Will Kim Jong Un Give Up North Korea’s Nukes? History Says No

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If U.S. President Donald Trump presses Kim Jong Un to give up his nuclear arsenal when they meet, heā€™ll be asking the North Korean leader to surrender more than a half centuryā€™s labor.
North Korea has as many as 60 nuclear weapons, an achievement spanning three generations of Kims. Theyā€™ve repeatedly chosen the bomb as the best guarantee of survival despite decades of negotiations, international sanctions and threats of war.

Kim Jong Un looks at a metal casing with two bulges in North Korea.
Source: KCNA/AFP via Getty Images

Nuclear weapons have also become central to the regimeā€™s identity — and its propaganda efforts. North Koreaā€™s status as a ā€œnuclear stateā€ is enshrined in its constitution, and Kim recently built monuments to commemorate last yearā€™s tests of intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of reaching the U.S.
That history is why arms-control experts urge caution as Kim expresses a willingness to discuss ā€œdenuclearizationā€ during an unprecedented summit with Trump in May or June. Giving up nuclear weapons is more than just a tactical choice: It would signal a fundamental change in how one of the worldā€™s longest ruling dynasties maintains power.
ā€œWithout the bomb, North Korea is Albania,ā€ said Ralph Cossa, president of the Center for Strategic and International Studiesā€™ Pacific Forum. ā€œNo one would take it seriously. It could still threaten Seoul, but certainly not much beyond the peninsula.ā€
Here are some key moments in North Koreaā€™s nuclear quest.

1950s: U.S. Nukes Arrive

The threat of nuclear war loomed over the Korean Peninsula from the conflictā€™s start in 1950, five years after U.S. subdued neighboring Japan with a pair of atomic blasts. While the 1953 armistice ended hostilities, U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower later deployed nuclear weapons to South Korea. Kim Il Sung, North Koreaā€™s founder, sought a nuclear weapon from the Soviet Union.

Kim Il Sung in 1966.
Source: Three Lions/Getty Images

1960s: Soviet Help

Eisenhowerā€™s move fueled a regional scramble for nuclear technology, with the superpowers aiding less-developed states. Soviet physicists and engineers helped Kim Il Sung build the Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center in the 1960s, which would produce the fissile material for North Koreaā€™s first bomb tests decades later.

A satellite image showing Yongbyon nuclear complex in 1994.
Source: AFP via Getty Images

1970s: Self-Reliance

A confluence of events — severe drought, surging oil prices and U.S.-Soviet non-proliferation talks — encouraged Kim Il Sung to accelerate domestic reactor development in the 1970s. The power plants fit with his guiding philosophy of Juche — often translated as ā€œself-relianceā€ — as sources of both electricity and waste that could be processed into weapons-grade plutonium.

Construction site for nuclear reactors in Kumho, North Korea, in 2002.
Source: Getty Images

1980s: Peace Hopes

North Korea raised hopes that it may abandon nuclear weapons after the Soviets convinced it to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1985. Those expectations soon faded after U.S. intelligence analysts viewing satellite photos of the expanded Yongbyon complex concluded that Kim Il Sung was in the early stages of building a bomb.

Kim Il-sung visits Krasnoyarsk, USSR, in 1984.
Source: TASS via Getty Images

1990s: U.S. Nukes Leave

U.S. President George H.W. Bush recalled nuclear weapons from South Korea and other sites as the Cold War ended, creating new space for talks. Bill Clintonā€™s administration signed an agreement with North Korea in 1994 that would see Pyongyang freeze work on its nuclear weapons program in return for reactors that couldnā€™t be used for proliferation. The deal broke down after the regime launched a missile over Japan in 1998 (North Korea says it carried a satellite).

Missiles on display at the North Korean Peopleā€™s forcesā€™ 60th anniversary parade in Pyongyang in 1992.
Source: AFP via Getty Images

2000s: Axis of Evil

President George W. Bush placed North Korea alongside Iran and Iraq in his ā€œAxis of Evil.ā€ Kim Jong Il — the founderā€™s son — eventually agreed to abandon ā€œall nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs.ā€ But talks on implementing the deal broke down and Pyongyang resumed weapons tests, detonating its first atomic bomb in 2006. Kim Jong Il walked away from talks for good in 2009 and tested his second bomb soon after.

A North Korea missile is seen before its launch in 2009.
Source: KCNA via AP

2010s: The Dictatorā€™s Fall

President Barack Obamaā€™s moves to help to oust Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, who had surrendered his nuclear weapons, reaffirmed North Koreaā€™s resolve to accelerate its program. Kim Jong Un, who took power two months after Qaddafiā€™s death, stepped up bomb and missile testing, and declared in November he could strike the U.S. with a nuclear weapon. Trump, meanwhile, tightened sanctions and threatened ā€œfire and furyā€ to stop him.

Kim Jong-Un inspecting the successful test-fire of the intercontinental ballistic missile Hwasong-14 in 2017.
Source: KCNA/AFP via Getty Images

Now: Unprecedented Meeting

Kim opened the door to talks with South Korea in an annual New Yearā€™s Day speech, and a few months later Trump made a surprise decision to meet him — a request U.S. presidents had denied for decades. Many analysts are skeptical that Trump can convince Kim to finally give up his nuclear weapons and forge a new identity.

Kim Jong-Un, left, inspects a ground-to-ground medium long-range strategic ballistic rocket Hwasong-12.
Source: KCNA/AFP via Getty Images

ā€œThey donā€™t want to see all their impressive achievements go down the drain,ā€ said Andrei Lankov, a historian at Kookmin University in Seoul who once studied in Pyongyang. ā€œIf they surrender nuclear weapons, they will sign their own death warrant.ā€
Source: Bloomberg
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