GannonFan wrote:CID1990 wrote: Remember that China wants and needs a friendly buffer on their southern border with NK. Losing that is unacceptable to them, so they won't let Kim precipitate the end of his own regime. They'll do it on their own terms first
I didn't understand this part - why does China really care if North Korea is friendly to them or not? Surely they're not worried about invasion - no one's going to attack China in this day and age. I understand the loss of face if a North Korean regime was anti-China. Are they worried about not being able to secure the border and Chinese would flee to North Korea? It doesn't seem all that hard for them to secure the border and would there really be a mass movement of people if it was possible?
That's because China's psyche is different from ours.
When the Korean War occurred, China badly needed a secure ally on their southern border, given that US forces were in Korea, and then after the ceasefire elected to stay.
In those years remember that China's relationship with the USSR was very tense, and if NK had been defeated and then reunited with the south, China would have had the USSR to the north and a US proxy to the south.
The calculus has changed somewhat, but old habits die hard. We have done the same thing since the USSR broke up- we have continued to operate around the world as if Russia was still a problem in terms of the NATO perspective.
Consider the hissy fit Beijing has been having over our THAAD deployment... they dont want us having a radar that can peer into China- which is exactly why they dont want a US ally on their border.
China views North Korea as a petulant little brother- one they would rather be without. They aren't really allies in the traditional sense. But China feeds and tolerates the Kims because they believe they need them to keep us off their doorstep. It is classic "sphere of influence" strategy and the Chinese are stuck in that paradigm.
If China thinks we can be provoked into attacking Kim, then they will be VERY nervous- possibly to the point that they either "persuade" Kim to knock it off, or they will take him out themselves, occupy the country, and set up a puppet. They also could find a way to finesse a deal that eliminates our presence in Korea in return for a reunification, but that's far fetched.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk