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	<title>건강과 대안 &#187; 황금낙하산(Golden Parachute)</title>
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		<title>[반전/평화] , “제2의 한국전쟁은 핵전쟁 될 것”</title>
		<link>http://www.chsc.or.kr/?post_type=reference&#038;p=3875</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Apr 2013 18:35:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>건강과대안</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[반전·평화·민주주의]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[반전]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[북한 위협]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[북핵]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[제2 한국전쟁]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[평화]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[포린어페어스]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[한반도 위기]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[핵전쟁]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[황금낙하산(Golden Parachute)]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[“제2의 한국전쟁은 핵전쟁 될 것”한겨레 등록 : 2013.04.03 14:24 수정 : 2013.04.03 15:05 “북 전력 약해서 핵 사용할것”“지도부 중국 망명 ‘황금낙하산’ 만들어야”한반도 정세가 계속 악화되면서 미국 내에선 한반도에서 [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><H3>“제2의 한국전쟁은 핵전쟁 될 것”</H3><SPAN>한겨레 등록 : 2013.04.03 14:24</SPAN> <SPAN>수정 : 2013.04.03 15:05<BR></SPAN><BR><br />
<H4><포린어페어스> “북 전력 약해서 핵 사용할것”<BR>“지도부 중국 망명 ‘황금낙하산’ 만들어야”</H4>한반도 정세가 계속 악화되면서 미국 내에선 한반도에서 전쟁이 일어난다면 어떻게 될지를 예측하는 가상 시나리오들이 부쩍 늘고 있다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>2일(현지시각) 외교전문지 <포린어페어스> 인터넷판에는 한반도에서 전쟁이 발발한다면 결국 핵전쟁으로 이어질 가능성이 높다는 내용의 기고가 실렸다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>미국의 외교·안보 전문가들인 키어 리버 조지타운대 교수와 다릴 프레스 다트머스대 교수는 ‘다음번 한국전쟁’이란 제목의 글에서 “미국 정부는 북한 정권이 생존을 위해 핵무기를 사용하는 바보 같은 짓은 하지 않을 것이라고 주장하고 있지만 핵전쟁 위험은 결코 먼 얘기가 아니다”고 주장했다. 이들은 “북한의 최근 위협은 허풍일 수 있지만 현재의 위기상황은 재래식 분쟁의 가능성을 높였다”면서 “어떤 형태로든 일단 북한과 재래식 전쟁이 발발한다면 이는 핵전쟁으로 갈 가능성이 있다”고 지적했다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>이들은 한반도의 핵전쟁 가능성은 한·미 양국의 군 전력이 약해서가 아니라 오히려 강하기 때문이라고 설명한 뒤, “전쟁이 발발하면 훈련, 무기 측면에서 뒤처지는 북한군이 한·미 연합군에 대적할 수 없다는 사실이 드러날 것”이라면서 결국 북한은 핵을 선택할 수밖에 없을 것으로 내다봤다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>특히 이들은 한·미 연합군이 북진하면 북한 정권의 핵심부는 이라크의 사담 후세인, 리비아의 무하마르 가다피 등과 같은 운명을 피하기 위해 중국으로 망명하길 원하겠지만 최근 중국의 태도로 봐서는 어려울 것이라면서 정전을 위한 ‘마지막 카드’로 핵위기를 조장할 것이라고 설명했다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>이들은 북대서양조약기구(나토·NATO)도 과거 바르샤바조약기구에 대한 재래식 전력의 열세를 극복하기 위한 수단으로 핵을 사용한 전례가 있다고 전했다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>또 최근 미국이 리비아, 이라크 등에서 전쟁을 수행하면서 보인 전형적인 방식은 탱크, 전투기, 군함 등을 공격하기에 앞서 핵심 권력층, 군 지휘부, 통신시설 등을 겨냥하는 것이었다면서 이런 전략은 매우 효과적인 것으로 증명됐다고 평가했다. 그러나 이런 전략이 핵으로 무장한 적을 대상으로 쓰여진다면 충돌을 더 악화시키는 방향으로 작용할 것이라고 지적했다. 이들은 상황 악화를 방지하기 위해서는 북한 지도자들이 생존할 수 있다는 것을 확신시킬 수 있어야 한다면서 정권을 고립시키기 위한 공격은 상황을 악화시킨다고 지적했다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>이들은 한반도 핵전쟁을 피하기 위해서는 우선 한·미 양국이 현재의 위기상황에서 전쟁을 피하기 위해 가능한 모든 노력을 다해야 한다고 조언했다. 또 한반도 전쟁 전략을 마련할 때도 극히 제한적인 군사 작전을 추진해야 하며,중국을 상대로 북한의 지도부와 가족들이 피신할 수 있는 이른바 ‘황금낙하산(Golden Parachute)’을 만들어줄 것을 요청해야 한다고 덧붙였다.<br />
<P align=justify></P>워싱턴/박현 특파원 <A href="mailto:hyun21@hani.co.kr">hyun21@hani.co.kr</A><BR><BR>==========================================<BR><BR><br />
<H1 class=title>The Next Korean War</H1><!--googleoff: index--><!-- /#content-header --><br />
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<DIV class="field-item odd">Conflict With North Korea Could Go Nuclear &#8212; But Washington Can Reduce the Risk </DIV></DIV></DIV><br />
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<DIV class="field-item odd"><A href="http://www.foreignaffairs.com/author/keir-a-lieber" jQuery1364975641171="19">Keir A. Lieber</A> and <A href="http://www.foreignaffairs.com/author/daryl-g-press" jQuery1364975641171="20">Daryl G. Press</A> </DIV></DIV></DIV><br />
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<DIV class="field-item odd"><SPAN class=date-display-single>April 1, 2013</SPAN> <BR><BR><A href="http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/139091/keir-a-lieber-and-daryl-g-press/the-next-korean-war">http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/139091/keir-a-lieber-and-daryl-g-press/the-next-korean-war</A><BR><BR>================<BR><BR><br />
<DIV class=sumarry-link-wrap><A class=article-summary-link href="http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/139091/keir-a-lieber-and-daryl-g-press/the-next-korean-war?page=2#" jQuery1364976355656="21">Article Summary and Author Biography</A> <BR></DIV><br />
