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Bush sets course for confrontation with North Korea
By Peter Symonds
30 December 2002
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The Bush administration is preparing to escalate the current
standoff over North Koreas nuclear program into a full-blown
confrontation, with reckless indifference to the potentially disastrous
consequences for the Korean peninsula and the entire region.
According to a report in yesterdays New York Times,
the US has drawn up a comprehensive plan to intensify financial
and political pressure on North Korea aimed at precipitating
an economic and political collapse. Administration officials
said the threat of growing isolation was the best way to force
North Korea to give up its nuclear ambitions and, if it refused
to, to bring down the government, the article explained.
Under the strategy, euphemistically known as tailored
containment, the US intends to pressure neighbouring countries
to reduce economic ties with North Korea and to push for the UN
Security Council to impose economic sanctions. Other key aspects
include the use of the US military to intercept North Koreas
missile exports in order to dry up one of the countrys few
sources of hard currency. It is a lot about putting political
stress and putting economic stress, one senior official
told the newspaper.
While the US has cynically declared its willingness to negotiate,
this offer is effectively an ultimatum. Bush has insisted
that no talks will take place until North Korea has scrapped its
nuclear program. Moreover, as Washington has repeatedly made clear,
the dismantling of nuclear facilities is just one of a long list
of US demands, which include North Korea ending its ballistic
missile production and reducing its conventional military forces,
in particular along the border with South Korea.
To date, Washington has made no direct military threat against
Pyongyang. But US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld strongly implied
that the Pentagon had made contingency plans when he provocatively
told a press conference on December 23 that the American military
was perfectly capable of waging a war against North
Korea at the same time as invading Iraq.
Rumsfeld declared that it would be a mistake for North Korea
to feel emboldened because of Washingtons current focus
on Iraq. We are capable of fighting two major regional conflicts.
Were capable of winning decisively in one and swiftly defeating
in the case of the other. Let there be no doubt about it,
he said.
The defence secretary did not directly contradict other White
House officials, who have been insisting that the US has no intention
of attacking North Korea. But when asked if there was a
military option on the table, he refused to rule it out.
Well, let me put it this way, he said. One of
the assignments of the [defence] department is to prepare for
a whole host of contingencies.
Rumsfelds comments triggered an angry reaction in Pyongyang.
North Koreas Defence Minister Kim Il-chol denounced the
US for bringing its hostile policy to an extremely dangerous
phase. He warned that his country could not remain a passive
onlooker while its sovereignty and right to exist were threatened
by the US hawks who are pushing the situation on the Korean
peninsula to the brink of a nuclear war.
The Bush administration, with the uncritical backing of the
media, blames the crisis entirely on North Korea. Commentators
habitually brand the Pyongyang regime as belligerent and irrational,
speculate on the malevolent motives behind its actions and focus
attention on the supposed threat posed by North Koreas nuclear
and other weapons programs. Each step by North Korea to restart
its nuclear facilitiesthe removal of seals and monitoring
equipment, the movement of fuel rods and the expulsion of UN observersis
treated as proof of Pyongyangs nuclear brinkmanship.
But this stands reality on its head. North Korea is a small,
impoverished country of some 20 million people, which has been
systematically isolated economically and politically by the US
over decades. It confronts the worlds largest imperialist
power with the capacity to obliterate North Koreas major
cities and military installations many times over, and an administration
that has adopted a provocative stance towards Pyongyang from day
one.
Axis of evil
On assuming office, George W. Bush immediately froze the high-level
negotiations conducted under Clinton. Then, after a lengthy policy
review, his administration issued a new set of demands to
be addressed by Pyongyang. In his State of the Union speech in
January 2002, Bush branded North Korea, along with Iraq and Iran,
as part of an axis of evila label that, as the
current US military buildup against Baghdad demonstrates, is tantamount
to a declaration of war. In March, portions of the Pentagons
Nuclear Posture Review, which were leaked to the press,
revealed that the US was prepared to use nuclear weapons against
North Korea.
