North
Korea's latest missile test has driven South Korea to seek US protection
After
North Korea tested a ballistic missile on the weekend, worried nations
searched for new ways to respond to an old fear – the fear that the rogue
nation will one day have a nuclear bomb and a missile capable
of delivering it.
And the most
worried country found one. The front-line target state, South Korea,
whose president is denounced by Pyongyang as a "rabid dog" and
an "old prostitute", announced that it has decided to formally
start talks with its great ally, the US, to install a missile defence shield.
This may
sound like a basic precaution and a bit obvious for a country that
lives at close quarters with perhaps the most dangerously erratic nation
on earth. But while South Korea has been attracted to this idea for years,
it kept dithering for fear that it would upset its big neighbour and
trading partner, China. Which it will. Big time.
For
comparative purposes, recall what happened when the US did something
similar in Eastern Europe. When the US said in 2007 that it would deploy a
missile defence system in Poland and the Czech Republic, it created a
fundamental rupture with Russia.
Russia's
Vladimir Putin threatened a nuclear strike on Poland. He suspended all
co-operation with the US alliance bloc in Europe, NATO. And he set in
train the events which culminated in the annexation of Crimea, the
invasion of Ukraine and the shooting down of MH17 by Russian-backed
Ukrainian rebels.
Why is it so
momentous to install a missile defence system? Because it will defang the
Russian bear. It will make Russian missiles a less potent threat and
upset the balance of mutually assured destruction in the event of a
nuclear war.
It will
embolden the East Europeans to take a harder line in dealings with Russia.
And it will diminish Russia as a danger. Which is why Putin resorted to
other measures to make Russia more dangerous again.
In the case
of South Korea, Beijing has warned it publicly, repeatedly, against doing
any such thing. But now North Korea has pushed Seoul too far.
The UN
Security Council has explicitly forbidden Pyongyang from testing ballistic
missiles, so the North Koreans claimed their weekend launch was the
harmless deployment of a satellite. Absolutely no one buys this. Provoked
one time too many, Washington and Seoul announced they would seek to
deploy a Terminal High-Altitude Air Defence system "at the earliest
possible date". The system is to be operated by US forces.
China will
be upset "because it believes that the system is not designed to stop
North Korean weapons but Chinese weapons", says a professor
of international security at the University of NSW, Alan Dupont.
"There's
some substance to the Chinese concern," says Dupont,
"because THAAD could be used to partially nullify Chinese ballistic
missiles."
It was,
nonetheless, the right decision for South Korea's President
Park Geun-Hye "South Korea has no alternative given the domestic
political pressure. The North Korean capability is steadily improving and
THAAD is the only game in town" for countering it, says Dupont.
"The Chinese will be pissed off at the North Koreans."
Indeed.
Their supposed friend and ally in Pyongyang, the baby-faced Kim Jong-un,
has, in effect, invited the US to bring a missile defence shield onto the
Asian mainland for the first time. The US has already deployed a missile
defence system in Japan at Tokyo's request. And it has installed another
on the American Pacific island of Guam, a major US base.
Now that the
US has been invited to deploy the system in Seoul as well, it will not
only diminish the potency of any Chinese missile threat to South Korea. It
will also provoke other countries in the region to consider doing the
same, Australia among them.
Four lessons
stand out. First, it's an object lesson for China in why it should
restrain its rogue ally. Out of its own self-interest, China should have
done more to check North Korea. By allowing Pyongyang to enlarge
itself as a danger to its neighbours, China has given the US a strategic
opportunity to improve its relations with Seoul. South Korea is a
major power of North-East Asia and a country that has been showing signs
of moving out of the US sphere of influence and into the Chinese. This
helps cement it into the US sphere.
Second, it
is an object lesson to China about why it should be more restrained
itself. The Korean episode is an example of what happens to regional
nations who feel their security to be under threat – they turn to the US
for protection. The more the Chinese push other countries around with
their aggressive island-building and territory-grabbing tactics in the
South China Sea, the more incentive those countries will have to seek
American protection.
Third, it's
a reminder to other countries in the Asia-Pacific region that the US may
be a diminished superpower, but it's still a superpower. It can still be a
uniquely valuable partner to countries in fear of their neighbours.
Fourth, as
countries weigh their future security choices between China and
America, a defining difference is that China is a country with some pretty
unpalatable allies, whereas the US is at the centre of an entire system of
alliances. It's a system much bigger than the sum of its parts.
And, as
Australia takes delivery of its air warfare destroyer ships in the next
few years, Canberra will have the option of doing what the South Koreans
are now doing.
The Aegis
missile systems on the Australian ships will allow Canberra to put
Australia into a US missile defence system too. As North Korea's missiles,
already capable of reaching Singapore, extend their range, it's an idea
that will be increasingly attractive to any Australian government.
Peter Hartcher is the international editor Sydney Morning
Herald Illustration: John
Shakespeare
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