Asian Defense News: (Reuters) - Policy blunders and an economic crunch have put North Korean leader Kim Jong-il into one of the riskiest periods of his iron rule, which could make him turn even more aggressive in his dealings with the outside world.
NORTH KOREA
But even if he chooses to resort once again to scare tactics to try to boost his bargaining power, he lacks a game-changing ace to play that would seriously rattle the international community or spook markets long used to his grandstanding.
Unless he is prepared to sail dangerously close to provoking a suicidal war -- and most experts firmly believe he is not -- then the most he can do is demonstrate incremental advances in the destructive capability of his armory or boost weapons sales to other countries at odds with the United States.
He is quite capable of provoking annoyance and concern, analysts say, but much less able to generate the kind of alarm that would cause a serious reassessment of the risks facing governments and financial markets in a region that includes the powerful economies of China, Japan and South Korea.
In fact, a signal of reconciliation may be his first step by ending a more than year-long boycott of international nuclear disarmament-for-aid talks, possibly within the next month.
If talks break down, as they have at every previous juncture, then Kim may well return to military grandstanding in the hope of forcing help from a nervous outside world and, in the process, bolstering allegiance from his million-strong army whose welfare he has enshrined in the constitution at the top of society.
ANOTHER NUCLEAR TEST?
North Korea, which Kim's family established 60 years ago, is even poorer since he took power in 1994. It is reeling under the loss of international aid and the impact of U.N. sanctions.
A currency reform debacle last year caused rare civil unrest, showing cracks in Kim's leadership though his grip on power looks unchallenged -- for now.
His mounting economic problems mean he will fall far short of honoring his heavily promoted promise to make North Korea a "strong and prosperous state" by 2012, and may undermine his efforts to win support from senior cadres to back his youngest son as successor to the family dynasty.
"The failure of this (2012) campaign, and it can only fail, is only going to make the regime more likely to resort to diversionary military spectacles of some sort," said B.R. Myers, an expert on the North's ideology at Dongseo University.
Moves could include a third nuclear test, which would put the North slightly closer to having a working atom bomb.
But Kim would still lack the capability to effectively use it as a weapon -- his Soviet-era bombers are no match for regional air forces, and he is far from being able to miniaturize a nuclear device so it can be mounted on a missile.
Another possible provocation would be restarting all of the Yongbyon nuclear plant, source of bomb-grade plutonium, that was being taken apart under six-country disarmament discussions.
Park Hyeong-jung, a specialist at the Korea Institute for National Unification, said the North could try to show off its uranium enrichment program, which provides a second path for producing bomb-grade fissile material.
And it may try to upgrade its mid-range missiles, which are designed to hit targets in Japan and U.S. military bases in Guam.
Kim's regime will also hope to sell more weapons to states like Iran, something U.S. officials cite as a major worry.
"Its motivation to survive could lead it to engage in more dangerous proliferation activities when other sources of foreign exchange are no longer available," the nongovernmental International Crisis Group said in a report this week.
MARKETS HAVE HIGH STRESS TOLERANCE
Regional investors have become largely inured to the North's violent gestures, as long as they have been contained to saber-rattling and not full scale armed confrontation.
"If North Korea takes unpredicted, negative actions, such as nuclear tests, stock markets will be dealt a blow. But this will probably be short-lived and investors will eventually return," said Han Beom-ho, a market analyst at Shinhan Investment Corp.
Of more concern to many is the possible collapse of the mercurial North if Kim's already doubtful health worsens or the economy's troubles deepen so seriously that the tightly controlled society turns unruly.
South Korea's government, mindful of the massive risk to its own economy, has been offering major, long-term investment to the North to prepare it gradually for eventual reunification.
That, say analysts, is something Kim sees as too big a threat to his own grip on power -- he would not dare to be seen at home as treating the South as his savior.
By some estimates, South Korea could face a bill of $1 trillion or more -- about the size of its annual economic output -- if it suddenly had to absorb its destitute neighbor.
CHINA TO THE RESCUE?
While the parlous state of his economy may give Kim the incentive to rally support with some military muscle-flexing, it also limits his options, if he wants to avoid even more punishing U.N. sanctions and a U.S. Treasury crackdown on his finances.
"The North Korean regime cannot risk any further destruction of the economy at this point," Myers said.
China, the North's only major benefactor, offers Kim one of his few ways out.
Beijing fears a collapse of his government would bring chaos to its border and has blocked any global economic push that would significantly destabilize Pyongyang. It has also supplied food, oil and money to keep his government afloat.
China appears to want to augment social stability along its three provinces that border North Korea by increasing investment with the state, according to John Park, an expert on the region with the United States Institute of Peace.
"China is helping facilitate localized development needs to boost its broader geopolitical needs," Park said.
That relationship may help to temper any provocations by Kim who does not want to put China in the position of having to fend off global criticism for propping up Pyongyang. (Additional reporting by Yoo Choonsik, Christine Kim and Jungyoun Park, editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Andrew Marshall)