World
N. Korea could be mother of all insurgencies: Expert
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il at an undisclosed location. Photo/FILE
Posted Sunday, September 5 2010 at 19:17
Quantico, Virginia, Sunday
North Korea’s regime has long defied naysayers by persevering through famines, floods and global opprobrium. But what would happen if the upcoming power transition marks the beginning of the end?
In the view of one US military strategist, a collapse of North Korea — a dirt-poor nation with an indoctrinated population and nuclear-armed military — could result in no less than the greatest world crisis in modern times.
Colonel David Maxwell, who heads the Strategic Initiatives Group at the Army’s Special Operations Command, said that the United States needed to invest more time planning for the most dire scenario, even if it does not transpire.
US troops have been stationed in South Korea since the 1950-53 war to guard against attack. A North Korean advance could easily hit densely populated Seoul, just an hour’s drive from the frontier, and would send shockwaves through economic powers Japan, China and South Korea.
“I believe a conventional attack by the North would be the worst crisis that the international community has faced since the end of World War II,” Maxwell said in a presentation at the Marines Corps University in Quantico, Virginia.
“But I think the real worst case would be regime collapse,” said Maxwell, who stressed he was speaking in a private capacity.
Questions have been rising about North Korea’s stability since Kim Jong-Il apparently suffered a debilitating stroke in 2008.
The ruling party is expected this month to anoint Kim’s youngest son as his successor, marking the hermetic regime’s second hereditary change of power. Kim Jong-Un is in his 20s and is not known to have experience in governance.
If the regime collapsed, foreign forces would likely face a major threat from insurgents whose belief in the Kim family’s philosophy of “juche” — or self-reliance — resembles religious fanaticism, Maxwell argued.
And an insurgency in North Korea would be “far more sophisticated than what exists in Iraq or Afghanistan now,” Maxwell said.
He said an insurgency could tap into North Korea’s military might. Despite its meagre economy, North Korea has more than one million standing troops — one of the largest forces in the world — along with nuclear weapons.
Maxwell recommended that the United States develop a plan to quickly engage and reassure North Koreans in the event of a regime collapse — particularly second-tier military officers who may wind up in charge of the country.
But not all Korea experts are convinced by Maxwell’s views. L. Gordon Flake, who heads the Mansfield Foundation think-tank, questioned whether average North Koreans had a “guerrilla ethos” that would survive the fall of the top leadership.




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