The North Korean nuclear dance has sometimes been perceived as a type of harmless parochial hoedown.... But with every new spin around the floor, the dance gets more serious.
There are few events in geopolitics so metronomically dependable you could dance to them, but the North Korean nuclear situation is one of them.
It's a military exercise cha cha cha and a nuclear testing cha cha cha.
It's a tightening sanctions cha cha cha and a "Death To America!" cha cha cha.
Still, as reliable as this dance has been throughout the years (I myself have been talking about it for a very long time), there is the sense that it is starting to accelerate. And while an errant drummer who speeds up a song might be responsible for nothing more than a few bumps or bruises on the dance floor, the escalation of the nuclear dance is altogether more dangerous.
The latest steps toward the nuclear cliff took place on Monday when North Korea fired four ballistic missiles into the Sea of Japan. The missiles, which landed in Japan's declared exclusive economic zone and put the country on its highest state of alert, are not believed to be intercontinental, but the North Korean government has boasted that it is ready to test-fire an ICBM "at any time, at any place," perhaps even this year. Given that North Korea is still technically at war with South Korea (and their co-belligerents, the UN and the US), and given that an ICBM is one half of the key to delivering a nuclear payload to the west coast of the United States (nuclear miniaturization being the other half), this is not an insignificant threat.
Worse, this latest whirl around the dance floor comes amid a flurry of worrying developments:
On Saturday it was revealed that the Pentagon has been engaged in covert cyberwarfare with North Korea for at least three years, tasked with sabotaging the country's missile tests.
On Monday North Korean UN Ambassador Ja Song Nam warned the Security Council that this "may go over to an actual war, and, consequently, the situation on the Korean Peninsula is again inching to the brink of a nuclear war."
Also on Monday the first elements of the US' highly contentious Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense system were deployed in South Korea this week.
The latter development is a perfect example of how the North Korean situation really could spiral into war, and not necessarily a war involving North Korea. The THAAD anti-missile system is being done under cover of the threat from North Korea, but both Russia and China know full well that it is equally aimed at them. Although anti-missile systems are presented to the public as being solely defensive in nature, military planners know that the ability to deter missile systems is a key requirement for an offensive military gambit.
As Victor Ozerov, chair of Russia’s Federal Defense and Security Committee, told reporters on Tuesday: "This is yet another provocation against Russia[…] Under the guise of a North Korean threat, they want if not to close the ring around Russia, then at least to besiege it from the west and the east."
Scariest of all is how easy it is for the rumors, speculation, and unconfirmed reports that travel through the newswires in the wake of every such event inevitably result in a race to the bottom as the fake news establishment media tries to scare the public into clicking on their sensational headlines. It is positively frightening how quickly North Korea's "unidentified projectile" became a "nuclear missile" in the imaginations of the mainstream headline writers.
The North Korean nuclear dance has sometimes been perceived as a type of harmless parochial hoedown. After all, it's just those crazy North Koreans with their wacky dictator threatening the world's greatest superpower with their firecrackers and peashooters. But with every new spin around the floor, the dance gets more serious. North Korea's technological capabilities improve, relations between NATO and China/Russia worsen, and the margin for human error grows. Suddenly the world is dancing on a powder keg, and the military contractors who have been milking this situation for everything it's worth have no incentive to bring the evening to a close.