Description
Meltdown is a riveting inside account of an American diplomatic disaster.
When George Bush took office in 2001, W North Korea's nuclear program was frozen. Kim Jong Il had signaled to the out- going Clinton administration that he was ready to negotiate an end to his missile program. Today, North Korea has become a full-fledged nuclear power, with enough fissile material to stage an underground test in 2006, manufacture as many as ten more warheads, and in a worst-case scenario provide nuclear material to rogue states or terrorist groups. How did the United States fail to prevent a longtime adversary like North Korea from acquiring nuclear weapons?
Drawing on more than two hundred inter- views with key players in Washington, Seoul, Tokyo, and Beijing, including Colin Powell, John Bolton, and ex-Korean president Kim Dae-jung. as well as insights gained during fourteen trips to Pyongyang, longtime CNN correspondent and North Korea expert Mike Chinoy provides a blow-by-blow account that takes readers behind the scenes of secret diplomatic meetings, disputed intelligence reports, and Washington turf battles, and inside the mysterious world of North Korea. Meltdown shows us how the U.S. refusal to engage in serious diplomacy spurred Kim Jong Il to stage his nuclear breakout, and it provides a wealth of new material about the subsequent reversal of course that led the Bush administration to abandon confrontation in the hope of negotiating an end to the nuclear crisis.
Chinoy has produced a gripping account of one of America's longest-running, most volatile foreign policy crises that explains why North Korea remains a danger today and why it didn't have to be this way. ISBN:9780312371531