experts, and the United States is virtually defenseless. America's embryonic anti-missile defense system is partially deployed in Alaska and California. But hitting an incoming North Korean ICBM would be tantamount to shooting a rifle bullet fired from one end of a football field with another bullet fired from the other end. The United States also has Aegis-class destroyers in the Sea of Japan whose missiles could get lucky if they caught Taepodong in its initial boost phase. There is no need to speculate whether the North Koreans have the technological wherewithal to miniaturize a nuclear weapon to fit the nosecone of an ICBM. They got that trade secret years ago from A.Q. Khan, the inventor of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, who was running a nuclear Wal-Mart for the benefit of America's enemies. In return, Pakistan got North Korean missile technology. There are varying degrees of ignorance about North Korea, but no expertise. We know that the hermit Stalinist kingdom is almost hermetically sealed and nothing filters out about the decision-making process around the supreme leader, Kim Jong-il. A regime that lets a couple of million of its own people starve to death rather than open up to Western assistance shares Stalin's belief that one death is a tragedy, a million deaths a statistic. In North Korea, everything runs on high-octane paranoia. A credible source in the speculative welter is a Korean-American who has visited North Korea three times in as many years and spent 4 hours and 20 minutes with the Great Leader on his most recent trip. The pictures we saw showed the two men sitting across from each other at a small table. Believe it or not, Kim's main theme was a desire to improve relations with the United States. Two-power talks, instead of the six-power format North Korea abandoned last year, were the best way to achieve their objective, Kim said. The Korean source, who spoke on condition his name be withheld, also concluded in separate meetings with high-ranking, four-star interlocutors, that they are "uncomfortable with their total dependence" on their semi-normal relationship with China. Normalization of relations with the United States, the Korean-American concluded, would enable Pyongyang to loosen China's diplomatic embrace. If that is indeed Kim's objective, he miscalculated monumentally. The fueling of Taepodong-2 even managed to provoke normally dovish Democrats into bellicose postures. Former Defense Secretary William Perry and his former Assistant Defense Secretary Ashton Carter wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post in which they recommended launching U.S. cruise missiles to destroy the offending North Korean missile on its pad. This could be a miscalculation atop the original miscalculation. Perry figured the 11,000 North Korean artillery tubes calibrated against Seoul, the South Korean capital, would remain silent. After all, South Korea is gradually becoming Kim Il-sung's meal ticket so why attack Seoul. Cynics said Perry must have known there wasn't a snowball's chance in Baghdad's 120 degree heat that President Bush would authorize a two-front war situation. Perry did not think the North Koreans would retaliate against South Korea given Seoul's current policy of rapprochement with, and economic assistance to, the North. Yet Kim Dae-jung, South Korea's former president and the architect of Seoul's "sunshine policy," which is designed to bring Pyongyang into the international fold, canceled his trip to the North scheduled for next week. Why the mighty United States is fearful of bilateral talks with North Korea makes as little sense as the fear of talking to the other axis of evil power in Tehran. After launching Taepodong-1 in 1998, which flew over Japan into the Pacific Ocean, North Korea agreed to a moratorium on missile tests. Now the regime says it is no longer bound by its "unilaterally self-imposed agreement."
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London (UPI) Jun 26, 2006It is unusual to watch a senior and experienced politician walk deliberately into trouble. But Gordon Brown, for the past nine years the successful steward of the world's fourth-largest economy and the second-most powerful man in Britain after Tony Blair, knew exactly what he was doing when he kicked the third rail of left-wing politics by pledging to renew Britain's nuclear forces. |
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