On Selective “Strategic Empathy” — B.R. Myers

An even more obviously orchestrated flurry of DPRK-related articles than the “Why North Korea hates America” flurry we got in 2017 (which I discussed here) was the one which Siegfried Hecker and Robert Carlin (discussed here) initiated last January with an article on the Stimson Center’s 38 North website.

The main points of that piece were these:

  • For 30 years and under three leaders, North Korea’s central goal has been that of “normalizing relations with the US.”
  • Kim Jong Un’s “traumatic” loss of face at the Hanoi summit in 2019 led him to make “a decisive break with the past.”
  • The new approach: a “strategic reorientation toward China and Russia.”
  • Since then, the intensification of ties with Russia has encouraged Kim to prepare in earnest for a “military solution to the Korean question.”
  • Relying on the threat of mutually-assured destruction to keep the North at bay may be a “fatal” error for the US to make.
  • “History suggests those who have convinced themselves that they have no good options left will take the view that even the most dangerous game is worth the candle.”
  • “If that comes to pass, even an eventual US-ROK victory in the ensuing war will be empty. The wreckage, boundless and bare, will stretch as far as the eye can see.”

This urgent, doomsday call for “strategic empathy” with the North (to quote one of its subheadings) was reported on by one establishment outlet after another, with each journo making sure to identify Hecker and Carlin as “respected,” as “top experts,” etc, perhaps so as to lend weight to their (false) assertion that talk of preparing for war was something new to North Korea. The article was reprinted in full by the Pacific Forum, and the two men were invited to enlarge on it by Stanford, by NK News, etc.

The claim made that tensions on the peninsula had risen higher than at any time since 1953 (higher than 1968, 1976, 1987, 1993, 2002, 2010 and 2013!) was so ludicrous that for a while there — as readers of this blog will have noticed — I worried that Kim’s partnership with Putin had finally put paid to Foggy Bottom’s soft spot for the North, and that the US public was being primed for a preemptive strike on the country.

But clearly, the soft spot is alive and well; just contrast Biden officials’ fierce condemnations of Russia’s offensive against Ukraine with their expressions of “concern” about North Korea’s participation in it.

It appears, then, that the effort to raise awareness of the threat of nuclear war on the peninsula was in fact intended to prime the US public for a softer approach to Kim Jong Un, an approach which his dispatch of troops to the Russian war effort has naturally put on hold.

I’m not of course complaining about this; I’m relieved. But unless I’ve missed something, Hecker is yet to urge on us any “strategic empathy” for Russia, that far more heavily armed nuclear state which (in contrast to North Korea) carried out no deadly attacks on our allies during the 30 years in question, and which made a far more consistent and convincing show of wanting good relations with Washington than North Korea ever has.

The questions that Hecker recently posed to our two presidential candidates in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists must be seen to be believed. Not once does he express a desire for an immediate end to hostilities in the Ukraine war, let alone ask how the candidates propose to bring it about.

Instead he speaks prefatorily of the “brutal, unjustified invasion of Ukraine” before asking Harris and Trump:

  1. How has Russia’s war in Ukraine changed your view of the role of nuclear weapons in Europe and by extension to Northeast Asia?
  2. How does China’s nuclear buildup shape your view of the requirements for the US nuclear arsenal and for nuclear policy?
  3. Should North Korea use this nuclear threat to attack South Korea, perhaps to enforce what it sees as its legitimate borders, what will you be prepared to do to either prevent or respond?
  4. And how would you respond to a South Korean decision to field its own nuclear arsenal?
  5. How will you address the increasing, but largely ignored, nuclear dangers in South Asia?
  6. How would you respond to Iran’s continued nuclear buildup, which has considerably reduced the breakout time required for nuclear weapons, especially considering the escalating dangers resulting from the war in Gaza?
  7. What would you do to dissuade Saudi Arabia’s crown prince from responding to Iran with his own nuclear weapons program?
  8. How would you address the concerns over lack of progress on nuclear disarmament?

At one point in his explanatory remarks he asks, without numbering them, these questions:

How would you attempt to restore the global nuclear order absent a fair termination of the war in Ukraine? Would you be willing to take the political risk of inviting China to join the United States to do so? If you do, how would you get China to the negotiating table?

Imagine being a nuclear scientist, and asking those questions about the war. Asking about political risk!

Oh, and note “fair”: we know what the Deep State, on whose behalf Hecker teaches “practice” in Monterey, means by that. But when it comes to North Korea we’re not to worry about “fair.” We’re to come rushing to the negotiating table, for the sake of humanity.

