Editor’s note: This commentary is by Catherine Bock of Charlotte. She is a member of the Burlington Friends Meeting and part of an advocacy group with Friends Committee on National Legislation that has been working on preventing war with North Korea since January.
[P]resident Donald Trumpโs decision to cancel the planned June 12 meeting with Kim Jong Un in Singapore is a huge mistake that increases the risk of war. The open allusions to the use of nuclear weapons by both the North Koreans and the United States are particularly concerning. This loose talk of nuclear war undermines diplomacy and reflects a careless disregard for the real cost of any military conflict on the Korean peninsula.
I urge our members of Congress, Bernie Sanders, Patrick Leahy and Peter Welch, to demand a return to the negotiating table with the full understanding: that these talks must be based on negotiations, not threats; that confidence building must begin with some give and take; and that war on the Korean peninsula is unacceptable.
Above all, Congress must now pass the legislation introduced by Sen. Christopher Murphy (S.2047) and Rep. Ro Khanna (H.R.4837) making clear that the president may not launch a preventive military strike against North Korea without explicit congressional approval.
Walking away from a meeting will not eliminate a single North Korean nuclear weapon, uranium centrifuge or plutonium production reactor.
Walking away from a meeting will do nothing to slow North Koreaโs ballistic missile development.
Walking away from a meeting will not free a single political prisoner from a labor camp, bring home to the United States the remains of a single fallen American serviceman, or permit a single long-divided family member to see her loved ones again.
Abandoning diplomacy, on the other hand, will embarrass, if not enrage, Americaโs South Korean ally, whose president just a few short weeks ago personally pledged to all Koreans that war would not return to the Korean peninsula.
Abandoning diplomacy will cause our allies in the region and in Europe to question American reliability and constancy even more than they had after the decision to renege on the Iran nuclear deal.
Abandoning diplomacy will increase the chances that misunderstanding or accident could spark a conflict killing millions.
Our nation must pursue diplomacy because the path of war is littered with false promises and worse than expected consequences.
Our nation must pursue diplomacy because only the slow, challenging, difficult work of diplomacy and peacebuilding hold a real chance of opening a way to a better tomorrow.
