Via the Korea Economic Reader comes an Asia Foundation article from Bruce Bechtol that discusses the issues facing the US and South Korea in regards to the transfer of war time operational control from he US to the ROK military. Give the article a read, but here is what Bechtol recommends in regards to the hand over of operation control:
It is extremely important to note that while the South Korean military is highly capable of combating a traditional conventional forces threat from North Korea, it is still heavily dependent on the capabilities of the U.S. military to deter and defeat the highly evolved North Korean asymmetric threat. The North Korean military threat of 2010 is not the same as that of 1990 against which South Korea has been so well prepared to defend. While high-ranking American officials have stated that the U.S. can support its ally with “bridging capabilities,” in reality, the best bridging capability would be to continue the command relationship that has proven to successfully deter the DPRK for so many years. By postponing the change in Wartime Operational Control (OpCon) until the ROK military has sufficiently achieved the necessary acquisition, training, personnel upgrades and transformation, the United States would be safeguarding the security and stability of its most loyal ally in East Asia.
I have to respectfully disagree with Mr. Bechtol. How is the US military best equipped to deal with the asymmetric threat from North Korea? In the opening of any hostilities the North Koreans using their special operations forces disguised in ROK Army uniforms as well as civilian clothes will likely be wreaking havoc on population centers in South Korea order to clog the roads with vehicles and evacuees in order to stop the ROK military’s ability to quickly move armored forces and other vehicles.
Due to the chaos the North Koreans will cause there is going to be much friendly fire incidents and the killing of civilians. In such chaos how are American soldiers with no linguistic ability the best suited to deal with this? The Korean War should be a good indication of what happens when you throw US soldiers into such chaos. Furthermore why isn’t a ROK Army general better suited to command forces in such a chaotic situation plus deal with the blow back that is sure to come after wards due to the killing of civilians?
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Bechtol also stresses that delaying operational control will give the ROK government more time to acquire needed technology to properly address the responsibility they are taking on. Seeing the Korean government’s delay games over the years in regards to the relocation of Yongsan Garrison, does anyone doubt such delay games would continue with this issue as well? The ROK government receives a huge defense discount due to the capabilities that the US military provides for them. The 2012 deadline that is at least forcing them to acquire some of the technology the US military currently provides for them. If this deadline is dropped it was just give the Korean government an excuse to not continue to move forward with taking over responsibilities currently handled by the US military.
Personally I would not be surprised to see the operational control deadline delayed considering reports have already been leaked that President Obama has agreed to do this in exchange for ROK military support in Afghanistan. That is why I have continued to maintain, the hand over of operational control is something I will need to see to believe.
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Note: I tried to find a link to the article itself on The Asia Foundation website but was unable to find it. However, you can read the full report below and whenever a link is available I will include it.
THE U.S. AND SOUTH KOREA: CHALLENGES AND REMEDIES FOR WARTIME OPERATIONAL CONTROL
Bruce E. Bechtol Jr.
The Center for US-KoreaPolicy
The Asia Foundation
March 2010 – Vol. 2, No. 3
According to an agreement signed by U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates and South Korean Defense Minister Kim Jang-soo in 2007, the United States and the Republic of Korea have formally agreed that Combined Forces Command (CFC) will be dissolved by April 17th of 2012. Some political scientists—largely individuals without military experience in the United States, and certainly many academics and politicians on the left in South Korea—have hailed the move as “necessary” and useful. In addition, most of these same individuals have repeatedly simplified these complicated issues by asserting it will simply be a matter of the ROK military buying a lot of equipment and the U.S. maintaining its status as an ally, albeit in more of a supportive role. The official position of the United States government supports this assertion.
The majority of conservatives in South Korea do not support this position and have very real concerns about national security issues directly related to the planned dissolution of CFC. Meanwhile, most Americans do not understand even the basic infrastructure of CFC, nor are they aware of the complications associated with its disestablishment. In recent months in Korea, many respected scholars, politicians, and retired military officers have voiced concerns associated with this complete and unprecedented change in command relationships. But before addressing what South Korea’s military needs to do if it is to assume a separate wartime command structure by 2012, one must first address the threat that the South will face from North Korea.
