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War danger grows on Korean peninsula
By James Conachy
27 March 2002
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Tensions between the US and North Korea are at their worst
since 1994, when the Clinton administration threatened military
strikes if Pyongyang did not shut down its nuclear power plants.
On January 29, Bush included North Korea in his axis of
evil and made further accusations during his February East
Asia visit that it possessed weapons of mass destruction.
This month, in response to the leaked Pentagon report proposing
the use of nuclear weapons in a war on the Korean peninsula, North
Korea issued threats of its own.
The most serious was a thinly-veiled warning that Pyongyang
may, in self-defence, abandon the weapons control agreements it
entered into in 1994 and 1998. The North Korean foreign ministry
declared on March 13: Under the present situation where
nuclear lunatics have taken office in the White House, we are
compelled to examine all agreements with the US. In case the US
plan turns out to be true, the DPKR [North Korea] will have no
choice but to take a substantial counter-measure against it, not
bound to any DPKR-US agreement.
In 1994, facing the threat of US attack, the Pyongyang regime
agreed to close its reactors, which were capable of producing
plutonium, in exchange for the US, Japan and South Korea financing
the construction of light-water nuclear plants and supplying the
North with alternative fuel in the interim. In late 1998, again
under military pressure, the North agreed to suspend testing a
long-range missile allegedly able to reach the US west coast.
Despite this record of submission to Washingtons demands,
the Bush White House is insisting that North Korea, an economically
crippled nation of just 23 million people, remains one the greatest
military challenges to the US. While it has made a verbal gesture
of being prepared to enter into talks, the Bush administration
has stressed it will demand Pyongyang reduce the size of its conventional
armed forces and allow International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
inspectors to enter its military and research facilities.
The US demands are an open provocation. While the Pyongyang
regime is being told to unilaterally disarm, Washington threatens
it with nuclear weapons, has 37,000 troops permanently stationed
in the South and supplies the South Korean military with state-of-the-art
hardware. On March 21, the largest military exercise ever held
on the peninsula began, involving over 50,000 US troops, including
some based in Japan, and most of the 650,000-strong South Korean
armed forces. The exercises scenario is a war with the North.
Pyongyang has labeled it a rehearsal for a nuclear holocaust.
The Bush administrations aim is to push the North into
taking defensive measures, which can then be presented as evidence
of assembling weapons of mass destruction and used
as the pretext for military strikes. The groundwork for this has
been laid already. On March 19, the White House, in response to
the Norths reaction to the Pentagon report, announced it
could no longer certify to the US Congress that Pyongyang was
abiding by the 1994 agreement.
In glaring contrast, an official involved in monitoring the
agreement told the Washington Post: As far as we
can see, it has been fulfilled. We challenge anybody who wants
to make us believe that the North Koreans didnt stick to
the bargain. The commander of American forces in South Korea,
General Thomas Schwartz, testified to the US Senate earlier this
month that North Korea had honoured the 1998 missile agreement
and said there were no indicators Pyongyang was participating
in any kind of terrorist activity.
Driving Bushs Korea policy is unstated opposition to
the South Korean governments sunshine policya
series of steps toward a political settlement with the North over
the past three years, a process encouraged by China in particular.
South Koreas rapprochement with the North seeks to enable
far greater economic exploitation of the markets and resources
of both China and the former territories of the Soviet Union.
Transport routes from the South, through the North and China to
Russias trans-Siberian railway, could transform it into
a significant trade hub between north-east Asia and the European
Union (EU). Russia has made major investments to upgrade the rail
line, which could move freight across Eurasia at least 10 days
faster than by sea. Oil and gas piped from Central Asia and Russia
to China and South Korea could be profitably exported on to Japan,
one of the worlds biggest importers of energy.
As a London Financial Times correspondent noted on March
18: Seoul believes that its location, sandwiched between
Japan, the worlds second largest economy, and China, the
worlds fastest growing economy, gives it a pivotal position
in north-east Asia ... at the heart of a region of 1.5 billion
people, which already produces 20 per cent of the worlds
gross domestic product and is forecast to challenge the dominance
of North America and Europe in future. More generally, some
in Asian and European ruling circles are actively seeking to develop
economic integration across the Eurasian landmass in order to
decrease the global weight of their US rivals.
China, due to both its geographical position and its growing
ability to project military and political power in East Asia,
is the key to such ambitions. Representing the most belligerent
sections of the American ruling elite, the Bush administration
is determined to prevent any possibility that the development
of China could bring about such a dramatic realignment in international
relations. It will not willingly accept any changes on the Korean
peninsula, or elsewhere in Asia, that lessens the hegemonic position
the US has held in the region since World War II.
Bushs policy is to replace the current North Korean regime
with a pro-US puppet state, using either political coercion to
bring about its collapse or, if necessary, bombing it out of existence.
As well as disrupting Beijings economic ambitions, Pyongyangs
fall would intensify the political and military pressure being
applied to China by the White House. Bushs declaration that
Beijing was a strategic competitor sums up the stance
of the Republican rightwing, among whom there is serious discussion
about launching a war against China before it is capable of militarily
resisting the US or consolidates alliances with other regional
powers.
