Jennifer Lind has a good piece up on Foreign Affairs this week on why NK seems to regularly get away with with hijinks like last week’s rocket test (which directly contravenes UN Resolution 1874). She notes, correctly, that NK has been pulling unanswered, wild stunts like this for years – shootouts in the Yellow Sea, nuclear tests, kidnappings, etc. Further, the US particularly tends to hit back when hit. Indeed, looking at the GWoT, America’s problem is over-reaction rather than passivity. If we look at the Israelis, it’s similar. They have a well-established reputation of hitting back, hard, when provoked. So why don’t the democracies of the Six Party Talks (Korea, Japan, US) do the same here? They easily out weigh NK.
Her argument is that NK manages to deter counter-strikes through a bizarre mixture of the ‘madman theory’ (what will the loopy, hard-drinking, megalomaniacal Kim family do next? so let’s just not provoke them), regional fear of what would follow a NK implosion (après moi le déluge), and traditional nuclear deterrence (if Saddam and Gaddafi had nukes, they’d still be alive, so we’ll never give them up!).
None of that is wrong, but I think she’s missing the big factor – SK domestic politics. Lots of countries and other international actors do wacky, crazy stuff; the question is whether the target wants to counterstrike and risk escalation. So it is SK ultimately (not the US or Japan) that decides whether or not to hit back. And SK doesn’t want to, because 1) South Korean population centers are extremely vulnerable to Northern aggression, and 2) South Koreans just don’t care that much about NK anymore.
I’ve written a lot before on the issue of SK’s extreme vulnerability and how this ties the Korean military’s hands (here is the full write-up, also here; this, picked up on Lawyers, Guns, and Money, is a long discussion thread of my argument). 50% of South Korea’s population lives northwestern SK, in the extremely dense Seoul-Kyeonggi-Incheon corridor. The southern most tip of this massive agglomeration is less than 70 miles from the DMZ. The extreme demographic concentration of the Seoul area is worsening too. Busan, the second city, where I live, is shrinking, even though we are a paltry 3.5 milllion, and Incheon, the site of a super-fancy new airport, is growing. This corridor is huge, proximate, defenseless city-hostage to the North. NK does not need nuclear weapons to jeopardize these inhabitants, which is why I remain skeptical of the hawk/neocon line that NK’s nukes change the balance in big way. (Lind herself has a made a similar point.)
I have brought this point up again and again at conferences here, and I have gotten no real response. Does it make any sense to hyper-centralize a country in a direct competition with a dangerous neighbor and place the grossly overpopulated national capital just 40 miles from the border? Who thought that would be a good idea? Look at what the West Germans did. But decentralization never happens because of the cost and resistance of Seoul-based elites who like the convenience.
Remember how Cold War planners used to say that the US had an advantage over the USSR, because its many federal layers of government and widely dispersed population meant it could absorb a Soviet strike better? By contrast, because the Soviets centralized everything in Moscow, they were very vulnerable to a decapitation strike. The logic is the same here. The ROK is extremely centralized (a legacy of the Park Chung Hee dictatorship), not just politically, but in just about every way – culturally, economically, demographically. And it’s all but impossible to shield these people from a NK rocket and artillery bombardment (even non-nuclear). That Korean urbanites live in towering apartment blocks vulnerable to World Trade Center-style collapse if bombarded only worsens the vulnerability. This dramatically ties the hands of the SK government. Even if none of Lind’s three variables applied, this huge risk alone is enough to prevent SK escalation/response (as is likely the case in the foregone retaliation after the Yeonpyeong incident in 2010).
Next, Lind does not address the growing disinterest in SK for retaliation, or even otherwise engaging NK. Several Korea-based western analysts (me, Brian Myers, Brendan Howe) have made this point. In a post-Yeonpyeong analysis for the Korean National Defense University, I argued that the most likely way to end the Korean stalemate is get greater South Korean commitment to ‘win’ rather than simply manage-when-necessary-and-ignore-when-possible, today’s current ‘strategy.’ And at the Korean Institute for Defense Analysis last year, I argued for a significant effort to ‘harden’ South Korea to withstand this competition. When Brendan and I suggested raising SK defense spending, which is a paltry 2.3% of GDP, the room roundly said it’s politically impossible.
