|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Korea
US uses nuclear revelations to raise tensions on Korean peninsula
By Peter Symonds
31 October 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Less than a fortnight ago, the Bush administration announced
that North Korea had admitted, during bilateral talks in early
October, to having established a uranium enrichment program in
breach of international agreements. In the midst of preparations
to invade Iraq for allegedly possessing weapons of mass
destruction, the US response to Pyongyangs confession
has been decidedly muted. Bush officials announced that diplomatic,
rather than military, means will be used to pressure North Korea
to abandon the project.
There is no reason to believe, however, that Washingtons
current low key approach is any more than tactical and temporary.
Since coming to office last year, the Bush administration has
ignored overtures from Pyongyang for dialogue and ratchetted up
the pressure on the Stalinist regime. Earlier this year, Bush
branded North Korea as part of the axis of evil, along
with Iraq and Iran, thereby signifying that it was regarded as
irredeemable and a target for future military action.
Washington has carefully chosen its time to make North Koreas
nuclear program an issue. According to the Washington Post,
the US had known about the project for up to two years but held
back from making it public. A senior South Korean official told
the newspaper that Washington had information about the program
well before the northern summer and that in several East Asian
countries the intelligence community followed it very closely.
Whether North Korea confirmed the US intelligence or not, the
revelation that it was capable of producing weapons-grade uranium
was guaranteed to produce a nuclear scare in South Korea and Japan,
and raise tensions in the region. The timing of the Bush administrations
decision to confront North Korea is bound up with a number of
political considerationsboth inside the US and internationally.
One of the immediate aims of the nuclear revelations was to
cut across recent attempts by the Japanese government of Junichiro
Koizumi to open up relations with North Korea. According to a
recent article in the Japanese business newspaper Nihon Keizai
Shimbun, the US informed Koizumi of the uranium enrichment
program prior to his visit to Pyongyang last month. When that
failed to deter the Japanese prime minister, the Bush administration
took the unusual step of contacting his rival within the ruling
Liberal Democratic Party, former prime minister Ryutaro Hashimoto,
to warn against moves to normalise relations.
Details of North Koreas uranium enrichment program were
made public after Koizumi ignored the US message, went ahead with
the visit and signed a memorandum of understanding with Pyongyang.
The purpose was to bluntly remind Tokyoalong with Seoul,
Beijing and the European powersthat Washington intends to
dictate the terms in North East Asia and will not hestitate to
use its military power to do so. The Bush administration wants
to ensure there is no challenge to its strategic and economic
predominance in the regioneven in the form of Koizumis
rather tentative diplomatic moves to assert a more independent
role for Japan.
For well over a decade, the US used allegations about Pyongyangs
nuclear capacity as a means of pressuring not only North Korea
and its main backer, China, but also for keeping its allies, South
Korea and Japan in line. Its aggressive military stance ensured
that North Korea remained isolated and forced the regime to make
a series of concessions. At the same time, Washington used the
constant tension on the Korean peninsula to justify the continued
presence of US bases in the region and to keep South Korea and
Japan militarily dependent on the US.
Even so, sections of the Republican Party rightwing were highly
critical of the previous Clinton administration for conceding
too much to North Korea, and in doing so, allowing US rivalsJapan
and Europeto take advantage of the easing of tensions under
the Sunshine Policy of South Korean President Kim Dae-jung. Kims
program, which offered economic incentives to North Korea aimed
at opening it up as a source of cheap labour, was embraced by
the European Union, along with China and Russia, as a means of
lessening US influence in the region and opening up new and cheaper
transport links from Europe to East Asia, including Japan.
Since coming to office last year, the Bush administration has
maintained an increasingly belligerent stance towards North Korea.
By declaring North Korea part of the axis of evil,
Bush effectively stymied the Sunshine Policy, reinforced more
militarist elements in South Korea and Japan, and laid the basis
for maintaining and strengthening the US military presence. The
demonising of North Korea was also a crucial element of the Bush
administrations justification for developing its Nuclear
Missile Defence, aimed at neutralising the missile arsenals not
simply of so-called rogue states but of any potential military
rivals.
The Bush administrations strategy toward North Korea
was considered at length in an article entitled Koreas
place in the axis in the May/June issue of the influential
US magazine Foreign Affairs. Associate professor Victor
Cha pointed out that there was a method behind the apparent madness
of the abrupt twists and turns in US policy towards Pyongyang
over the last 18 months. He termed the Bush policy hawk
engagement, and explained that it viewed talks with North
Korea, not as a way of resolving outstanding issues, but rather
as a means of casting the country in the worst light and gathering
support from South Korea and Japan in preparation for future conflict.
