ID | 142086 |
Title Proper | Neoconservative approach to North Korea |
Other Title Information | its prospects under the next U.S. administration |
Language | ENG |
Author | Lee, Alex Soohoon ; Kim, Sung-han |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Peace through strength, regime change to democracy, and preemptive strikes are known to be neoconservative policies which are based on such values as hegemonic stability, democratic peace and war as a necessary evil. If a Republican candidate wins office in January 2017, the new U.S. administration will undertake a bottomup-review of the North Korea policy. The key variable will be whether North Korea returns to the dialogue or conducts another long-range missile test and/or nuclear test before the new U.S. administration comes in. If the long-range missile test makes a big advance by confirming North Korea’s capability of reaching the U.S. mainland and if the nuclear test turns out to be a success of miniaturizing nuclear warheads that can be placed on the top of ICBMs, the new U.S. administration will take it as a game changer. This kind of strategic game changer could revive neoconservatism that has been ostensibly dead in the U.S. security community and it could be applied to North Korea. |
`In' analytical Note | Korean Journal of Defence Analysis Vol. 27, No.4; Dec 2015: p.435-452 |
Journal Source | Korean Journal of Defence Analysis Vol: 27 No 4 |
Key Words | Human Rights ; North Korea ; Neoconservatism ; Regime Change ; Republican |