In IR lingo, SK is not really a revisionist anymore; it is a status quo power. De jure, (i.e., in its constitution), the ROK is committed to unity, but as anyone who’s lived here for just a little while can tell you, most South Koreans are genuinely frightened of NK’s collapse – not of NK, mind you, but of its collapse: the huge amount of money it will cost, the massive, generations-spanning reconstruction it will require, internal ‘refugees’ from the north decamping in southern cities, loss of the hard-won OECD lifestyle in the name of national sacrifice, etc. South Koreans would much rather buy iPhones, travel, study in the West, move to Seoul, and get a cool job with Samsung.
I see this in my students all the time. We talk about reunification in class a lot naturally. It’s an unnerving abstraction to them; they certainly don’t get fired up about it. I have never seen a Korean get passionate, angry, or intensely patriotic about unification, even though they are a very nationalistic as a people. In my experience, South Koreans get more angry and emotional over the Liancourt Rocks dispute with Japanor or the Dongbei/Mt. Baektu flap with China than over NK . Just look at the lack of interest and care shown to North Koreans who make it here (a terrible moral failing, IMO). Or, I’ve had students tell me that my discussion of the 1990s famine in NK that killed maybe half a million people was just American propaganda I picked up from the US military in Korea.
If you’re wondering if this really strange, yes, it is. North Korea has probably the worst long-term human rights record of any country in the world, yet South Koreans don’t want to talk about it. I guess a parallel is Germans under 40 years old by the mid-1980s. They too increasingly saw the inter-German border as a real border, not a temporary division. Divide a community long enough, and I guess it slowly becomes two. That’s not too surprising. It’s rather uncomfortable that outsiders, usually Americans, are the ones who seem to push the NK issue and worry about NK human rights and nutrition. I am continuously mystified and moral discomforted that NK doesn’t dominate SK politics.
But that’s how it is. And if we believe in democracy and self-determination, we have to respect Southern public opinion. We can’t get in front our own ally who will carry most of the costs if there’s a war or collapse. When I came to SK I shared the typical American hawk/neocon thinking regarding NK – on the axis of evil, the worst country on earth, run by power-mad lunatics, deserved to get punched in the face at the earliest opportunity, etc. All of that is still true of course, but the longer I live here, the more I have moderated on what that means for policy. South Koreans really don’t want a war or escalation, no matter how many times western IR and think-tank types tell them that NK is dangerous, erratic, terrifying, etc. (I’ve seen this so debate so many times here); they don’t want to risk much for regime change; they don’t want to ally with democratic Japan against communist NK and China, regardless of what structural realism and democratic peace liberalism say; SK is very vulnerable and neocon-John Boltonism looks reckless and scary to them; most don’t really believe in their hearts that their ethnic compatriots to the north will nuke them. Yes, there are demonstrations sometimes against NK, but look closely and you’ll notice that most of the demonstrations are small and the participants elderly. Washington may not like this (I don’t either), and it may feel morally uncomfortable, in that it effectively abandons North Koreans to the brutal status quo, but this is where Southern public opinion is.
So South Koreans seem increasingly comfortable letting NK go its own, bizarre way. I think this is why the conservative, anti-communist press here comes off so unhinged; they’re terrified that South Korea is effectively a status quo power now (which is true). President Lee’s post-Sunshine Policy return to confrontation is very unpopular here (even though lots of western analysts I meet here [me included] think it was a good idea to give it up). Even the conservatives in this year’s elections here are running as doves now. Lots of Koreas thought that the 2010 Cheonan sinking was a plot by the government or the even Americans, or that it illustrated the incompetence of the Lee administration; there was no post-9/11-style national outburst against NK. And a similar shrug greeted the 2010 Yeonpyeong shelling; there was no nation-wide outburst for war or even counterstrikes comparable to how, say, Americans would have responded to such an attack. In the parliamentary elections that just concluded, NK wasn’t an issue, even though the rocket launch preparation was making global news during the campaign.
