Newsweek's list of reasons for Bush's "relatively low key" response to North Korea ignored the elephant in the room -- his ineffective policy
SUMMARY: A Newsweek article offered various reasons why the Bush administration's response to the North Korean missile tests "has been relatively low key," but completely ignored another explanation: In the words of one expert on U.S. policy toward North Korea, "they don't want to highlight the failure of American policy for the last five years."
In a July 5 "Web Exclusive" article, Newsweek senior White House correspondent Richard Wolffe and White House correspondent Holly Bailey offered various reasons why the Bush administration's response to the North Korean missile tests "has been relatively low key," but completely ignored another possible reason for the administration's playing down the missile tests and eschewing the kind of crisis rhetoric it used in the lead up to the Iraq war: because, in the words of one expert on U.S. policy toward North Korea, "they don't want to highlight the failure of American policy for the last five years."
In the July 5 article, Wolffe and Bailey offered three reasons for the Bush administration's "mild" response: the tests failed, the administration "is pushing at an open door" regarding sanctions against North Korea, and the administration is content to allow North Korea to commit diplomatic "blunders." Wolffe and Bailey cited only unnamed White House officials in offering these reasons for the administration's response.
From the July 5 article:
Why was there such a mild response to the missile launches when the administration spoke so darkly about them before they took place? One explanation is that the launches were a flop. "You have to remember that they fired six missiles of short- to medium-range that splashed into the ocean," said one senior administration official. "That technology stems from World War II. And the other longer-range missile failed 42 seconds after launch. What was Kim Jong Il thinking? Did he improve his negotiating position? Does it strike fear into the hearts of those who sit down with him?"
Another explanation for the low-key response is that the administration is pushing at an open door. Its only demand is for North Korea to return to the six-party talks -- not for sanctions to topple the regime, which China would never impose. China already supports a return to the talks, which it has hosted, and rejects what it considers to be emotional talk of sanctions at the U.N.
[...]
When it comes to the diplomacy surrounding North Korea, the Bush administration believes its biggest help comes from Pyongyang's own blunders. With enemies like North Korea, the president's aides think there's little need to go on the warpath.
At no point, however, did Wolffe and Bailey acknowledge that the Bush administration may be playing down its response to avoid scrutiny of its North Korea policy, which many analysts view as ineffective. Gordon Chang, author of Nuclear Showdown: North Korea Takes On the World (Random House, January 2006), remarked on the July 4 edition of CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 that the administration has muted its response to North Korea "because they don't want to highlight the failure of American policy for the last five years."
From the July 4 edition of CNN's Anderson Cooper 360:
KITTY PILGRIM (guest host): Now, is the response by the Bush administration, in your estimate, the right one? Is this the right way to go about it?
CHANG: Well, I think that it is right for the Bush administration not to get rattled and not to overplay it. But we have to remember that the White House wants to downplay this because they don't want to highlight the failure of American policy for the last five years. This is not just a Bush failure. This failure is evident from administration to administration. The United States is large and North Korea is small, but they always seem to be one step ahead of us.
The Boston Globe similarly reported on July 5: "Many specialists have been urging the administration to take a new approach with North Korea, given that years of tense diplomacy and almost no contact has failed to work."
In comments ignored by U.S. media but reported by the South Korean Yonhap News Agency on June 21, former State Department official David Straub called the Bush administration's policy on North Korea "incoherent in conception [and] incompetent in execution." Straub was in charge of the State Department's North Korean desk in 2002 when the United States confronted the country with evidence that it was pursuing nuclear weapons. Straub said he urged the administration at the time to pursue bilateral negotiations with Pyongyang in order to curb the development of nuclear weapons, but that "was not a top priority for the Bush administration." Further, in an interview with the Council on Foreign Relations, Graham Allison, director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University and an expert on nuclear terrorism, called the Bush administration's North Korean policy an "abject failure," given that North Korea has significantly expanded its nuclear capabilities since Bush took office:
The administration has mostly been following a policy of threaten and neglect, and then, in recent years, repaired to the six-party talks. But in terms of either positives for to get them not to do things, or minimal negatives to prevent them from doing things, the administration has not been playing a very agile hand.















The guy is insane and is starving his own people. Bush is a moron but I dont blame the administration for this. I blame China and Japan and Russia.
There is no doubt that KimJo is a ruthless tyrant and that is a drag. It'd be nice if Bush actually cared about such things as human rights but he does not as evidenced by his policies that hurt the poor.
Since North Korea has WMDs, a tyrannical ruler, and people without democracy. Just as Iraq did. And since Bush still feels that his actions in Iraq were correct then neocon logic follows that we should send in the troops. Sorry, forgot one thing that is different. North Korea has no oil.
