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Opinions from around the country
Two weeks ago, North Korea admitted it has been covertly
running a nuclear weapons program in defiance of a 1994
arm control accord that pledged American and European
energy in exchange for a North Korean freeze on nuclear
weapons development. That North Korean leaders spend
their already-pitiful revenues to build a nuclear program
and not to feed a population paralyzed by famine and
stagnant economic growth is a human tragedy.
North Koreas about face should come as no surprise
policymakers in Congress and in the White House
have known for a long time that Kim Jong Il, North Koreas
dictator, has had an interest in making his otherwise-crippled
nation a nuclear power.
In response to the recent revelation, the United States
has so far acted in a responsible, sober-headed and
deliberate manner. The decision to withdraw from the
1994 accord makes sense. Additionally, the United States
should use diplomatic influence to seek the support
of the international community in rebuking North Korea
and imposing even harsher economic aid sanctions on
the autarchic North Korean government, squeezing possibly
the worlds worst economy into compliance. The
United States must lead the global community in delivering
North Koreas leaders a choice either continue
building nuclear weapons or get the energy they need
to power their blackout-prone country.
American leaders should appeal especially to China,
whose economic interests in Asia are threatened by the
destabilizing actions of a nuclear despot. A unified
international response would do more to convince North
Korea to halt its nuclear program than would bombing
Yongbyon, the nuclear testing facility.
Many critics of President George W. Bushs policies
regarding Iraq have drawn comparisons with North Koreas
attempts to build nuclear weapons. The Bush administration
should treat the two problems as they are separate
problems with their own idiosyncrasies although
the situations do have some similarities. As it further
develops its policies toward Iraq and North Korea, the
administration should not let the approach in one situation
tie its hands in the other, but the president should
strive for consistency. One approach should inform the
other.
The final result of American policy should be that both
nations end their programs to create weapons of mass
destruction and that neither country has the capability
to threaten regional or global security.
This
is a staff editorial from the Chronicle at Duke University.
This editorial was distributed by U-Wire.
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