Big talk for a little fat boy
By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
A boy
with his first gun can be as deadly as a
sharpshooter with a fruit salad of ribbons across
his chest, and President Obama and his generals are
treating North Korean crackpottery as a genuine
threat to peace and good order. But they’re within
their rights to get a kick out of Kim Jong-un’s
little-boy tantrums, too.
Kim,
even with a large inventory of rusty sabers to
rattle, at 29 or 30 still looks like a boy in his
first pair of long pants, and with all their wealth
and pelf the Kims, grandfather, father and son,
should find either a better barber or a bigger bowl.
It’s hard for anyone to take seriously a kid with a
haircut that bad. (When the satirical newspaper
Onion called him “the sexiest man alive,” thousands
cheered.)
The
North Koreans have a talent for making deadly
mischief, blowing up civilian airliners, capturing
gunboats, shelling South Korean offshore islands and
once, in 1983, dispatching agents to Burma to plant
three bombs that exploded and killed 17 visiting
South Koreans, including 4 cabinet ministers. Their
actual target, the president of South Korea, might
have been killed, too, but his motorcade was delayed
in traffic and he missed laying a ceremonial wreath.
So the little dictator with the jarhead haircut is
probably capable of starting a war.
Just
what’s in the mind of the North Koreans is hard for
outsiders to fathom. Tall tales and wild threats –
Pyongyang regularly vows to turn the south into “a
sea of fire” – seem to be the work of geeks and
nuts, but the terror administered from the top is so
pervasive that even officials who know better are
afraid to let on they’re skeptical of the nine
foolish things they have to repeat before breakfast.
When Kim’s father, the late Kim Jong-il, picked up
golf clubs for the first time, he shot 11
holes-in-one. His spokesman said he hoped to get the
other seven holes on the next outing. Kim was not
the first golfer to take an occasional mulligan and
turn in an exaggerated scorecard, and no one in
Pyongyang thought the story fanciful.
Tall
tales, brash bloviation and idiotic insults, in
fact, are Pyongyang’s only exports. Several years
ago I was invited to take several editors and
correspondents from The Washington Times to
Pyongyang for an 11-day tour. We were entertained at
a lavish dinner, with several choice cuts of mystery
meat, on our last night in town. When it was time
for the ritual exchange of toasts, our host, the
foreign minister, delivered a 25-minute diatribe
against the United States, laced with insult,
contempt, disdain, calumny, scorn, insolence and
taunt. In my return toast I told them that beautiful
downtown Pyongyang reminded us of a popular American
television program, “The Twilight Zone.” Then, since
our hosts had abandoned the ritual of mutual toasts
of the heads of state, I asked our hosts to join me
in lifting a glass only “to the president of the
United States.”
Bloviation or not, the rest of the world has to
listen to Kim and act accordingly. Even the Chinese,
the only friend Pyongyang has in the region, are
telling him to put a sock in it. So are the
Russians, who rarely miss an opportunity to needle
whoever’s in the White House. Kim and his generals
have a missile, the Taepodong, which would be
capable of reaching Alaska and Hawaii, though it has
a short and shaky history in flight tests. The
Taepodong probably couldn’t reach Los Angeles,
Washington or Austin, Texas, which Kim has said are
his first targets of choice.
His
missiles probably pack little punch, but Kim has
other weapons that do. He has more than a million
men under arms, with, according to Washington's
estimates, 27 infantry divisions, 3,500 battle
tanks, 10,000 heavy artillery pieces, 7,500 mortars,
10,000 surface to air missiles and 11,000
air-defense guns. His air force consists 605 combat
aircraft, equipped mostly with old Russian MiGs, and
the navy can go to sea with several hundred small
ships of varying size. Everything is deployed close
to the demilitarized zone, and Seoul is duly nervous
to be within artillery range.
Kim Jong-un
The
south has a smaller inventory of nearly everything,
but it nearly all works, with no shortage of spare
parts and no worries about fuel. The north has few
spare parts for its aging machines, and a scarcity
of fuel. Best of all, it has America on call. To
make this point, the Pentagon dispatched two F-22
Raptor stealth fighters to South Korea over the
weekend. These are the most advanced fighter planes
in the world, shaped like boomerangs with a profile
dark and sinister against a cloudy sky, enough to
make a boy playing with guns think twice about
shooting out streetlights.
Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington
Times.