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<P>As North Korea issues increasingly over-the-top threats, officials in Washington have sought to reassure the public and U.S. allies. But the risk of nuclear war on the Korean Peninsula is far from remote&#8211;and the United States should adjust its military planning accordingly.</P></SPAN><SPAN class="field field-type-text field-field-article-bio"><br />
<P>KEIR A. LIEBER is an Associate Professor in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service and Department of Government at Georgetown University.<BR>DARYL G. PRESS is an Associate Professor in the Government Department at Dartmouth College and Coordinator of War and Peace Studies at Dartmouth’s John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding.</P></SPAN></DIV>===============<BR><BR><br />
<P><EM><IMG style="VERTICAL-ALIGN: top" src="http://www.foreignaffairs.com/files/images/Press411.jpg">A nuclear test in Nevada, 1953 (Courtesy U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration)</EM></P><br />
<P>As North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un issues increasingly over-the-top threats &#8212; including intimations that he might launch nuclear strikes against the United States &#8212; officials in Washington have sought to reassure the public and U.S. allies. North Korea, they say, may initiate cyberattacks or other limited provocations, but the leaders in Pyongyang wish to survive, so they are highly unlikely to do anything as foolhardy as using nuclear weapons.</P><br />
<P>Despite those assurances, however, the risk of nuclear war with North Korea is far from remote. Although Pyongyang’s tired threats are probably bluster, the current crisis has substantially increased the risk of a conventional conflict &#8212; and any conventional war with North Korea is likely to go nuclear. Washington should continue its efforts to prevent war on the Korean Peninsula. But equally important, it must rapidly take steps &#8212; including re-evaluating U.S. war plans &#8212; to dampen the risks of nuclear escalation if conventional war erupts.</P><br />
<P>Ironically, the risk of North Korean nuclear war stems not from weakness on the part of the United States and South Korea but from their strength. If war erupted, the North Korean army, short on training and armed with decrepit equipment, would prove no match for the U.S.–South Korean Combined Forces Command. Make no mistake, Seoul would suffer some damage, but a conventional war would be a rout, and CFC forces would quickly cross the border and head north.</P><br />
<DIV class=pullquote>The risk of nuclear war with North Korea is far from remote. </DIV><br />
<P>At that point, North Korea’s inner circle would face a grave decision: how to avoid the terrible fates of such defeated leaders as Saddam Hussein and Muammar al-Qaddafi. Kim, his family, and his cronies could try to escape to China and plead for a comfortable, lifelong sanctuary there &#8212; an increasingly dim prospect given Beijing’s growing frustration with Kim’s regime. Pyongyang’s only other option would be to try to force a cease-fire by playing its only trump card: nuclear escalation.<br />
<P>It’s impossible to know how exactly Kim might employ his nuclear arsenal to stop the CFC from marching to Pyongyang. But the effectiveness of his strategy would not depend on what North Korea initially destroyed, such as a South Korean port or a U.S. airbase in Japan. The key to coercion is the hostage that is still alive: half a dozen South Korean or Japanese cities, which Kim could threaten to attack unless the CFC accepted a cease-fire.</P><br />
<P>This strategy, planning to use nuclear escalation to stalemate a militarily superior foe, is not far-fetched. In fact, it was NATO’s strategy for most of the Cold War. Back then, when the alliance felt outgunned by the massive conventional forces of the Warsaw Pact, NATO planned to use nuclear weapons coercively to thwart a major conventional attack. Today, both Pakistan and Russia rely on that same strategy to deal with the overwhelming conventional threats that they face.&nbsp;Experts too easily dismiss the notion that North Korea’s rulers might deliberately escalate a conventional conflict, but if their choice is between escalation and a noose, it is unclear why they would be less ruthless than those who once devised plans to defend NATO.</P><br />