The threat from North Korea’s military has not subsided, despite the overwhelming resource constraints Pyongyang has faced since the early 1990s (a better term to use when addressing what has occurred in North Korea’s military forces would be “evolved”). In fact, as North Korea’s capability to mount a large invasion built around armor and mechanized forces and supported by aircraft declined during the 1990s due to losses in fuel and foodstuffs that simply could not be replaced, Kim Jong-il focused his efforts on the build-up of asymmetric forces. These forces include short-range ballistic missiles (SRBMs) that now number at least 600 Scuds, and other shorter, more accurate missiles (such as the North Korean version of the old Soviet SS-21), long-range artillery, much of which was moved close to the demilitarized zone (DMZ) during the late 1990s, and special operations forces (now estimated to number up to 180,000 men by the ROK Ministry of National Defense) that can create havoc in the South using unconventional warfare. North Korea continues to extensively develop and enhance these capabilities. Most recently, unusual live-fire exercises were conducted on the west coast (north of Pyongyang) utilizing some of the exact long-range artillery systems that would be used to target Seoul in time of war.
By focusing resources on asymmetric forces, North Korea has maintained its capability to threaten the South, and has also continued to maintain its belligerent and uncooperative foreign policy—a policy that shows no signs of changing. It is this asymmetric threat to the South that the U.S. government currently seems to underestimate when addressing the needed capabilities of its military ally, South Korea. The U.S. Director of National Intelligence Congressional testimony from February 3, 2010, clearly demonstrates just how much the North Korean non-nuclear threat is being downplayed. What makes the North’s non-nuclear forces even more ominous is the fact that once they have created confusion and casualties potentially in the hundreds of thousands (many of them civilians) in the early hours and days of a potential war, this confusion could lead to weaknesses in South Korean defenses that could be exploited by North Korea’s less capable but still extremely large and potentially dangerous maneuver forces such as mechanized infantry and armor. North Korea’s maneuver forces have undergone reorganization and disposition changes since 2006 that have enhanced their capability to threaten the South.
It is because of this evolved North Korean threat that the ROK military faces challenges they will unlikely overcome by 2012. South Korea will not have the needed command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence (C4I) systems online and operational by 2012 in terms of acquisition, training, or even probable integration with U.S. systems. The same applies when it comes to airpower. The ROK Air Force continues to focus on improving its attack and air-to-air interdiction capability but must radically upgrade the airlift capability of elite airborne units if it is to truly take the fight to the North in any potential conflict. Finally, the ROK government simply does not have the ballistic missile defense capability to protect its military bases and population centers. The missiles Pyongyang holds in its growing arsenal can presently do damage to important nodes in the ROK that 15 years ago would have been more threatened by North Korea’s now declined but still dangerous conventional maneuver forces capability. While realistic (though costly) steps can be taken to answer this threat, it will be nearly impossible to complete them within the next five years.
It is extremely important to note that while the South Korean military is highly capable of combating a traditional conventional forces threat from North Korea, it is still heavily dependent on the capabilities of the U.S. military to deter and defeat the highly evolved North Korean asymmetric threat. The North Korean military threat of 2010 is not the same as that of 1990 against which South Korea has been so well prepared to defend. While high-ranking American officials have stated that the U.S. can support its ally with “bridging capabilities,” in reality, the best bridging capability would be to continue the command relationship that has proven to successfully deter the DPRK for so many years. By postponing the change in Wartime Operational Control (OpCon) until the ROK military has sufficiently achieved the necessary acquisition, training, personnel upgrades and transformation, the United States would be safeguarding the security and stability of its most loyal ally in East Asia.
