By Amber Phillips July 5 at 1:05 PM

North Korea surprised the world on Tuesday when it successfully tested a missile that could carry a nuclear warhead and could have landed in Alaska. The world is arguing about how to respond: Self-restraint? War? Something in between?

There are no easy answers. But unless President Trump and the international community decide to do something really crazy, their next step will probably be okay with Congress.

Since North Korea escalated its missile capability over the past few years, there's been a “surprising” amount of political agreement in Washington about how to deter the rogue country without setting it off, says Victor Cha. Cha is a North Korea expert who served in the George W. Bush administration and is now the Korea chair at the bipartisan Center for Strategic and International Studies.

I called Cha up to get a feel for the political climate surrounding Trump's reaction to North Korea; our conversation has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

THE FIX: When you heard North Korea successfully tested this, what was your first thought?

CHA: It's dangerous on multiple levels. Just a couple months ago, people were saying that this might happen at the end of Trump's term in office. So, they achieved their goal of an [intercontinental ballistic missile], but they did it faster than anybody had expected. And that is a trend, I think, since December of 2012 when they were first able to put a satellite into orbit. North Korea has really accelerated their missile technology beyond anybody's estimation.

I think there's pretty good unity between the administration and Congress on the issue. There's very little disagreement between Republicans and Democrats on North Korea. Congress has put forward a number of different sanctions bills against North Korea that have been quite effective.

There used to be a debate about whether engagement or sanctions was the right way to go. When [President Bill] Clinton did an agreement with North Korea, Republicans were against it. Sanction bills started to take formation in the second half of the Obama administration, particularly when many in Congress felt like the strategic-patience policy of Obama wasn't really going anywhere, it was kind of treading water. Meanwhile, North Korea kept testing missiles.

The problem is not the U.S. government. The problem is China. China doesn't want to cut off its little communist brother, even though that brother is misbehaving.

Trump's been very transparent about his focus on China.

If you look at what he tried to do in North Korea, it all kind of makes sense. He looked at the situation. He realized North Korea needed money to develop these programs. Eighty-five percent of that trade is with China, so you go to China — and that's what he did in Mar-a-Lago in April — and you cut them off.

It was clear he didn't believe the Chinese were doing enough, so last week he took the first step, which was to treat China not as part of the solution but as part of the problem. He sanctioned them [a small Chinese bank]. And he's moved a lot of military assets through the region, like aircraft carriers, to try to demonstrate a more muscular policy than the previous administration. Those seem like logical steps. I don't know what else he could do.

Is it normal to see the president think all this through out loud?

If Trump makes a decision Congress doesn't agree with, or it feels he isn't taking this seriously, is there anything Congress can do?

The president can't go to war without Congress. But he can issue sanctions unilaterally because of the USA Patriot Act [which allows the administration to impose sanctions on a country that threatens the United States' national security).