The captured image shows Gen. Vincent Brooks (ret.), former commander of US Forces Korea, speaking in a webinar hosted by the Washington-based Center for Strategic & International Studies think tank on Monday, using online platform Zoom. (Washington-based Center for Strategic & International Studies think tank)
Arming South Korea with its own nuclear weapons against threats from North Korea would only help justify the North's ongoing pursuit of nuclear weapons, and thus making it impossible to denuclearize the North, a former commander of US Forces Korea said Monday.
Vincent Brooks argued the US must instead periodically reaffirm its commitment to the joint defense of South Korea and strengthen its extended nuclear deterrence for South Korea.
"My opinion is that the provision of nuclear weapons in South Korea would not be helpful," Brooks said when asked if South Korea should have its own nuclear weapons.
"I think that it would further solidify North Korea's lock in on their nuclear weapons, which stays reticent to yield in the first place, to give up in the first place. How do you then resolve the fact that South Korea has them and that South Korea was allowed to have them?" he told a webinar hosted by Washington-based think tank, the Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS).
The former Army four-star general also argued South Korea's nuclear armament would raise a number of questions from neighboring Japan and China that will only create a "more tangled Gordian knot for South Korea than it may anticipate."
Some South Koreans, as well as Americans, have occasionally voiced a need for South Korea to have its own defense capabilities to counter North Korea's seemingly growing asymmetrical weapons.
Pyongyang has so far staged six nuclear tests.
Rep. Steve Chabot (R-OH) argues that discussing the possibility of nuclearizing South Korea may force China to finally exert its influence over North Korea to denuclearize the North.
"The thing that scares the PRC, that keeps them awake at night, is a nuclear Japan or a nuclear South Korea," Chabot said in a webinar last week, referring to China by its official name, the People's Republic of China.
Brooks stressed the need for Washington to continuously reaffirm its defense commitment, as well as its extended nuclear deterrence, to South Korea.
"I would say that extended deterrence must be viewed as a reality. It's real. But it is challenging...to convince the beneficiaries of extended deterrence, who are our allies of that reality," he told the webinar.
He noted the US often invites skeptical South Koreans to board a nuclear submarine to provide the reassurance they need.
"But it doesn't become universal reassurance. It's for the few policymakers who are actually able to be exposed to it, and we hope that they would provide a contrarian voice to those who would seek to pursue their own nuclear capability in South Korea," he said.
"It must be frequently affirmed in dialogue as it was recently by Secretary (of Defense Lloyd) Austin in his recent trips to Japan and Korea, and also in actions that cause it to become more tangible and that happens through senior level military exchanges and through confidence building activities that make it very clear that it's something that our allies can count on," said Brooks.
Brooks was part of a CSIS commission that on Monday published a report on the US-South Korea alliance.
The need to strengthen the US' extended nuclear deterrence was also reiterated in the report, based on discussions between experts and scholars from both South Korea and the United States, including Kathleen Stephens, former US ambassador to South Korea, and Wendy Cutler, former acting deputy US trade representative.
"The US security commitment to South Korea forms the core of the alliance's capacity to maintain peace and stability on the peninsula in the face of the burgeoning North Korean nuclear threat. The allies should take a number of steps to strengthen the credibility of US extended deterrence," says the report.
The report makes various policy recommendations for the new US administration, including the need to further develop the Korea-US alliance for a "resilient Asia" and to expand their economic cooperation to regional and multilateral venues.
It also urges the allies to take a "principled, substantive approach" toward North Korea that it says "should not come at the expense of US allies and instead should be closely coordinated with them."
To this end, the report insisted the United States "should support North-South engagement efforts, particularly in humanitarian
areas, with the understanding that these policies will be aligned with denuclearization negotiations and with UN sanctions requirements."
Still, the experts argued US and UN Security Council sanctions on North Korea should be relaxed only in response to irreversible denuclearization measures by the North.
While the report offers recommendations for the alliance, CSIS President and CEO John Hamre said the report really reflects what the US must do to keep and further develop its alliance with South Korea.
"This is really a group of Americans that all have a deep, passionate commitment to the safety, the security, the prosperity of Korea, for us to join together to think about this next phase of this alliance," he told the webinar.
"This is not America lecturing Korea. This is America talking directly and constructively with one of our most important partners in the world, with Korea, and asking for us together to continue a dialogue because it's in both of our interests to get this, to revitalized and refresh this alliance," added Hamre. (Yonhap)