(Photo by Jon
Roemer, courtesy Woodrow Wilson School)
Aaron
Friedberg
Professor Aaron Friedberg has returned to the Woodrow Wilson
School for Public and International Affairs after spending two years as
a deputy national security adviser to Vice President Dick Cheney. Friedberg,
a specialist in East Asian affairs, recently discussed current events
in that region with PAW’s Mark F. Bernstein ’83. They spoke
shortly after North Korea had conducted a nuclear test Oct. 9.
What is the next step for the United States now that North Korea
has successfully conducted a nuclear test?
[North Korean leader] Kim Jong-Il needs hard currency to pay for his
nuclear program and also for luxuries he uses for his own comfort and
to pay off the people around him. If we could squeeze that, we could endanger
his grip on power and make him feel insecure. But to do that we really
need help from China and South Korea, which we have not gotten so far.
One of the problems with our diplomacy in the past is that it has seemed
at times to be based on the assumption that if we’re really nice
to Kim and offer him goodies for his people, he’ll see the light.
I think all Kim cares about is himself, so we have to get at that.
If North Korea can acquire nuclear weapons, is the very idea of
nonproliferation dead?
It’s not dead, but it’s on life support. The nonproliferation
treaty still exists, and North Korea was a signatory to it. If North Korea
can violate the treaty, get a bomb, and get away with it, that will be
a real blow. It shows that others can do the same thing, and it suggests
that the will of other countries to uphold the treaty is wavering.
Why does North Korea want nuclear weapons?
Kim Jong-Il sees them as the ultimate guarantor of his safety. It makes
it more difficult for anyone to overthrow him from outside. He also is
aggressive and sees them as useful in his efforts to extract rewards and
benefits from other countries. He has gotten a lot of payoffs over the
years, and he may believe that he is even better situated to do that now
that he is more menacing. Kim ultimately hopes to reunify the Korean peninsula
on his terms, and he believes a nuclear capacity will help him do that.
Is there a way for the United States to stop North Korea’s
nuclear program militarily?
We might use our armed forces to impose some sort of blockade to make
sure that the North Koreans don’t smuggle nuclear weapons or materials
to other countries or to terrorist groups. But as far as destroying the
North Korean nuclear program, I don’t think there is a good military
option. Still, this situation could get worse. The North Koreans have
two large unfinished nuclear reactors that they have said they intend
to build. If this crisis drags on, we could face a situation in which
they are moving toward a capacity to mass-produce nuclear weapons. We
then might face the question of whether it is better to use force and
deal with the consequences than not.
Why hasn’t China influenced North Korea?
I think the Chinese have a lot of potential influence with the North
Koreans that they have not exercised. They could apply economic pressure
by cutting off oil and food, for example. China also still is a treaty
ally of North Korea and has a commitment to help North Korea defend itself
if it’s attacked. China could abrogate that commitment. Why haven’t
the Chinese used their influence? Some people say China doesn’t
want to try [to stop the nuclear program] and fail. Others say they don’t
want to increase the risk that North Korea might collapse, which could
create a refugee problem for them. I think the Chinese simply don’t
see it as being in their interest to apply pressure.
Should the United States be concerned about China’s military
buildup?
I think we have to be. I don’t think China is an imminent threat
to us. But its military buildup certainly increases China’s options
for using force in its own neighborhood against Taiwan, as well as bullying
Japan.
Is conflict between the United States and China inevitable?
I don’t think it is inevitable, but it’s not impossible,
either. We’re gambling that by trading and engaging with the Chinese
— which makes them richer and more powerful — we’re
also helping a process of domestic reform that’s going to make them
more democratic and easier to deal with. That part has not happened yet.
We could end up facing a China that’s richer and stronger and still
an authoritarian one-party state that has objectives that are very different
from ours. One thing that might come out of the current North Korean situation
is that people will begin to look at whether China is, in fact, becoming
a responsible international stakeholder. I think there’s going to
be a new debate about that.