North Korea

For Kim, his regime ‘ain’t broke’ — so why fix it?

Please read this piece by my colleague Paul Roderick Gregory in The Hill The agreement that President Donald Trump is offering Kim Jong Un carries uncertain rewards and considerable risk for Kim. Trump’s offer is based on the false assumption that Kim wants a prosperous country from which he and the people of North Korea can benefit. […]

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U.S. Has Leverage in Dealings with Iran and North Korea

Victor Davis Hanson // National Review America and our allies have several ways to deter the rogue nations. There has been a lot of misinformation about both getting out of the so-called Iran deal and getting into a new North Korean agreement. The two situations may be connected, but not in the way we are

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Revolution and Worse to Come

Victor Davis Hanson // National Review When legal bloodhounds and baying critics fail to take out Trump, what’s next? The Resistance wants Trump’s head — on the chopping block. On the domestic and foreign fronts, the Trump administration has prompted economic growth and restored U.S. deterrence. Polls show increased consumer confidence, and in some, Trump

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Trump Is Cutting Old Gordian Knots

Victor Davis Hanson // National Review The proverbial knot of Gordium was impossible to untie. Anyone clever enough to untie it would supposedly become the king of Asia. Many princes tried; all failed. When Alexander the Great arrived, he was challenged to unravel the impossible knot. Instead, he pulled out his sword and cut through

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Our Long History of Misjudging North Korea

Victor Davis Hanson // National Review There’s a lot to learn from seventy years of failure to stop the Kim regimes’ aggression. North Korea has befuddled the United States and its Asian allies ever since North Korean leader Kim Il-sung launched the invasion of South Korea in June 1950. Prior to the attack, the United

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Who’s Really Winning the North Korea Standoff?

Victor Davis Hanson // National Review There have been wild reports that the United States is considering a “bloody nose” preemptive attack of some sort on North Korea’s nuclear arsenal. Such rumors are unlikely to prove true. Preemptive attacks usually are based on the idea that things will so worsen that hitting first is the

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Will Nuclear North Korea Survive 2018?

by Victor Davis Hanson// National Review   Given several rapidly developing geopolitical factors, North Korea may look much different by the end of the new year.   For good or evil, we may see radical changes in North Korea in 2018.   The beefed-up United Nations sanctions by midyear could lead to widespread North Korean

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Don’t Forget Middle East Madness

by Victor Davis Hanson// National Review   Thanks to the Iran deal, the mullahs can buy nearly all the weapons they need.   There is currently a real Asian pivot as the president completes one of the longest presidential tours of Asia in memory. Three carrier battle groups are in the West Pacific.   America

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Who Gets to Have Nuclear Weapons — and Why?

By Victor Davis Hanson// National Review   The rules used to be controlled by two big powers, but not anymore.   Given North Korea’s nuclear lunacy, what exactly are the rules, formal or implicit, about which nations may have nuclear weapons and which may not?   It is complicated.   In the free-for-all environment of

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North Korea Knowns and Unknowns

by Victor Davis Hanson// National Review   We are in the middle, not at the end, of a long North Korean crisis.   No one really knows all that much about North Korea’s nuclear or conventional military capability or its strategic agenda. Are its nuclear missiles reliably lethal, are they as long-ranged and accurate as

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