BRAVO: NEW MAJORITY MAKES CONGRESSIONAL OVERSIGHT ON NORTH KOREA DEAL THE FIRST ORDER OF BUSINESS

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(Washington, D.C.): Tomorrow, the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee will hold what amounts to the first
hearing by the new congressional majority. The specific
focus of this hearing will be to review the terms and
implications of the Clinton Administration’s hastily
consummated and fatally flawed pre-election agreement
with North Korea. As important, however, will be the
backdrop for this Committee review: President
Clinton’s serious mismanagement of the foreign policy
portfolio and its likely repercussions.

To be sure, the hearing will be run by the outgoing
Democratic chairman and his staff. As a result, the
questioning about the damage done to vital U.S. interests
by the North Korean deal — which is of a piece with the
Clinton Administration’s wheeling-and-dealing with
despots from Beijing to Belgrade — may be less pointed
than it will be after the 104th Congress is sworn in.
Even so, the Foreign Relations Committee’s decision to
take up the North Korean deal at the first possible
opportunity suggests that the Administration must already
reckon with the new reality: The executive branch
can no longer assume that Congress will rubber-stamp its
dubious international initiatives, that it will passively
acquiesce in diplomatic faits accomplis and
dutifully agree to pay whatever bills come due as a
result.

What the Hearing Should Examine

In recent months, the Center for Security Policy has
repeatedly warned about the alarming strategic
implications of North Korea’s determination to acquire
nuclear weapons and the ballistic missiles with which to
deliver them.(1)
It has also identified a number of critically flawed
aspects of the Clinton Administration’s deal with
Pyongyang. It respectfully suggests that these concerns
should be examined with care in the course of tomorrow’s
hearing. Specifically, the following issues are among
those that ought to be reviewed with Ambassador Robert
Gallucci, who negotiated the agreement with North Korea,
and with the other, non-government witnesses:

  • Precisely how many billions of dollars
    has the United States taxpayer been committed to
    providing up front to North Korea —
    funds that will unquestionably constitute life
    support for its repressive communist regime?
    The
    price tag should reflect the total not only for
    the two new 1,000 megawatt nuclear power
    plants
    promised under this deal
    (estimated to be worth $4 billion by themselves);
    it should also take into account the cost of the nuclear
    fuel
    for those reactors (estimated to
    have a value of $2 billion), ten years
    worth of oil
    (easily hundreds of
    millions more), and the cost of upgrading North
    Korea’s obsolete power grid so
    as to avoid a catastrophic overload when the new
    reactors are plugged into it (perhaps another
    billion or more).
  • Why has President Clinton formally
    pledged that he would try to ensure the U.S. will
    pick up the whole tab for these goodies if our
    Allies (e.g., Japan, South Korea, the Europeans,
    etc.) refuse to go along?
  • What will be the strategic and monetary
    value to Pyongyang of easing — to say nothing of
    ending — U.S. trade restrictions against North
    Korea?
    At a minimum, this will provide
    questionable new hard currency revenue streams
    for the North. Official encouragement for Western
    investment there will doubtless be accompanied,
    at least over time, with OPIC insurance,
    multilateral lending and other inducements that
    will also entail costs to the U.S. taxpayer. Have
    these costs been estimated?
  • What are the benefits to the U.S. and its
    Pacific Allies of offering the early
    establishment of bilateral diplomatic relations
    — a step that will also have the effect of
    legitimizing the North Korean regime and of
    facilitating its rehabilitation as a candidate
    for assistance from international financial
    institutions?
  • Is the Administration, in making all
    these concessions long before it can be
    established that North Korea really is out of the
    nuclear weapons business, actually expecting that
    the Kim dynasty will shortly collapse — taking
    with it the threat of nuclear terrorism and
    aggression from the North?
    If this is
    indeed the Clinton Administration’s plan, it is
    hard to imagine a more counterproductive strategy
    since the effect of this agreement
    will be to prop up, perpetuate and empower that
    regime
    .
  • Does the Clinton Administration
    appreciate that the nuclear reactors it proposes
    to provided to North Korea are not
    immune to proliferation?
    In fact, those
    1,000 megawatt reactors can produce much more
    recoverable plutonium than does North Korea’s
    present, 5 megawatt reactor. Secretary of Energy
    Hazel O’Leary recently recklessly declassified
    information that establishes that the by-products
    of such reactors can be utilized to make nuclear
    devices. This is certainly true if one is content
    with using such materials for terroristic
    purposes — an activity in which the North
    Koreans have long indulged — such as laying down
    deadly radioactive contamination on populations
    or territory.
  • How is it that Secretary Gallucci seems
    so indifferent to the size of the nuclear arsenal
    North Korea has already amassed?
    On 18
    October, he said on the MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour
    that he did not believe that, in the course
    of the previous 16-months of negotiating with the
    North Koreans
    , he had ever inquired
    whether they had acquired nuclear weapons.
    Indeed, the Clinton Administration seems fixedly
    disinterested in this point, perhaps because it
    highlights Mr. Clinton’s complete abandonment of
    his previous position that the North must not be
    allowed to obtain any nuclear weapons.
  • It is predictable that the inspections
    contemplated by this agreement — even if
    permitted to occur and even if competently
    performed by the International Atomic Energy
    Agency (or, alternatively, a special team
    commissioned by the U.N. Security Council) —
    will prove so circumscribed, so tardy and so
    incomplete as to render them of minimal value in
    terms of monitoring North Korea’s future
    bomb-building activities
    . They certainly
    will not give high confidence assessments about
    the number of nuclear weapons North Korea will
    actually produce from the weapons grade material
    it has already diverted.
  • What precisely is the nature of the
    constraints imposed on North Korea by this
    agreement — if any — with respect to preventing
    Pyongyang’s future exports of dangerous military
    hardware, including but not limited to ballistic
    missiles and nuclear weapons?
    A failure
    to achieve effective constraints in this area
    would be particularly worrisome given Pyongyang’s
    well-established willingness to sell anything in
    its arsenal to anyone with cash.
  • How easily can the North Koreans reverse
    course even if they (against all odds) actually
    do comply with the agreement?
    It would
    appear that this option will remain available for
    years since the agreement allows them merely to
    “seal” but otherwise leave intact their
    nuclear weapons infrastructure (reactors,
    reprocessing facility, cooling ponds). It is hard
    to comprehend why dismantling of such
    facilities was not linked directly to the
    initiation of Western oil supplies.
  • What will be the effect of this agreement
    on already strained U.S. defense ties with
    critical regional allies?
    Although Japan
    and South Korea have been reluctantly implicated
    in it, both appreciate the folly of the Clinton
    approach. Their probable response will be to
    reduce further their reliance on Washington for
    security — perhaps by seeking their own nuclear
    weapons capabilities — while hedging their bets
    through trade and other ties with North Korea in
    ways that will greatly inhibit Western freedom of
    action when it becomes necessary to deal
    militarily with Pyongyang down the road.

The Bottom Line

The Center for Security Policy welcomes tomorrow’s
Foreign Relations Committee hearing as the first evidence
of what will surely be more serious future congressional
oversight of the Clinton conduct of U.S. foreign and
defense policy. It is long overdue.

Had such oversight been conducted more rigorously
heretofore, a number of costly — and portentous —
Clinton missteps might have been avoided or swiftly
corrected (e.g., the commitment of U.S. forces to an
open-ended nation-building commitment in Haiti; the
impoverishment of Ukraine in order to compel its
denuclearization; the wholesale transfer of strategically
sensitive technologies to communist China; the
perpetuation of the deplorable arms embargo against the
Bosnian government; etc.) At the very least, it would
seem that this new reality assures that the Clinton
Administration will have to think twice in the future
about ignoring, or cavalierly preempting, congressional
opposition to such executive branch initiatives as the
deployment of American troops on the Golan Heights or
negotiating away U.S. options to deploy effective theater
(to say nothing of strategic) missile defenses.

– 30 –

1. See for example the Center’s Decision
Briefs
entitled, Whistling Past
Gallucci Gulch: Appeasement Will Assure — Not Prevent —
Conflict With Pyongyang
( href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=94-D_103″>No. 94-D 103, 19 October 1994), Meanwhile,
Back In North Korea: Defector’s Warnings A Reminder That
Nuclear Crisis Is Intensifying
( href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=94-D_80″>No. 94-D 80, 28 July 1994) and Chamberlain-Carter-Clinton:
The North Korean Nuclear Problem Won’t Be Solved By More
Talking
(No. 94-D 61,
16 June 1994).

Center for Security Policy

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