Tough talk for a country (USA) that regularly uses food as a weapon against helpless citizens of dictators (Iraq, North Korea, and Cuba until recently). It is a ineffective policy that does nothing to pull even a dessert off the dictator's plate. It only creates malnutrition for the citizens and makes them even more dependent on the State. Our decades old embargo in Cuba hasn't hurt Castro's waistline one bit. As bad as dictators are, it is still immoral for us to contribute to the starvation of the their citizens.
Prior to Bush entering office, North Korea was opening up to the world. South Korea was holding productive talks with it, many nations were sending high level embassies and there was a feeling of hope for the future, that things would get better on the Korean peninsula.
Then Bush and the Nazi-Cons took power and immediately began making threats and trying to bully North Korea in negotiations. They really did a number on the progress that had been made. North Korea is like a scared turtle that needs to be coaxed out of it's shell. The Bushies want to stand there with a hammer ready to crack it's skull in the minute it does. No wonder North Korea went back to it's normal paranoia.
The Nazi-Cons need to feed us imaginary threats to justify their regime of fear, their warmongering, their endless and pointless "defence" spending. Actually engaging in meaningful and peaceful discussions with North Korea doesn't make Lockheed/Martin the big bucks, do it?
phrase opening it up you must mean N. Korea shooting a missile over Japan in 1998.
Crazy dictator or not we dont get to choose the leaders of other countries any more than republicans get to choose the leaders of the democratic party. We made an agreement with them which DID stop their nuclear programs then WE reneged on our part of the deal before THEY did. What they are asking for is not unreasonable. IF we want them to shut down their large reactor then we need to replace the energy they lose because of it by building the pebble nuclear reactors like we said we would and a non agression pact is also not to much to ask for. IF we are telling them they must forgo getting whatever weapons they CAN get then agreeing not to invade them is a reasonable request. Direct talks are what is called for. Japan, Russia and China are definitly NOT the problem. Bush is definitly part of the problem. He called Kim Jong Il a pygmy. What was the thinking there Exactly how was that in our best interest? The Bush threatened them in a nationally televised speech with nuclear anihilation. Once again, exactly how was that helpful? Did Bush learn everything he knows about diplomacy on the playground in third grade? Direct talks are only useful IF we actually want to solve the problem, it isnt any good for grandstanding and political one upsmanship it only might, you know, LEAD TO A SOLUTION.
are you smoking today?
Direct talks would be psychotic.
Shoving China aside is the dumbest move I have ever heard of. Which country has the most control over N. Korea?
Not only that all I have heard from you for years is how we need to build coalitions and have the world with us. Now you pump some kind of cowboy diplomacy. This is mindboggling idiocy.
You know damn well N. Korea was cheating on the 94 agreement from day one and the problem was NEVER solved. You sound like Begala announcing how the Clinton administration had N. Korea contained and the next week a missile flies straight over Japan.
First what do you mean push China away? China ENDORSES bilateral talks YOU MORON.
[link to world.kbs.co.kr]
China - deems North Korea proposal 'reasonable' / proposes U.S.-NK bilateral talks
Ah YEAH build coalitions TO INVADE COUNTRIES not to have diplomatic relations, my goodness, are you being disengenuous or are you really this stupid?
I know no such thing and niether do YOU. You only WANT that to be true to conform with your Planet Wingnut philosophy that we shouldnt negotiate with anyone just tell them what to do. What I KNOW is we have no evidence of any violations (do you know what evidence is or do you just substitute fevered imagination as a matter of course?) WE were the first to publicly violate our agreement by NOT coming across with either the pebble reactors OR the non aggression pact that was part of the agreement mostly because of warmonger alarmists like YOU
Has any administration had success in dealing with N Korea? What policy would be considered successful? As Chang said, this failure is evident from administration to administration.
wasn't perfect, but when Bush took office we had an agreement to monitor their nuclear power production and give them aid if they stopped any intention of aquiring nuclear weaponry. Bush renigged on the whole deal as soon as he was sworn in. Blame falls squarely on Bush, for going back on our word, and for abandoning any and all diplomatic solutions to this problem. It's nice to see Bush show a little humility because his administration's policies have helped create the animosity the wing nut in North Korea has for us. Good one Bushie, who should we insult into war next?
Your version of events exists only in your mind. Clinton made the mistake of trusting N Korea and they walked all over the agreement before the ink was dry.
As i said it wasn't perfect, but it was better than what we have now isn't it? I'm no Clinton cheer leader but there was diplomacy in place. It might seem cool when the president refers to a country as an axis of evil and tells them to forget any agreements the previous administration made to them. What does one expect a mad man to do?
what could possible be worse than the Clinton/Jimmy Carter deal?
We paid them 100 of millions to feed starving people and they used the money to develop WMDs because we did not implement any verification.