<P>Even if the United States and South Korea anticipated the danger of marching to Pyongyang and adopted limited objectives in a war, nuclear escalation would still be likely. That’s because the style of conventional war that the United States has mastered over the past two decades is highly escalatory.</P><br />
<P>The core of U.S. conventional military strategy, refined during recent wars, is to incapacitate the enemy by disabling its central nervous system &#8212; its ability to understand what is happening on the battlefield, make decisions, and control its forces. Against Serbia, Libya, and Iraq (twice), the key targets in the first days of conflict were not enemy tanks, ships, or planes but leadership bunkers, military command sites, and means of communication. This new American way of war has been enormously effective. But if directed against a nuclear-armed opponent, it would pressure the enemy to escalate a conflict.</P><br />
<P>Preventing escalation in the midst of a war would require convincing North Korea’s leaders that they would survive, and so attacks designed to isolate and blind the regime would be counterproductive. Once airstrikes began pummeling leadership bunkers and severing communication links, the Kim regime would have no way of discerning how minimalist or maximalist the CFC’s objectives were. It would face powerful incentives to make the CFC attacks stop immediately &#8212; a job for which nuclear weapons are well suited.</P><br />
<P>The sliver of good news is that North Korea may not yet have the capabilities to carry out this strategy. It may not be able to tip its ballistic missiles with a nuclear payload, and its other means of delivering nuclear weapons remain limited. Given the rate of progress, however, if the regime does not have these capabilities today, it will soon.</P><br />
<P>What can be done? First, Washington and Seoul must make every effort to avoid war in the current crisis. The United States is undoubtedly (and appropriately) quietly reinforcing U.S. forces in the region, and the CFC is understandably considering what red lines might trigger a pre-emptive conventional strike. But the fact that war with North Korea probably means nuclear war should temper any consideration of limited pre-emptive strikes. Pre-emption means war, and war means nuclear.<BR><BR></P><br />
<P>Second, U.S. and South Korean planners need to develop truly limited conventional military options for the Peninsula &#8212; limited not merely in their objectives but also in terms of the military operations they unleash. Perhaps the greatest danger of all is if the U.S. president and the South Korean president incorrectly believe that they have limited military options available; they and their senior advisers may not fully appreciate that those supposedly limited options in fact entail hundreds of airstrikes against high-value targets, such as leadership, command-and-control systems, and perhaps even against nuclear-weapons sites.</P><br />
<P>Third, American and South Korean leaders should urge China to develop “golden parachute” plans for the North Korean leadership and their families. Leaders in Pyongyang will keep their nuclear weapons holstered during a war only if they believe that they and their families have a safe and secure future somewhere. In the past, China has been understandably reluctant to hold official talks with the United States about facilitating the demise of its ally. But the prospect of nuclear war next door could induce Beijing to take more direct steps, including preparing an escape plan now and revealing it to Kim as soon as a first shot is fired.</P><br />
<P>More broadly, the strategic dilemma Washington faces today extends beyond the current standoff with North Korea: how to run a network of global alliances when nuclear weapons allow enemies to nullify the United States’ superior military might. American officials used to extol the ability of nuclear weapons to stalemate powerful enemies.&nbsp;Now the shoe is on the other foot. There is every reason to believe that North Korea has adopted NATO’s old strategy. As the current standoff is making frighteningly clear, deterring escalation, especially during conventional wars, is not last century’s concern; it may be the single toughest strategic problem confronting the United States for decades to come.</P><br />
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