Does Hecker really believe that the current conflict in Europe is less dangerous, less likely to result in nuclear war than the current standoff on the peninsula? Or does he think (to pick up on the Ozymandias-influenced finale to that 38 North piece) a nuclear war between the US and Russia would be more survivable than one between the US and North Korea?

 

UPDATE: 3 December 2024: Rumble contributors irk NYT:

For decades now the New York Times has run regular op-eds urging the US government to avert catastrophe by finding some sort of accommodation with nuclear-armed North Korea.

Op-eds like the one penned last year by retired US Air Force general Dan Leaf (a supporter of Christine Ahn and Woman Cross DMZ), in which he expresses “deep alarm over the growing risk of nuclear conflict with North Korea”:

In this hair-trigger environment, one bad decision or misunderstanding could kill millions… You must be aggressive to win wars but assertive to make peace. No matter how challenging the negotiations and politics of securing peace on the Korean Peninsula may prove, they are nothing compared with nuclear war.

Agreed. But surely, since 2022 at the latest, any rational observer must consider a nuclear war far likelier to break out in Europe?

Yet that prospect doesn’t appear to worry the New York Times any more than it worries Leaf, Hecker or “peace activist” Christine Ahn. Evidently, the newspaper’s Stuart A. Thompson is now preparing to discredit Rumble contributors’ preoccupation with the “wrong” nuclear threat.

On South Korea’s Decision to Bar Christine Ahn’s Entry — B.R. Myers

Putin is Hitler. You’d have to be a right-wing extremist to want peace with his Empire of Evil. The top priority for our democracies is to stop the Putin-lover, along with the homophobe and racist, from hiding behind archaic laws protecting “free speech.” Fuck their freedoms! Entry visas can and indeed must be denied to all far-right troublemakers. (Good on yer, Australia.)

If that sounds stilted, I confess: I’ve been a reader for so long, and taught so many Russian students, I’m having trouble getting into the proper spirit. But give me time. Man is the creature who can get used to everything, as Dosto-, uh, as somebody once said.

Here’s what puzzles me. Why are Blob-friendly media and human rights groups like Amnesty International so angry at South Korea for not allowing in Christine Ahn, America’s most prominent North Korea sympathizer? (Lawrence Peck abounds in relevant information and quotations, if you’re interested.)

Why does calling for dialogue with Pyongyang make Ahn (of Women Cross DMZ) a “pacifist” or “peace activist,” when calling for dialogue with Moscow makes Victor Orbán a stooge of Russia?

Why does denial of Ahn’s entry signal “democratic backsliding,” as Gloria Steinem says, when censoring Russia-sympathetic speech in the West is thought vital for protecting democracy?

Is it really because “tensions on the Korean Peninsula are running dangerously high,” as Women Cross DMZ claims? Aren’t they running much higher in Europe? And aren’t thousands of North Koreans now fighting with Russian troops against Ukraine, that embodiment of liberal-democratic values?

Don’t tell me our woke left is still giving North Korea bonus points for revolutionary pretensions. After all, this is the regime whose propaganda apparatus called Obama (in 2014) “the spitting image of a monkey in an African jungle… a mongrel of indeterminate bloodline.” As for LGBTQ issues, here (from a propaganda story) is an exchange between a captured Yankee and a North Korean soldier:

“Captain, sir, homosexuality is how I fulfill myself as a person. Since it does no harm to your esteemed government or esteemed nation, it is unfair for Jonathan and me to be prevented from doing something that is part of our private life.”

[The soldier’s response:] “This is the territory of our republic, where people enjoy lives befitting human beings. On this soil, none of that sort of behavior will be tolerated.”

[From Chŏn In-gwang, “P’yŏngyang-ŭi nunbora,” 2007.] 

No country is more strongly opposed to everything the globalist West stands for than North Korea. So what gives? Why do people like George Soros donate to Women Cross DMZ, and what is Steinem, the CIA’s favorite feminist, doing in this pro-North group? I’m sure there’s a reasonable explanation, but until I get it, I’ll stick to my assertion (see the post below) that the Blob harbors an intriguing soft spot for the most authoritarian state in the “authoritarian bloc.” Yes, even now.

 

UPDATE: Ahn and the State Dept: 10 November 2024:

Now, if an American known for fiery condemnations of US imperialism, demands for the withdrawal of US troops, and expressions of sympathy for a country fighting Ukraine were barred from entering Poland, the last institution to which that person would turn for help would be the US State Department.

And anyone those people would be less likely to help under such circumstances is hard to imagine.

But according to Korean Quarterly (hat-tip to Lawrence Peck):

“Along with the Women Cross DMZ attorney, Ahn said she immediately got in touch with the State Department, which will try to obtain a formal justification from the South Korean consulate on why she was barred from entering South Korea.”

See what I mean?