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It's as though war were creeping up slowly after we'd been shrugging off the possibilities, not always paying much attention to missile shots and military exercises, dismissing them as "just newspaper stories" that a lot of people don't bother to read.
Well, maybe all the test shots and the counter-tests are not for real, and maybe there's nothing to worry about, but weren't people in Paris and London saying much the same thing in the 1930s before Adolf Hitler turned his Nazi regime against them and plunged the world ― the Western world ― into World War II.
On the other side of the globe, in the Far East, Japan had been acting up for decades, taking over South Korea, setting up its own phony state in Manchuria, and talking up the joys of "co-prosperity" to the multitudes in the rest of Asia.
The trouble is, every time we plunge into another crisis, we get closer to a showdown that's going to be much worse than the first Korean War. Now North Korea has fired a missile that's flown further than any of its previous shots. Sure, it landed harmlessly in the northern Pacific, but its trajectory over the large northern Japanese island of Hokkaido sent the Japanese into panic mode for a few hours and inspired President Yoon Suk-yeol to issue one of his strongest denunciations of North Korea's nuclear-and-missile program.
The responses of South Korea and Japan won't bring them into a formal alliance considering the sheer impossibility of resolving all their other problems, but it does mean they may cooperate closely on North Korea.
We can expect more exercises in which U.S., South Korean and Japanese forces participate. Korea and Japan should also share intelligence on North Korea in accord with GSOMIA, the General Security of Military Information Agreement. Controversy over GSOMIA has intruded into never-ending issues between Korea and Japan, but the North's rising threat makes it more important than ever.
Increasingly, we're hearing talk about trilateral unity. A new word, "trilateralism," has entered the lingo, implying a three-sided arrangement, not quite an alliance, binding the U.S., South Korea and Japan in common cause. Kim Jong-un is doing all he can, it seems, to compel his enemies to work together.
All sides are playing with fire. South Korean and U.S. strikes on a tiny islet in the West Sea no doubt was a great way to catch Kim Jong-un's attention after his latest missile test, which also may be seen as his own way of getting noticed. Is it not possible, however, that such shows of force will turn into acts of war in which all sides are firing on one another?
War can break out in any number of ways. What if the Japanese decided to try to shoot down the next North Korean that flew over their territory or even entered Japan's Air Defense Identification Zone above the waters between North Korea and Japan? The Japanese may have every reason to fire on North Korean missiles, but might North Korea see that response as a pretext for firing missiles into, not over, Japan?
And what if Kim decided that South Korean and American bombing in the West Sea pretty close to North Korea's shores was the excuse he needed to unleash a nuclear strike in accordance with the North Korea's newly enacted law empowering the North to open a nuclear war at any sign of a threat on its territory?
Surely such speculation is pure fantasy. He wouldn't dare, would he?
Probably not, but then Korean history is full of shocks and surprises, most especially the decision of Kim's grandfather, regime and dynasty founder Kim Il-sung, to invade the South in June 1950. For that matter, who would have thought the assassination in 1914 of Archduke Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, would plunge Europe and then America into the First World War.
History doesn't work out the way national leaders, advisers and experts, soothsayers and fortune-tellers, predict. We've been worrying for years about a second Korean War, and then a wider war including Kim's friends, China's President Xi Jinping and Russia's President Vladimir Putin. Just because it hasn't happened yet doesn't mean it will never happen while Kim tries to frighten everyone with his nukes and missiles.
Donald Kirk (www.donaldkirk.com) writes from Seoul as well as Washington.