Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
And what made you think a mere nuclear test would instigate a US military response? All members of the Six-Party Talks, save North Korea itself, benefit from an economically-intertwined but politically-quiescent region. The dollar value of trade amongst the countries are in the tens of billions; so, no, the geopolitical dynamic of the Korean peninsular is anything but black-and-white despite the seemingly-bipolar nature of the club.
And hence why nobody expects the Chinese or the Russians to move a finger if Mr. Kim gets himself into a quagmire he can't handle.
You are right(1) The Americans leave SK
(2) N and S sign a peace treaty
(3) the two are allowed to choose their own path of development with NO interference by any third country
Simple really.
But the Americans, out of its own evil interests, won't let the above happen.
Have you forgotten about what happened to Iraq? Syria? Libya? Hey i'm just saying they didn't do anything yet the US went on rampage
The assumption that the geopolitical fate of NK lies with either recklessly testing nuclear armaments or a US-led invasion, with no room for middle ground, is unreasonable and a rash oversimplification of US foreign policy.
(1) The Americans leave SK
(2) N and S sign a peace treaty
(3) the two are allowed to choose their own path of development with NO interference by any third country
Simple really.
But the Americans, out of its own evil interests, won't let the above happen.
That wasn't my point. The assumption that the geopolitical fate of NK lies with either recklessly testing nuclear armaments or a US-led invasion, with no room for middle ground, is unreasonable and a rash oversimplification of US foreign policy.
In fact it is so simple. Check out their history of invading other countries, without looking for the famous grey areas, on phony grounds.
You are apparently over-emphasizing their strategic capacity.
If there were no China or Russia, the DPRK was up in smokes already.
The US has a history of overseas military interventions? So does China. And Persia. And Spain. And the Netherlands. Get my point?
If there were no DPRK, the US would have had no rationale, at least superficially, to station 60% of their fleet in the Pacific. But, as usual, we have strayed from the main trajectory of our discussion.
Whereas in reality:
1. The US presence in ROK is to deter DPRK. The status quo will be held until DPRK is sufficiently sensible as to eliminate any US rationale for staying there.
2. A ROK-DPRK treaty in the short run is out of the question.
3. The Chinese will very much wish to interfere with whatever government is situated south of their border.
And why was there no middle ground for Iraq, Libya ? Testing nukes is serious topic, we are talking about WMD isn't that the reason why US accused Iraq and Syria for possessing or developing them in the first place so that they can justify military actions? I think everybody can tell why the US isn't taking military actions against KIM because of the obvious reason.