North Korea and Nuclear Weapons

North Korea and Nuclear Weapons

Author: Sung Chull Kim

Publisher: Georgetown University Press

Published: 2017-05-01

Total Pages: 236

ISBN-13: 1626164541

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North Korea is perilously close to developing strategic nuclear weapons capable of hitting the United States and its East Asian allies. Since their first nuclear test in 2006, North Korea has struggled to perfect the required delivery systems. Kim Jong-un’s regime now appears to be close, however. Sung Chull Kim, Michael D. Cohen, and the volume contributors contend that the time to prevent North Korea from achieving this capability is virtually over; scholars and policymakers must turn their attention to how to deter a nuclear North Korea. The United States, South Korea, and Japan must also come to terms with the fact that North Korea will be able to deter them with its nuclear arsenal. How will the erratic Kim Jong-un behave when North Korea develops the capability to hit medium- and long-range targets with nuclear weapons? How will and should the United States, South Korea, Japan, and China respond, and what will this mean for regional stability in the short term and long term? The international group of authors in this volume address these questions and offer a timely analysis of the consequences of an operational North Korean nuclear capability for international security.


Meltdown

Meltdown

Author: Mike Chinoy

Publisher: St. Martin's Press

Published: 2010-03-22

Total Pages: 461

ISBN-13: 1429930233

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When George W. Bush took office in 2001, North Korea's nuclear program was frozen and Kim Jong Il had signaled he was ready to negotiate. Today, North Korea possesses as many as ten nuclear warheads, and possibly the means to provide nuclear material to rogue states or terrorist groups. How did this happen? Drawing on more than two hundred interviews with key players in Washington, Seoul, Tokyo, and Beijing, including Colin Powell, John Bolton, and ex–Korean president Kim Dae-jung, as well as insights gained during fourteen trips to Pyongyang, Mike Chinoy takes readers behind the scenes of secret diplomatic meetings, disputed intelligence reports, and Washington turf battles as well as inside the mysterious world of North Korea. Meltdown provides a wealth of new material about a previously opaque series of events that eventually led the Bush administration to abandon confrontation and pursue negotiations, and explains how the diplomatic process collapsed and produced the crisis the Obama administration confronts today.


Going Critical

Going Critical

Author: Joel S. Wit

Publisher: Brookings Inst Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 474

ISBN-13: 9780815793878

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Annotation In this book, three former U.S. officials who played key roles in the 1994 North Korean nuclear crisis trace the intense efforts that led North Korea to freezeand pledge ultimately to dismantleits dangerous plutonium production program. The story of the 1994 crisis provides important lessons for the U.S. as it grapples once again with a nuclear crisis on a peninsula that half a century ago claimed 50,000 American lives.


Kim Jong Un and the Bomb

Kim Jong Un and the Bomb

Author: Ankit Panda

Publisher:

Published: 2020

Total Pages: 417

ISBN-13: 0190060360

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Kim Jong Un and the Bomb tells the story of how North Korea-once derided in the 1970s as a "fourth-rate pipsqueak" of a country by President Richard Nixon-came to credibly threaten the American homeland with a thermonuclear bomb atop an intercontinental-range ballistic missile by November 2017.


Disarming Strangers

Disarming Strangers

Author: Leon V. Sigal

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 1999-07-01

Total Pages: 336

ISBN-13: 1400822351

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In June 1994 the United States went to the brink of war with North Korea. With economic sanctions impending, President Bill Clinton approved the dispatch of substantial reinforcements to Korea, and plans were prepared for attacking the North's nuclear weapons complex. The turning point came in an extraordinary private diplomatic initiative by former President Jimmy Carter and others to reverse the dangerous American course and open the way to a diplomatic settlement of the nuclear crisis. Few Americans know the full details behind this story or perhaps realize the devastating impact it could have had on the nation's post-Cold War foreign policy. In this lively and authoritative book, Leon Sigal offers an inside look at how the Korean nuclear crisis originated, escalated, and was ultimately defused. He begins by exploring a web of intelligence failures by the United States and intransigence within South Korea and the International Atomic Energy Agency. Sigal pays particular attention to an American mindset that prefers coercion to cooperation in dealing with aggressive nations. Drawing upon in-depth interviews with policymakers from the countries involved, he discloses the details of the buildup to confrontation, American refusal to engage in diplomatic give-and-take, the Carter mission, and the diplomatic deal of October 1994. In the post-Cold War era, the United States is less willing and able than before to expend unlimited resources abroad; as a result it will need to act less unilaterally and more in concert with other nations. What will become of an American foreign policy that prefers coercion when conciliation is more likely to serve its national interests? Using the events that nearly led the United States into a second Korean War, Sigal explores the need for policy change when it comes to addressing the challenge of nuclear proliferation and avoiding conflict with nations like Russia, Iran, and Iraq. What the Cuban missile crisis was to fifty years of superpower conflict, the North Korean nuclear crisis is to the coming era.


The North Korean Nuclear Weapons Crisis

The North Korean Nuclear Weapons Crisis

Author: J. Kim

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-05-06

Total Pages: 195

ISBN-13: 1137386061

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Jina Kim investigates how North Korea rationalized its pursuit of nuclear weapons programs for more than two decades, by exploring the dialectical development of the nuclear crisis and the obstacles generated by complex internal Korean dynamics and conflicting interests amongst the major players concerned.


Strategic Thinking about the Korean Nuclear Crisis

Strategic Thinking about the Korean Nuclear Crisis

Author: G. Rozman

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan

Published: 2011-02-11

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780230108479

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China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea have struggled to navigate between the unsettling belligerence of North Korea and the often unilateral insistence of the United States on how to proceed. This book focuses on their strategic thinking and internal debates over four stages of the crisis.


Rival Reputations

Rival Reputations

Author: Van Jackson

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2016-02-19

Total Pages: 229

ISBN-13: 1107133319

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Surveys patterns of crisis, coercion and credibility in US-North Korea relations from the 1960s through to 2010.


On the Brink

On the Brink

Author: Van Jackson

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2019

Total Pages: 251

ISBN-13: 1108473482

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Former Pentagon insider Van Jackson explores how Trump and Kim reached - and avoided - the precipice of nuclear war.