North Korea is a paradigmatic example. From the 1990s onward, U.S. administrations framed Pyongyang as a rogue nation: developing nuclear weapons, starving its people, and issuing unpredictable threats. This script justified decades of sanctions, military exercises, and the refusal of a formal peace treaty. However, the script also backfired. North Korea internalized the label, using it to justify its nuclear program as necessary deterrence. When engagement occasionally replaced the script (e.g., 2018 Singapore Summit), the narrative shifted rapidly from "rogue" to "negotiating partner," demonstrating the script’s contingency, not its inevitability.
The modern "rogue state" script emerged after the collapse of the Soviet Union (1991). With the bipolar framework of the Cold War obsolete, the United States sought a new organizing principle for its foreign policy. The term first appeared in official discourse under the Clinton administration, targeting states like Iraq, North Korea, Iran, Libya, and Cuba. These nations were initially labeled "backlash states" (1993) before the more aggressive "rogue states" (1994) was adopted. The script filled a conceptual void: it replaced "communist enemy" with "lawless outlaw," enabling continued U.S. global leadership without a peer competitor. rogue nation script
In the lexicon of contemporary international relations, few labels carry as much weight—or as much controversy—as "rogue state" (or "rogue nation"). This term, popularized primarily by the United States in the post-Cold War era, is not merely a descriptor but a script: a pre-defined narrative framework that shapes how a nation is perceived, how its actions are interpreted, and how other states are expected to respond. The "rogue nation script" is a discursive tool that legitimizes diplomatic isolation, economic sanctions, and even military intervention. This paper examines the origins, core characteristics, structural functions, and critical responses to this script, arguing that it serves as a powerful but contested heuristic in global politics. North Korea is a paradigmatic example