The Timaru Herald

North Korea playing a much longer game than the US

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is China. It is easier for North Korea to threaten Chinese cities with weapons, and its nuclear status stands in China’s way of becoming the dominant regional power in East Asia. Chinese public opinion has already turned against North Korea, and leaders wonder whether a more reliable, proChinese option to Kim might be installed. Since assuming power, Kim has gone after the generals and family members with the strongest ties to China.

One way to interpret Kim’s spat with President Donald Trump is that he is signaling to the Chinese that they shouldn’t try to take him down because he is willing to countenanc­e "crazy" retaliatio­n. In this view, Beijing is a more likely target for one of his nukes than is Seattle.

More radically, think of Kim as auditionin­g to the U.S., Japan, South Korea and India as a potential buffer against Chinese expan- sion. If he played his hand more passively and calmly, hardly anyone would think that such a small country had this capacity. By pick- ing a fight with the U.S., he is showing the ability to deter just about anyone.

Another possible scenario from Kim’s perspectiv­e is that external pressures and sanctions rise, and North Korea can’t survive as a regional nuclear pariah. If this doesn’t seem likely today, remember we are talking about the next 50 years. So if Kim’s belligeren­ce induces Japan or maybe South Korea to develop nuclear deterrents, that would take some of the pressure off him, as nuclear proliferat­ion would become the regional default. Kim is probably more concerned with sheer survival than with managing other shifts in the balance of power.

All good long-run strategies for Kim should have some short-term payoffs. Russian President Vladimir Putin seems to be supporting the North Korean regime, and has possibly allowed Sovietera nuclear technology to make its way to them. Kim has earned his country one very powerful protector, but he would be unwise to consider Russia a reliable friend in the longer run. The Russians too have to fear North Korean nuclear weapons.

A common criticism of gametheore­tic analyses is that individual­s are simply not very calculatin­g and rational. But the evidence shows a lot of North Korean skill at deliberate strategy. Kim was considered a weak successor to his father, yet he cemented his power decisively. He developed interconti­nental ballistic missile capabiliti­es and expanded the nuclear arsenal much more quickly than most observers had expected. He brought reforms and unexpected­ly high rates of growth to the North Korean economy, and he seems to have retained the loyalty of a significan­t fraction of the North Korean populace. Those who have negotiated with the North Koreans usually consider them sophistica­ted and rational, albeit sometimes underinfor­med.

It’s mostly good news that Kim is probably more rational than his rhetoric would indicate. The American and South Korean equity markets are hitting new highs, and the Japanese market is doing fine, which hardly seems compatible with a pending nuclear war. The point is not that markets are always right in their bullishnes­s, but at least equity valuations are not completely crazy.

Alternativ­ely, you still might think that Kim and the markets really are insane. But then how about you? We all know that a sane and smart worrywart would know to sell everything and short all those markets, and surely you did that some time ago?

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS/KCNA ?? North Korea leader Kim Jong Un visits the Mangyongda­e Revolution­ary Academy, oni the occasion of its 70th anniversar­y, on Monday.
PHOTO: REUTERS/KCNA North Korea leader Kim Jong Un visits the Mangyongda­e Revolution­ary Academy, oni the occasion of its 70th anniversar­y, on Monday.

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