Given the impermeability of the regime in North Korea, it is difficult to know whether the leader, Kim Jong-Un, is of sound mind or otherwise. There appears to be an emerging consensus that he is dangerous but not clinically insane. He pulled back from a direct strike on Guam and instead menaced Japan that is hamstrung by any number of treaties and heavily dependent on the US for help in a crisis. He was not going to risk a dent in the Trumpian pride that might trigger a response beyond the merely rhetorical. North Korean hatred of Japan is almost as visceral as that of the US, and there is reportedly greater public support inside North Korea for a strike against Japan than there is for a hit on America.
China may be aghast but unlikely to do anything to destabilise the regime in North Korea; and looks to Syria and Libya as examples of the chaos that can ensue when strong men are challenged and in the case of Libya toppled to catastrophic consequences. Carrying a big stick and talking softly did not work for Bush or Obama but ultimately President Trump will have to tread the same path having been outplayed — for now — by his equal when it comes to pulling cunning stunts.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 16th, 2017.
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