Jeffrey Lewis: North Korea's Nuclear Disappearing ActKim Jong Un has figured out that he can have his cake and eat it, too.by Jeffrey Lewis
September 10, 2018There were no major surprises in North Korea’s September 9 military parade.
Although North Korea has not yet broadcast the parade, images taken by journalists in Pyongyang show that the parade line-up was identical to the lineup seen in a satellite image taken on August 22. Contrary to some earlier prognostications, the parade on Sunday was smaller than the one in February, smaller than past parades, and did not include any nuclear-armed systems.
While there were some interesting developments among conventional systems, the only missile systems were decidedly defensive: the Kumsong-3 coastal defense cruise missile and the KN-06 surface-to-air missile. And most important these are not nuclear-armed systems.
The president immediately took to Twitter to celebrate the lack of ICBMs, citing it as a sign of North Korea’s commitment to “denuclearizationâ€â€”a term that the president and his national-security team often mistakenly use as a synonym for “disarmament.†In fact, that word means something different. The only thing North Korea denuclearized on Sunday, my friend Josh Pollack noted wryly, was Kim Il-sung Square.
Still, the decision to hold out nuclear-armed ICBMs was a decision. And that decision deserves some thought.
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https://nationalinterest.org/feature/jeffrey-lewis-north-koreas-nuclear-disappearing-act-30942