Opposition in Asia and Europe
The only major power currently lending support to Bushs
rhetoric against North Korea is Japan. Beset by economic crisis,
the unstable government of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi is
seeking to use the war on terrorism and the alleged
threat from North Korea to divert social tensions and justify
the build-up and use of Japans armed forces. With the backing
of sections of the media, he is working in tandem with Washington
to create a climate for military strikes against Pyongyang. On
March 12, a wife of a Japanese Red Army terrorist
conveniently confessed that she assisted North Korean agents kidnap
a Japanese woman in 1983. The rightwing Yomiuri Shimbun
editorialised the following day that, combined with alleged intrusions
by North Korean spy ships into Japanese waters, the kidnapping
charges proved North Korea is a state that supports terrorism.
Elsewhere, the bellicose stance of the Bush administration
has provoked open opposition. In South Korea, the economic interests
of major sections of the corporate elite are being disrupted and
there are fears of a catastrophic war devastating the peninsula.
While the South Korean ruling class has depended upon US support
since the establishment of the state in 1948, a groundswell of
anti-American sentiment is developing within ruling circles and
among broader sections of the population. Even the opposition
Grand National Party, the most pro-US faction of the political
establishment, demanded an official government protest over Bushs
nuclear posture review.
Lim Dong-won, the former Unification Minister and still an
adviser to President Kim Dae-jung, bluntly stated on March 18
that the two Koreas had to push ahead with the sunshine
policy, regardless of the US, or face a military crisis
within a year. Before an audience of students at Seouls
National University, Lim warned: If military action is taken
to disable the Norths weapons of mass destruction,
it will most likely escalate into an all-out war.
Pointing to the limited options before the North Korean regime,
Lim also raised the possibility of Pyongyang ordering an all-or-nothing
suicide attack to drive the American military out of South
Korea. Numerous commentators and organisations have invoked the
memory of the four million Koreans who died in the 1950-53 Korean
War.
Kim Dae-jungs government has attempted to straddle the
position of the Bush administration by downplaying the dangers
of another war and stating its commitment to both its US military
alliance and the sunshine policy. On March 25, the
South announced that it had reached an agreement with the North
for Lim Dong-won to travel to Pyongyang in the first week of April,
for the highest level inter-Korea talks since last year.
There are growing calls for open defiance of Washington, though.
One columnist for the newspaper JoongAng Ilbo declared
in a March 14 opinion piece: Seoul must speak up. The National
Assembly should protest, but the government is mute; politicians
are trapped by scandals, elections and party in-fighting. No-one
is paying attention to the looming shadow of nuclear war here....
North Korea and Iraq have treated Washington delicately
and signalled their interest in dialogue. The Bush administration,
however, wants to rule the axis of evil with its nuclear
axis, a policy that is counterproductive. Shrugging our shoulders
and saying there is nothing we can do about US nuclear strategy
is neglect of duty and defeatism. We must defy any nuclear strategy
that would bring destruction to the peninsula.
The calls in South Korea for the continuation of the sunshine
policy are drawing support from China and the EU. Both have
made efforts to prevent the Bush administration disrupting the
détente between the two Koreas, from which they hope to
reap considerable political and economic gains.
In mid-March, China dispatched a senior diplomat to South Korea
and hosted a visit to Beijing by North Korean vice foreign minister
Kim Yong Il to urge the two Koreas to resume talks on economic
cooperation.
From March 4 to 18, the EU hosted a two-week, four-nation European
tour by senior North Korean officials. To mark the occasion, the
EU executive released a strategy paper on the Korean peninsula
emphasising its aim to open up the North to foreign investment
and its support for a South-North détente.
An agreement was reached for the EU Chamber of Commerce in
Korea (EUCCK) to take part in the Pyongyang International Trade
Fair, as well as delegations from Britain, Germany, France and
Italy. EUCCK has also been invited to attend the first Pyongyang
Technology Exhibition in September, aimed at providing, according
to the Korea Herald, a platform for European companies
to enter a market that is difficult to access but at the same
time offers most viable business prospects. An EUCCK press
release declared: As North Korea is moving to join the ranks
of successful developing nations, it is adapting to a new international
environment.
In response to questions on the gulf between the US and EU
over North Korea, EU external relations commission spokesman Gunnar
Wiegand told the media: We have different approaches, but
for us this is just the implementation of a policy that has existed
for some time. In perhaps the clearest repudiation of Bush,
the British Foreign Office announced on March 16 that it was sending
an ambassador to North Korea for the first time since it broke
diplomatic relations at the beginning of the Korean War.
Any US move toward direct confrontation with North Korea can
only heighten the political and economic tensions. Bush is sowing
the seeds not only for conflict on the Korean peninsula but also
with China and the European Union.
See Also:
Bush visit to Japan cements closer ties
against China
[1 March 2002]
Bush's "evil axis"
speech destabilises the Korean peninsula
[15 February 2002]
State of the Union speech:
Bush declares war on the world
[31 January 2002]
US steps up pressure
on North Korea
[30 November 2001]
The Nobel Peace Prize
and Korea's Kim Dae-jung
[3 November 2000]
The Korean summit:
no recipe for peace and prosperity
[27 July 2000]
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