USA-North Korea Relations, What Would USA Do to Deal With Problem of North Korea’s Nuclear Weapons?
By Ergul Haliscelik, Policy And Politics International Perspective Paper, H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management, Carnegie Mellon University, Spring 2006
North Korea has a centralized government under the rigid control of the communist Korean Workers' Party (KWP), to which all government officials belong.[i] U.S.-North Korea relations developed primarily during the Korean War, but in recent years have been largely defined by the United States' suspicions regarding North Korea's nuclear programs, and North Korea's perception of an imminent U.S. attack. North Korea claims to possess nuclear weapons, and is widely believed to have a substantial arsenal of chemical weapons, deliverable by artillery against South Korea.[ii] Different presidents have dealt with North Korea in different ways.
Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, the 42nd and 43rd presidents respectively also tried at the beginning of their tenure as president to ignore the brewing problems in North Korea. Their decisions in dealing with North Korea would help to define their early reputations as foreign policy makers. Many similarities can be seen, however, between how Clinton started dealing with North Korea and how Bush started out dealing with North Korea.[iii]
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http://www.hazine.org.tr/cv/ehaliscelik.php
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