I don’t think I would call this appeasement of Lind’s ‘madman.’ That would imply a level of interest, if only to duck or hide from the North, that isn’t there. Appeasement would also suggest that SK would eventually spend more on defense so that it would have more choices against the madman next time. But as Brendan noted, SK isn’t doing any of this. The military is shrinking, the defense budget is astonishingly, irresponsibly low, and there’s no effort to generate force totals with the requisite skills even close to what Lind says is needed to pacify a unified Korea. And that’s because a unified Korea isn’t really on the public radar.
To my mind, the real reason SK doesn’t respond is simple disinterest; they don’t want to make the sacrifices and run the risks. K-pop, climbing the social ladder, learning English, moving ‘up to Seoul,’ reducing the Gini-coefficient, going to school in the US, playing golf, Yuna Kim, the scandals of the Lee administration, etc. are far more common topics of conversation with my students, family, and colleagues. I am the one who brings up NK, and the answers just aren’t that passionate.
More than anything else, South Koreans just want NK to go away. The most scary implication of this is that if NK can hang on a few more decades, the South won’t even want unity.
Cross-posted on Asian Security Blog.
Except for those with family in North Korea why should South Koreans care about what happens north of the 38th parallel? I know that nationalist norms state that people who speak the same language and share a common culture should all do everything possible to live in a unified state. But, is such an approach really rational? Is it not a throw back to emotional appeals of romanticism? The history, mentality, and arguably even some aspects of culture in North Korea must be diverging considerably from South Korea so that they are becoming two different nations. I know from my experience of living in Central Asia that the local Koreans there were very different from those from South Korea. I had students from both groups. The local Koreans were very much Sovietized and even Russianized in their mentality and culture and much of what was retained of Korean culture was from the 19th century and from Hamgyong province For instance a number of Russian-Korean cafes in Bishkek served dog (a famine food when they came to Russia) and South Korean ones did not. Other than a psychological identification as Koreans in no small part due to constant Soviet reinforcement of natsionalnost in a variety of policies and racial discrimination Russian Koreans do not have much in common with South Koreans. A slower process of divergence appears to happening between the people of South and North Korea.Â
Rationally I concur, but of course highly emotional national identity doesn’t really work that way. Koreans have very distinct view of themselves as a unique people, even race (the minjeok). Until just a few years ago, Korea high school textbooks taught that Korean blood was different. (This got scrapped, in part because Korea now has a growing foreign population and intermarriage.) There is a whole genre of Korean film devoted to hyperbolically bemoaning the national division. (The best is called the ‘Brotherhood of War’ in English.) The irony I perceive is that despite all the nationalism, I don’t see much willingness to pursue unification.
Very interesting argument. Great case for path dependence re: the trajectory of development in SK. More interesting I think is the apathy re: NK in SK. On this point I have to quibble with your analogy to Germany. The quote:
“If you’re wondering if this really strange, yes, it is. North Korea has
probably the worst long-term human rights record of any country in the
world, yet South Koreans don’t want to talk about it. I guess a parallel
is Germans under 40 years old by the mid-1980s. They too increasingly
saw the inter-German border as a real border, not a temporary division.
Divide a community long enough, and I guess it slowly becomes two.”
I don’t think Germans ever really came to see themselves as two states (or were apathetic). Certainly not in the East, where the East German Gov’t failed to build a national identity. Shameless plug, I have a paper under review with Pat James (USC) on the subject. In the West, reunification was the tiger Kohl was desperate to ride safely, and he was constantly battling Genscher for pole position on the issue. That doesn’t seem to be the same thing as what you are talking about in SK…
Apologies for the typos. Trying to get out the door to the gym…no excuse though…
We should apologize, or Disqus should. It’s a shame commenters can’t edit.Â
 Turns out, you can edit your comments!
When I lived and worked in Germany in the early 90s, this seemed to be a big issue – would disinterested Wessis sacrifice for the east. Hence the passing reference.
And I gotta ask, who is that in your ID picture – the Man with No Name, Sam Peckinpah…
 The Outlaw Josey Wales, although some people who haven’t seen me in years think it is me.
“The [SK] military is shrinking, defense budget is irresponsibly low…”
And the US still has some 28,000 soldiers in the country. One might imagine the US electorate saying “if SK can’t be bothered to contribute responsibly to its own defense, **** it.” I also ran across an article re SK was supposed to reassume ‘wartime operational control’ of its forces from US in 2012 but it’s been delayed. (Military Review, May-June 2011)Â But haven’t really read the article, I confess… maybe this post will prompt me to.
