ldrews, on 2017-November-11, 10:56, said:
I would consider that a failure. Now lets look at the other side of the equation. What if North Korea successfully nuclearizes and then subsequently kills millions of people. Is this success or failure?
I would consider this deeply regrettable.
In much he same way that I would consider it regrettable if the Russians killed millions of people or the Pakistani's killed millions of people or Israeli's or the French or the Chinese.
There are many nuclear sates out there.
Deterrence has proven effective in the past.
I hope that it will continue to prove effective this time around.
Regrettably, we can't like in a world where we are perfectly safe and we don't get to gamble with the lives of hundreds of thousands of innocent people.
Note my earlier comments about Iraq.
The US was scared.
We rolled the dice.
We killed more than half a million people with almost nothing to show for it.
This destroyed our credibility on the international stage.
If we attack North Korea and something goes wrong I think that the long term consequences are significantly worse than losing an American city.
The are certainly worse than the risk of losing an American city.
At the end of the day, I don't believe that the United States can decide that we are going to risk seeing Seoul destroy to protect against a (potential) attack against Seattle or San Francisco.
I find this morally unacceptable.