Early Tuesday morning, North Korea provocatively flew a missile over Japan’s Hokkaido.
Launched from a location near the capital of Pyongyang, the missile
splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, east of the northern Japanese
island. Upon launch, Japan’s authorities advised residents to reach
shelter.
The missile’s main target, however, appeared to
be far away on the other side of the Pacific. That target would be the
credibility of President Donald Trump and that of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.
Tuesday’s
launch is considered belligerent because of the overflight of Japan.
The North has in the past launched rockets over the island nation, in
2009, 2012, and 2016, but the last time a North Korean missile flew over
Japan was in 1998.
The
launch of what appeared to be an intermediate-range missile capped off
an extraordinary in-your-face media blast from Pyongyang.
Trust
the Norks to make their adversaries seem naïve and perhaps just a
little foolish. Last Tuesday, both Trump and Tillerson took victory
laps. The Secretary of State, after noting that Pyongyang had not done
anything provocative since the August 5 adoption of Security Council
Resolution 2371, said the North Koreans had “demonstrated some level of restraint that we have not seen in the past.”
“Perhaps,” he said at the time, “we’re seeing a pathway to, sometime in the near future, to having some dialogue.”
Trump, for his part, was just as prematurely optimistic. On that same day, at his now famous off-script rally in Phoenix, the president bragged
about his North Korea policy. “Kim Jong Un, I respect the fact that I
believe he is starting to respect us,” he said. “Maybe something
positive can come about.”
On Saturday, something “came about,” but it was hardly
positive from the Trump administration’s perspective. North Korea on
that day fired a salvo of three short-range missiles. One blew up on
launch, and the other two traveled about 155 miles before splashing down
west of Japan.
Trump and Tillerson should have known
that the lull would be only short-lived. North Korea always does
something provocative during the Ulchi Freedom Guardian exercises, the
computer-simulation drills between the American and South Korean
militaries. The drills this year began August 21 and are scheduled to
end the 31st.
In short, the North Koreans were bound to embarrass the president and his not-ready-for-the-world-stage Secretary of State.
If
the North Koreans were not having enough fun, they decided to further
humiliate Trump. “The invincible naval forces are united in their
feelings that they will bury the entirety of the U.S. under water if the
U.S. brings in the cloud of war of aggression on this soil,” taunted Rodong Sinmun,
the newspaper of the ruling Workers’ Party of Korea, a day before the
American leader was scheduled to leave for Texas to comfort victims
reeling from the flooding and devastation of Hurricane Harvey.
Washington, Seoul, and Tokyo immediately requested
an emergency Security Council meeting to consider further measures
against Pyongyang. The last set of sanctions, the seventh, have been
correctly called the most stringent, but they still permit the North
Koreans to retain significant streams of revenues from exports. As
America’s U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley has said, the Kim regime uses its
export revenue not for its people but for its weapons programs.
Up to now, the Trump administration has been content in
sending only signals to Pyongyang with, for instance, the weak measures
of Resolution 2371, and the symbolic Tuesday sanctions imposed on 16
Chinese, Russian, and Singaporean individuals and entities.With
Tuesday’s launch, Kim Jong Un has once again shown that he cannot be
brought to his senses. It looks, therefore, time to bring his regime to
its knees, maybe not yet with force but with crippling sanctions. The
Saturday and Tuesday launches look like the lever for Trump and
Tillerson to regain the initiative by putting in place the economic
measures, like an embargo, to completely deny Kim the resources he uses
for the most dangerous weapons program on earth.
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