My Take | Beijing can’t make North Korea ‘denuclearise’, Mr Blinken
- China is as likely to stop Pyongyang’s nuclear arms programme as the US is to halt its sale of weapons to Taiwan

Muammar Gaddafi died with a bayonet stuck out of his rear end. Saddam Hussein was almost completely decapitated when he was hanged because his executioners didn’t do, or didn’t know how to do, the basic but essential maths that works out the ratio between the length of the rope and the weight of the condemned. It’s true what your old teacher told you about maths being useful in all kinds of situations and professions.
Besides the commonality of their gruesome deaths, they also had something else in common: both gave up their nuclear weapons programme.
People always say no one knows what Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un is thinking. But there should be no doubt that his top and greatest priority, for himself and his nation, is not to end up like Gaddafi and Saddam. I should think he probably loves nuclear warheads more than anything else in life, and would have cuddled up to one in bed if he could - they are what help him sleep soundly at night.
This image of Kim may be worth keeping in mind for everyone - a little comic relief may help lighten up the deadly dangers of the actual situation - as Thursday will mark the 70th anniversary of the Korean war armistice. Note the term armistice, which means technically, the war has never ended.
Denuclearisation, anyone? No thank you, especially if you are a dictator. The idea that the Kim regime would give up nuclear weapons for anyone or anything is therefore absurd in the extreme. It’s in this context that I would like to discuss the latest broadside from US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who said China must help to get North Korea to denuclearise, or else. That’s probably harder for China to achieve even if it wanted to than his demand that Beijing compel Vladimir Putin to end his war in Ukraine and commit political hara-kiri.
I sometimes wonder if Blinken ever listens to what he is saying. “We believe that you have unique influence and we hope that you’ll use it to get better cooperation from North Korea,” he said about China during a discussion at the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado last week.
“But if you can’t or if you won’t, then we’re going to have to continue to take steps that aren’t directed at China but that China probably won’t like because it goes to strengthening and shoring up not only our own defences but also those of South Korea and Japan and a deepening of the work that all three of us are doing together.”
