By now everyone knws that President Kim Jong-il of North Korea has decided to set sanity aside and test a weapon of mass destruction. Sadly, while the U.S. is tied up in Iraq fighting a war based on the suspicion of the existence of WMDs (only to find out that there were none, but that’s an old story) there is a country actually out there testing them. Now Bush is calling for sanctions against North Korea. Yes sanctions. A country with no nuclear capabilities gets a full-blown war, yet a country trying out their nukes to see how they fit gets sanctions. Everyone knows why the U.S. has gone with a more diplomatic suggestion, it’s not surprising that it has come to this.Â
Tonight I sit here in my home writing a blog post totally uncertain about my son’s future. I lived on a military base during the Reagan years with my parents, and I am familiar with the Cold War through studying it in school, but it feels different as the parent. I can’t go to North Korean and give Kim Jong-il a pow-pow, or a timeout, although he needs both. I can see me saying “Kim, put down those WMDs and come in the house. You’re grounded forever! No U.S. investment in the North Korean economy for you!” Unfortunately, I can’t do that. I can just watch the news, hope that cooler heads prevail (whoever they may be), and wait. I’m not particularly concerned for myself, beyond the typical post 9/11 jitters that many of us New Yorkers feel.  What concerns me is what my son’s life will be like in 20 years.   Will the world be such a mess that he’s called out in a draft (and not for the NFL)? I could go on and on. All I know is that as a father and a husband tasked with protecting his family as best he can, I hope that this bubbling conflict doesn’t boil over. Kim, don’t make me go over there!
I’m not particularly concerned about any physical threat to my son. I’m just hopeful that his generation’s will be the prevailing ‘cooler heads’.
As parents, we stress the importance of communication and honesty with our children, especially when it comes to discipline. Shouldn’t our foreign policy reflect that value?
I was in middle school when Communism fell, so for me the Cold War is an academic exercise. But for as long as I can remember, the US has always had an enemy. I don’t want my son living in a world where every country is perceived as a potential threat.