Posted on 05/22/2010 5:06:23 PM PDT by Jet Jaguar
SEOUL, South Korea As South Korea made its case last week that North Korea was behind the sinking of a South Korean patrol ship, it left at least one question unanswered: Why?
What motive did the North have for the brazen torpedo attack March 26 in the Yellow Sea near the maritime border between the two Koreas, and what does it have to gain besides another round of world condemnation and sanctions?
While South Korean officials deliberate on how to respond to the attack, experts interviewed by Stars and Stripes offered a range of possible North Korean motives from simple payback to another in a long string of incidents the impoverished and reclusive communist nation has used to gain international attention and concessions.
The sinking of the Cheonan, which killed 46 of 104 sailors aboard, was the latest of several North Korean provocations near the disputed maritime border, including an exchange of artillery fire between the two Koreas in January.
A more serious exchange of fire between North and South Korean patrol boats occurred in November.
No South Koreans were injured, but according to media reports, a North Korean officer and three sailors are believed to have died and a North Korean vessel was badly damaged.
They really took a beating, said Daniel Pinkston, a North Korea expert with the International Crisis Group. From North Koreas perspective, they probably look at the situation now as being even. They settled the score.
A multinational, South Korean-led team of investigators, citing overwhelming evidence, concluded Thursday that a North Korean midget submarine torpedoed the ship. North Korea has steadfastly denied involvement, and has threatened that any retaliation from the South, including pushing for United Nations sanctions, will be viewed as an act of war.
Bruce Bechtol, an international relations professor at the Marine Corps Command and Staff College in Quantico, Va., and author of Red Rogue: The Persistent Challenge of North Korea, said the attack on the Cheonan was North Koreas latest attempt to put changing the western maritime boundary on the negotiating table.
The Northern Limit Line, a jagged border that separates fishing waters between the two countries, was established by the United Nations after the 1950-53 Korean War but has never been recognized by North Korea.
The communist nation claims the boundary is much farther south, and views any movement north of its recognized line as a threat to its sovereignty, Bechtol said.
Former South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, who advocated a liberal sunshine policy of cooperation with the North, promised to redraw the line. But his successor, conservative Lee Myung-bak, has refused to do it, Bechtol said.
The North Koreans were very close to getting what they wanted through Roh, and that just didnt happen, he said. Now theyre trying to get what they want.
Bruce Klinger, an expert on northeast Asia with the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank in Washington, said the attack also fits North Koreas pattern of raising international tensions to get concessions from its opponents.
North Korea feels that it has additional leverage when its being paid attention to as well as when tensions are higher, he said. It also tends to lash out either when it feels weak or it perceives the outside world perceives it as weak. A Korean adage is the barking of a wounded dog.
North Korea may have also felt it could get away with such an attack because neither the U.S. nor South Korea has ever retaliated militarily to the Norths provocations since the war because of a fear of an all-out war, Klinger said.
There were no military responses when North Korean agents attempted to assassinate former South Korean President Chun Doo-Hwan in Myanmar in 1983, or when a bomb that agents placed on a Korea Air jet in 1987 exploded killing 135 people on a flight from the Middle East, according to Klinger.
Other motives for the Cheonan attack could be that North Korea was trying to divert attention from its nuclear weapons program, or ailing North Korean leader Kim Jong Il was trying to demonstrate he is still in control of his regime, said Nicholas Szechenyi, an expert on northeast Asia at the bipartisan Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
Scott Snyder, director of the Center for U.S.-Korea Policy at the Asia Foundation in Washington summed up the attack as a cry for attention and respect, as well as an act of revenge.
I believe the North Koreans took actions really strictly in an inter-Korean context, he said. I think they were trying to send a message to the South Korean administration: Dont take us for granted, and dont think you can ignore us.
Hillarys “nasty remarks” had to be the most boring, un-energetic, could-really-care-less-to-be-here, condemnations I think I have ever seen. Ooooh I bet Kim is shaking in his boots.
In fairness(?) to HRC, she probably knows whatever she says is just empty rhetoric and cant get excited about it.
Testing how the US will respond, Probably posturing for more aid..
Their motive? To prove that they could get away with it as long as Obama is in office. They did it to show China exactly how weak this American President really is.
No. South Korea and we should not take the norks “for granted.” We should initiate a partial evacuation from Seoul with no stated reason.Military forces should be repositioned with some moving away from the DMZ and other units moving up to the DMZ, etc.
Brinksmanship. They cause a crisis, make it seem like a very costly conflict is about to kick off... Then negotiate with weak, naive western âleaders,â get what they want, ignore their part of the bargain. Repeat. Business as usual for NK.
the bullies “pals” (they ones standing around him who usually are the first to throw out taunts) take their cue from the “pusher” to gauge how far they can go with their own aggressiveness. Something similar is happening with Iran as Syria, Hezb’allah, and Hamas prepare for their strikes.
To continue the analogy, at least Israel realizes the (current) US administration is a paper tiger and will not back up its “little buddy” ... pretty obvious as 0 is stuck on his “c’mon guys cant we work out this annihilation thing?”
How about their "Dear Leader" is a moron?
People are starving there. These incidents are done to take the peoples minds off of how wretched their existence is. NK provokes and their people are mobilized to prepare for an attack by evil outsiders. You have to wonder how much the citizens even know about how miserable they are compared to the south.
Response: Hostility.
vaudine
A simple probe intended to diagnose courage.
I helped treat the crew of the USS Pueblo including CDR Lloyd Bucher at the Naval Hospital, San Diego after their repatriation. These guys had been beaten mercilessly with rifle butts.
North Korea may have also felt it could get away with such an attack because neither the U.S. nor South Korea has ever retaliated militarily to the Norths provocations since the war because of a fear of an all-out war, Klinger said.
Imagining an expert on Korea named Klinger....
Dear leader #1 was in China to ask permission for another torpedo attack.
Or
Since every one assumes the crew was NK, suppose it was not?
Since NK is selling this type of sub to the Iranians, could it be that the crew was Iranian training to take on the US Navy?
Just asking.
“Lawsuit
Former Pueblo crewmembers William Thomas Massie, Dunnie Richard Tuck, Donald Raymond McClarren and Lloyd Bucher sued the North Korean government for the abuse they suffered at its hands during their captivity. North Korea did not respond to the suit. In December 2008, U.S. District Judge Henry H. Kennedy, Jr. in Washington DC awarded the plaintiffs $65 million in damages, calling their treatment by North Korea “extensive and shocking.”[22] The plaintiffs, as of October 2009, were attempting to collect the judgment from North Korean assets frozen by the US government.[23]”
This was ordered by the chicoms. They smell fear and feel this is the time to move on SK and Taiwan.
I started reading a book recently, the Sociopath next door.
This is very common sociopathic behavior, they take large risks and do not take responsibility or their actions. We need to deal with them as such.
If I am correct, and Kim is a Sociopath, then he has no conscience, and this act is probably driven by a need to see people jump like shrimp on a hot pan.
Pick a fight....
Declare war...
Surrender without any incoming shots fired...
Petition for post-war reparations ...$$$
**************
Just a thought...
(They are about THAT kwazy!)...
JMHO....
VERY WELL WRITTEN...you must read a lot to get these perspectives.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.