After negotiations with Washington in 1999, North Korea entered into a self-imposed moratorium on the testing of long-range rockets as long as missile talks continued. The Bush administration broke them off and has refused to enter into substantial bilateral negations with Pyongyang since coming into office. What is surprising is that Pyongyang has kept to its moratorium so long, even unilaterally extending it. When the present crisis erupted, it offered talks to allay Washington’s fears, but these were rejected. Nonetheless, President Bush has unabashedly complained that North Korea has not informed Washington of its plans.
North Korea didn't deceive the U.S. Bush just told them to go f*** themselves.
for backing me up.
thing.
forgot to mention that during that stretch they were enriching uranium.
To say we blew the deal by reneging on it is just laughable.
Trust but verify. Clinton and Carter should have learned that from Reagan.
WE reneged on OUR part of the deal long before the N Koreans. WE promised a non agression pact the right wing in congress demogogued it to death, WE promised to build lightwater pebble reactors to replace the energy they lost in their shutdown of their heavy water reactor then never came across with it. WE promised to get out of the way of their sunshine policy with South Korea then blocked it anyway. The version you are touting exists only in your head. Apparantly the North Koreans were silly to trust US
Lets stop being partisan. The blame is Kim Jong il and only him. Someone who starves his people while living a life of luxury is the one to blame.
At least you're not blaming this on Olbermann.
I don't really care if it appears partisan or not, I'd like my president to be accountable for his policies. How many times are we going to give Bush a free pass from his mistakes? We know Kim Jong il is a nut. We've known this. He is acting like an impetulant child. Nothing new there. But Bush is the "leader of the free world" and with that comes responsibility. So far he has been an absolute failure on every front. He has alienated our allies and strengthened our enemies resolve against us. We the people don't have any control over other world leaders. We do with our own. The blame falls squarely on Bush's shoulders. Just like 9/11. he failed to protect us and he is failing again.
But I dont think the great FDR would be able to deal with Kim Jong Il and Bush is not the leader of the free world. We have lost that during the Bush years.
Starving your own people and opressing your own people should not be rewarded.
No kidding about Bush not being the leader of the free world. But that is usually the moniker given to the president of the United States by default. It doesn't appear that Bush wants to do the hard work that it takes. This idea that talking to them is some kind of failure just puzzles me. Unfortunately in life you have to placate people you'd rather kick in the shins, that's the reality.
I think by allowing NK to dictate the terms of the talks is rewarding them. They have a vile and nasty leader.
"They have a vile and nasty leader."
Maybe we should start the talks on that common ground, then.
is making them think they are dictating the terms of the talks. I don't think bush is smart enough to pull that off. Condi actually had a deal worked out, til Cheney and Rummi screwed it up. Chicken hawk punks.
My favorite head scratcher is how during the 2004 debates he indicated our desire to have only two-party talks with North Korea, yet demanded multi-party talks for Iran. It didn't make sense then and it doesn't make sense now.
I believe Kerry said he'd entertain 2 party talks with North Korea and Bush thought that was a terrible idea. I think Bush has been consistent in his multi lateral talks with NK. It seems though that little effort in diplomacy and less chest thumping would go a long way with shutting KimJo up for a while. But that's seen as weakness in the eyes of Bush. It's a good thing they have no missles worth a damn else we'd see missles hitting the west coast.
Pyongyang’s attempted launch of a long-range rocket is certainly an attempt to push the U.S. towards bilateral negotiations aimed at removing the U.S. threat and sanctions, and securing the nuclear energy facilities promised by the Clinton administration but cancelled under Bush. Some senior members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee have recently renewed calls for bilateral talks.
Don't misconstrue the real meaning of these recent launches.
I got them backward. Bush in the debates said he wanted only multi-lateral talks with NK and bilateral talks with Iran.
I was pontificating there a little. KimJo's nuts but not that nuts. I agree the missle tests done on our independence day was a proverbial cry for help.
I just don't want people getting all worked up into a frenzy about Kim Jong-Il. North Korea is the weakest state in its region and has little international leverage.
This is not a failure "from administration to administration." This was a failure of THIS administration. As usual, the Bush apologists are trying to cover up another screwup by Dear Leader.
As has been pointed out, Clinton had a deal in place where NK promised not to fire any missiles in exchange for talks, food, and a limited nuclear energy program . . . but, as usual, Bush, with his "shoot first" style of diplomacy, peed that one away . . . and even though he called NK one of the "axis of evil" memebers, he had his eyes trained so long on the ongoing Iraq war - and the one he hopes to start in Iran - he didn't see the NK test-firings on his six.
But that's SOP for this bunch . . . we've already heard: "I don't think anyone anticipated the length and intensity of the insurgency," and, "I don't think anyone anticipated the breech of levees."
I'm just waiting to hear, "I don't think anyone anticipated that N. Korea would test-fire long-range missiles." Boy . . . funny how everything seems to catch Bush by surprise, isn't it?