Far from being irrational, North Koreas response
to Washingtons threats is completely logical. According
to a number of commentators, the country is incapable of fighting
a sustained war. Its large conventional armed forces are starved
of spare parts and fuel and dependent on an economy that is on
the brink of collapse. Boxed into a corner by Washington, Pyongyangs
decision to restart its nuclear program is a desperate attempt
to create a nuclear threat, either real or potential, with which
to keep the US at bay.
If Pyongyang is proceeding in defiance of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), it is because it has concluded that
compliance with international weapons treaties is no guarantee
against US military action. After all, Baghdad has complied with
all the US demands elaborated in the latest UN Security Council
resolution, UN inspectors have found no evidence of weapons
of mass destruction, yet the US preparations for an invasion
of Iraq continue relentlessly. North Korea is entirely justified
in concluding that it could well be the next target of the Bush
administrations doctrine of unilateral, preemptive strikes.
The US administration attempts to justify its belligerent stance
against North Korea by pointing to the regimes anti-democratic
methods and the countrys appalling social conditions. But
its expressions of concern for the Korean people are completely
hypocritical. While Bush denounces North Korean leader Kim Il-jung
for starving his people, he has no compunction about
using poverty and starvation as a weapon to bring Pyongyang to
its knees. His administration has already suspended its limited
food aid and is now preparing to tighten an economic noose around
the country.
The Bush administrations aggressive stance towards North
Korea is driven by its determination to assert US economic and
strategic interests in North East Asia. By demonising North Korea,
Washington can justify the large US military presence in South
Korea and Japan as well as its decision to tear up the 1972 Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty and build a Nuclear Missile Defence.
There are also broader considerations. By provoking a crisis,
the US has effectively scuttled the sunshine policy
of South Korean President Kim Dae-jung, which was aimed at opening
up North Korea to investment and the Korean peninsula as a major
transport route between Europe and East Asia. Those who stood
to benefit most from the sunshine policy and the lessening
of tensions were the USs main economic rivalsEurope
and Japanalong with the regional powers, China and South
Korea.
The World Socialist Web Site gives no political support
to North Koreas Stalinist regime, which is a brutal and
oppressive dictatorship that has nothing to do with socialism.
Like its counterparts in Beijing, Moscow and the capitals of Eastern
Europe, the Pyongyang bureaucracy abandoned its anti-capitalist
pretensions long ago and has been seeking to reach a deal with
the major powers to establish North Korea as a cheap labour haven.
Nonetheless, North Korea as a small, poverty-stricken nation has
the right to arm itself, by any means available, against the growing
military threat from US imperialism.
The Agreed Framework
The pretext for the Bush administrations latest actions
is the claim that North Korea has breached the Agreed Framework
signed with the US in 1994. In October, after being confronted
with American evidence, North Korea admitted to having established
a secret uranium enrichment program in violation of international
agreements and declared its intention to abrogate the 1994 deal.
White House spokesmen now piously declare that there can be
no negotiations with Pyongyang until it demonstrates its willingness
to abide by the Agreed Framework. North Koreas repeated
offer to negotiate a comprehensive security pact with the US has
been spurned. US Secretary of State Powell, for instance, told
the media yesterday: What they want is not a discussion.
They want us to give them something for them to stop the bad behaviour.
What we cant do is enter into a negotiation right away where
we are appeasing them.
However, like the Bush administrations stance on other
international treaties, its attitude to the Agreed Framework is
completely one-sided. It expects North Korea to live up to all
its obligations while ignoring the fact that the US has openly
breached both the spirit and the letter of the agreement for years.
North Korea only signed the deal in 1994 after the Clinton
administration threatened to carry out military strikes against
its nuclear infrastructure. Under the arrangement, Pyongyang agreed
to shut down its small 5MW nuclear research reactor, plutonium
processing plant and associated facilities at Yongbyon and to
halt construction on two nuclear power plants that were due to
be completed by 1996. The latter was a major concession given
the countrys dire economic straits and desperate shortage
of electricity.
In return, the Clinton administration promised to build two
commercial lightwater reactors and to provide 500,000 tonnes of
fuel oil annually, prior to the completion of the reactors. Unlike
North Koreas gas-graphite reactors, the replacements would
not have the same capacity to produce weapons-grade plutonium.