Bruce E. Bechtol Jr. is Professor of International Relations at Marine Corps Command and Staff College. Dr. Bechtol will serve as a roundtable presenter at a symposium on OpCon Transfer and Its Implications for the U.S.-ROK Alliance, co-hosted by The Asia Foundation’s Center for U.S. Korea-Policy and The Maureen & Mike Mansfield Foundation on March 25, 2010, in Washington DC.
The views expressed in this paper are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Marine Corps Command and Staff College, the Marine Corps University, or the United States Government.








1:18 am on March 8th, 2010 1
The Korean reluctance to assume OPCON is cultural rather than technological…it stems from Confucian filial piety. The US military is seen subconsciously as the doctrinal, organizational, and technological "father" or "ancestor" of the Korean military and is to be obeyed, respected, and supported.
4:01 am on March 8th, 2010 2
Please. No more "Confucian filial piety" nonsense.
Having once served as an officer at ROKAF ASAW (Republic of Korea Air Force equivalent of a think tank) I want to say that the Korean military is musch more practical than you give them credit for. The Korean military's delay tactics has more to do with military budget savings and natural inertia against change pronounced by bureaucracy.
From a purely Korean national interest perspective, delaying OPCON transer is the smart thing to do economically. As related to military capability, I think it's a double edged sword, as it could be seen as time gained for more improvement, but also as reduced pressure for the Korean military to truly step up and chisel itself away from the all show, no substance, bloated bureaucracy that it has become.
4:54 pm on March 9th, 2010 3
I think you are polite to "respectfully disagree" with Mr. Bechtol. The article is trash. He says South Korea "is still heavily dependent on the capabilities of the U.S. military to deter and defeat the highly evolved North Korean asymmetric threat." How are we better prepared?
And he says, "Finally, the ROK government simply does not have the ballistic missile defense capability to protect its military bases and population centers." What is he talking about? Is he saying the US has the capability and will take it away at transformation? Bull, the only way to defend a population center like Seoul is to move it.
He mentions the "still dangerous conventional maneuver forces" of North Korea. Yeah right, assuming they can get across the DMZ how are they going to get even a few miles south before being destroyed? It's not like the North will have any air support left five minutes after a war starts.
People on both sides, ROK and US, are looking for excuses to delay transformation and they make stuff up to fit their agenda.
5:45 am on March 25th, 2010 4
Wendy, I find your post partially correct, and Mr Bechtols post partially correct. The misille units cited by Mr Bechtol in North Korea will be deminished comepletely by the Misille units that are in South Korea . The ROK has LOW and High altitude air defense missile units that have already proved their worth against the missiles mentioned in his article. But Mr Bechtol has a very good point when he speaks of civilian casualties, and bottle necks created by uniformed conventional, and non uniformed North Korean soldiers. These soldiers will not place value on the lives of civilians and in fact will see them as their enemies. The confucianism though is more prominant in the North as is their fear of their own dictator, and they will Kill like no one has seen in Korea for many years. Yes they will infiltrate into the South. IMO they already have, and will continue to do this easily out of uniform making it hard for Korean civilians to trust anyone. I really dont have the answer to this but do not think we should change command structures untill we are 100% certain The ROK military is ready. IMO in this world we live in today there will be no way command can change untill the world changes. South Korea being our most stable ally in Asia needs us to continue with them. Yes they are stronger and far more educated then they were 60 years ago, even 20 years ago but North Korea is stronger (only) from what I see. No education of worldly mannerisms have taken hold as of yet. They still think westerners are canables. I know that is stretching but not much. These people have been allowed to learn how to fight, love their dictator, and die. I know this is a bit off topic but I am trying to show the mindset of these people in North Korea. They do not consider the rest of the world as human. How can They? They have no human rights themselves. They are well trained on what to do when or if war comes. And it wouldnt even benefit them as a people. Im not saying they will win but it would be a terrible thing for our world to see. The ones that need help are the North Koreans but alas their stubborn inability to question their own situation are their own bars in their cage they want to put South Korea back into. I appreciate the comments on this page and the article as well. Thank you, Duffy