With his comprehensive approach and gracious style, Gordon Chang is renowned for his incisive analyses and commentary. He lived and worked in Shanghai as Counsel to the American law firm Paul Weiss, and earlier in Hong Kong as Partner in the international law firm Baker & McKenzie. He has briefed the United States CIA, Pentagon and State Department on security developments and he shared this assessment with me this week: "North Korea has three launchers--theTaepodong-2, the KN-08, and KN-14--that can hit the lower 48 states. The better view is that the North cannot mate a nuclear warhead to them, but that is only a matter of about three years. The North Koreans have already put a nuke on top of their intermediate-range Nodong.
Beijing could rein in North Korea, but Chinese leaders do not want to do so because they view America as their main strategic rival. They find Kim Jong Un's antics useful in keeping us and our allies off balance.
We could force Beijing into being helpful--by, for example, imposing secondary sanctions on Chinese banks and enterprises--but so far there have been only tentative moves to do so. The U.S. sanctions on Dandong Hongxiang industrial, imposed last month, show attitudes in the American capital are changing. They are changing because an unstable Kim Jong Un in control of the world's most destructive weapons is presenting American policymakers with little choice."
N.B. Gordon Chang will be presenting The New Nuclear Politics: China, Iran and North Korea, at the Election Night 2016 Security Summit, 80 Minutes Around the World: Security Briefings for the Next American President, in Westport, CT, on November 8th.
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