While the US-led consortium has provided the fuel oil, the construction
of the lightwater reactors, which was due to be completed by 2003,
has barely started.
As far as Pyongyang was concerned, however, the most significant
clause in the Agreed Framework was one that pledged to move
toward full normalisation of political and economic relations.
Specific promises included the reduction of trade and investment
barriers, formal US assurances ruling out the threat or use of
nuclear weapons against North Korea, and eventual moves towards
the establishment of full diplomatic relations.
The clause was never treated seriously by Clinton, who, having
extracted a North Korean pledge to shut its nuclear facilities,
proceeded to make a string of further accusations and demands.
His administration only lifted the US economic blockade of North
Korea, in force since the Korean War, in 1999 and then only in
a restricted fashion. Just prior to the 2000 election campaign,
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright made the first tentative
high-level visit to Pyongyang.
Even these limited measures came to an abrupt halt when Bush
was installed in office. In a recent letter to the UN, declaring
the intention to reopen its nuclear facilities, Pyongyang specifically
cited the US designation of North Korea as part of the axis
of evil and as a target for nuclear attack as evidence for
the substantive breakdown of the Agreed Framework.
As far as North Korea is concerned, it has gained nothing from
the arrangement. The deal has not produced any normalisation of
political and economic relations with the US; the completion of
the lightwater reactors is nowhere in sight; and, since October,
the US has punished North Korea for its uranium enrichment program
by cutting off supplies of fuel oil.
The provocative character of the Bush administrations
actions is highlighted by the fact that the Republican Party rightwing
has long denounced the Agreed Framework. The very people who described
the deal from the outset as grovelling appeasement and proof of
Clintons weakness on foreign policy now hold the levers
of power. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that the current
incumbents in the White House have treated the terms of the Agreed
Framework with ill-disguised contempt.
If the Bush administration has proceeded relatively slowly
in confronting North Korea, it is because there are fears in US
ruling circles about the consequences of such a reckless course
of action. It is by no means certain that Washington will be able
to bully South Korea, Japan, China and Russia into backing its
blockade of North Korea. Official opposition has already been
voiced in Moscow and Beijing. In South Korea, the outsider Roh
Moo-myun won the recent presidential elections by appealing to
growing popular hostility to Washingtons belligerent policy
towards North Korea and widespread fears of a military conflagration.
What is at stake in the current standoff is highlighted by
the last major confrontation in 1994. As Clinton and his advisors
dispatched stealth warplanes to South Korea and prepared to strike
North Korea, knowing that the result could be full-scale war,
the Pentagon presented the administration with a sobering calculation
of the potential costs and casualties.
General Luck [US commander in Korea] estimated, on the
basis of the experience in Vietnam and the Persian Gulf, that
due to the colossal lethality of modern weapons in the urban environments
of Korea, as many as one million people would be killed in the
resumption of full-scale war on the peninsula, including 80,000
to 100,000 Americans, that the out-of-pocket costs to the United
States would exceed $100 billion, and that the destruction of
property and interruption of business activity would cost more
than $1,000 billion dollars to the countries involved and their
immediate neighbours [The Two Koreas, Don Oberdorfer,
p.324].
The Clinton administration was prepared to take an enormous
gamble in order to extract an agreement from North Korea. Now
those who berated him for his softness are careering down the
path to conflict. No confidence whatsoever can be place in their
soothing public assurances that the situation is under control
and that a military strike against North Korea is off the agenda.
If war does erupt then the responsibility for its disastrous consequences
lies squarely with the Bush administration and its allies.
See Also:
South Korean election reveals deep-seated
hostility to Washington
[21 December 2002]
US uses nuclear revelations
to raise tensions on Korean peninsula
[31 October 2002]
Pyongyang summit: North Korean
prostration answered with more Japanese demands
[1 October 2002]
Noose tightens around North
Korea following Yellow Sea naval battle
[11 July 2002]
US-backed groups push North
Korean asylum bids in China
[24 June 2002]
War danger grows on Korean
peninsula
[27 March 2002]
Bushs evil axis
speech destabilises the Korean peninsula
[15 February 2002]
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