That’s right; the Combined Forces Command is scheduled for elimination in 2015. It got pushed back from 2012 after the two incidents – Cheonan and Yeonpyeong – in 2010.
I agree on the free-riding threat. I mention it all the time here when discussing SK defense budgeting. But if I had to guess, South Koreans are reckoning that (neocon/DC think-tank) America is so enamoured of our ‘indispensibility’ and a US global footprint, that we’ll stay in Korea anyway (my students routinely call the US an ‘empire’). And I think that is right; if John McCain, Lindsey Graham, AEI, and all the rest won’t cut the defense budget even when deficit exceeds $1T, why would allies bother to do much? Koreans can see this.
Walt says this all the time on his blog – we don’t play hard to get enough and we look like we love managing the planet. If we’re ‘bound to lead,’ then the US foreign policy consensus for interventionist global hegemony is a signed invitation to free-ride. In Asia, the recently announced ‘pivot’ is a big, lazy signal to Japan, Korea, and Australia that they can rest easy (I’ve had people from western embassies here openly say that to my face – I couldn’t fr—– believe it), because the US navy and air force are jonesing for a peer competitor (https://asiansecurityblog.wordpress.com/2012/03/16/the-us-will-not-pivot-much-to-asia-3-we-cant-afford-it/). Bring on the overstretch!
I would be interested to know from your perch what your students think of Japan and China, i.e., in terms of being Enemy No. 1? Students in my classes and family members and friends split almost evenly between both neighbors. I think the strategic argument takes precedence over the domestic argument. North Korea is China’s buffer against Japan, which historically has seized the peninsula, to get at Manchuria and Siberia. Russia also didn’t give Kim Il-sung the green light to invade the South because he wanted Korea, but only after the U.S. made it clear Russia would have no role in Japan’s postwar development and that it would not get the Kurils for agreeing to invade durnig the last days of WW2. North Korea is patently not what China or Russia wanted, but it’s Japan’s military prowess that forces both to support the Kim regime. Good relations with South Korea is just economic gravy and a small hedge against Japan. But, in the modern era-or ever – there’s never been a reasonably strong Korea – with or without the U.S. The U.S. stays, not to deter North Korea, but to keep the pin in the regional grenade. Once North Korea goes up, it’s only a matter of time before China and Japan clash, and in that case both Koreas are toast.
There’s also another strategic argument, from Alice Miller and Richard Wich’s “Becoming Asia” that the DMZ is a fault line between China and Southeast Asia and Japan where the U.S. does have direct economic interests in the form of sea lanes and the preponderance of markets in ASEAN countries. Korea is the closest “aircraft carrier” to China now that China is pushing out into the South China Sea and Indian Ocean.
I don’t disagree with your opinion about Korean domestic attitudes. I just think Koreans are oblivious to how irrelevant their opinions still are to their own sovereignty.
‘Japanophia’ is a pathology in Korea. It activates Koreans, in my experience, far more than discussions about China or any other country. The Korean response to the mention of Dokdo or the colonial period is practically pavlovian in its bitter automaticity. In fact, I worry sometimes about just how deeply Japan seems to infuriate Koreans – to the point racism, deep loathing, and obsession. Remember the whole ‘Yuna Kim over Asada Mao = Korea defeats Japan’ thing (https://asiansecurityblog.wordpress.com/2010/03/04/kim-yu-nationalism-or-how-insecure-middle-powers-convince-themselves-of-their-relevance/)? China seems to be floating there, in the background, but I sense more fear of China from Americans (especially Americans in Korea) than I do from Koreans – which I find almost inexplicable.
 After the incident with Chinese fishermen in the Yellow Sea – ooops…West Sea – students characterized Chinese as low-class, dirty, cheap, etc. Japanese are militaristic and treacherous because of the colonial past. There’s a certain cultural respect for Japan, as if to say, “We’d like to be like them, only Korean.” But, modern Chinese are pathetic, from food to manners.It’s discussions like these when I struggle to isolate the native Korean culture from Chinese and Japanese influences.