Cha explains: It [hawk engagement] acknowledges that
diplomacy can be helpful, but sees the real value of engagement
as a way to expose the Norths true, malevolent intentions....
Supporters of the Sunshine Policy view engagement as the best
way to discern and improve the intentions of the reclusive [North
Korean leader] Kim Jong Il today. Hawks, however, see engagement
as the best practical way to build a coalition for punishment
tomorrow.... Hawk engagement provides a way to convince allies
that noncoercive strategies have already been triedand failed.
By tabling its evidence of Pyongyangs nuclear capacity,
the Bush administration has raised the stakes in North East Asia
even further. It wants to push South Korea and Japan to take a
tougher stance against North Korea, which would, in turn, compel
them to rely more heavily on US military might. At the same time,
the rising tensions will inevitably undermine growing European
trade and diplomatic links with Pyongyang. The new EU ambassador
to Japan Berhard Zepter described North Koreas admission
as a heavy blow that may call into question European
funding for the countrys lightwater reactors.
Regime change
The decision to make North Koreas uranium enrichment
program public has strengthened the most hawkish elements in the
US administration and wider ruling elite. In their eyes, the fact
that North Korea has established a secret uranium enrichment program
in breach of international agreements is a decisive argument in
favour of preemptive military action against Iraqregardless
of whether there is any evidence of Baghdad having a nuclear weapons
program or notand elsewhere.
Moreover, the most rightwing layers have already been critical
of the Bush administration for failing to take a sufficiently
aggressive stance against North Korea. Much of their hostility
has been directed against the 1994 Agreed Framework signed by
Clinton, under which North Korea agreed to freeze its nuclear
program in return for the construction of two modern lightwater
power reactors and supplies of fuel oil. As far as the rightwing
is concerned, the agreement made impermissible concessions to
Pyongyang and should be torn up.
The two lightwater reactors planned for North Korea have been
a particular bone of contention. Originally due to be completed
in early 2003, construction has been repeatedly delayed by US
demands for inspections of North Koreas nuclear facilities.
Work on the project only began last year and will take at least
six years. Even these first steps have been vigorously opposed
by the rightwing, who have argued that construction should either
be abandoned completely or used to extract further concessions
from Pyongyang.
As far back as May, three leading Congressional conservatives
wrote to Bush calling on him to instruct US representatives to
object to any concrete pours prior to North Korea agreeing to
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspections. Their letter
also called for the US Department of Energy to halt all nuclear
technology transfers to North Korea under the 1994 agreementprimarily
the training of technicians to operate the new facilities.
In early August, the Asian Wall Street Journal published
an article by two members of the rightwing US thinktank, the Nonproliferation
Policy Education Centre. While planning military action
against Iraq and talking tough about regime change in Iran,
they complained, the White House is failing its first test
on nuclear inspections in North Korea.... The US-directed inspectors
plan to pour the concrete foundations on Wednesday in spite of
North Koreas stiff-arming of even the start of inspections.
Following the revelations about North Koreas nuclear
program, the calls for a regime change in Pyongyang
have become even more strident. The Wall Street Journal
commented that the US had to revise the now-obvious failure
of its decade-long policy of appeasing nuclear blackmail.
To reinforce its demand, the newspaper republished an editorial
written in 1993 berating the Clinton administration for its big
carrot approach to North Korea.
In the end, the only certain non-proliferation policy
toward nasty, closed regimes such as North Koreas is to
change the government. Containment worked against the Soviet Union,
while engagement with Iraq in the 1970s and 1980s
obviously didnt change Saddam Hussein. We fear that Mr Clintons
all-carrot diplomacy will fare no better in North Korea than a
similar policy once did in Iraq, the editorial stated.
In similar vein, William Kristol and Gary Schmitt, writing
in the latest issue of the rightwing Weekly Standard, declared
Clintons engagement with North Korea to be a
failure. This softheaded policy of engagement produces a
world no one wants to live in. And certainly our current difficulty
in confronting an armed North Korea shows precisely why dealing
with Iraq and Saddam Hussein cant wait. As President Bush
has made clear over the past year, the United States has a fundamental
choice to make in confronting rogue states, dictators developing
weapons of mass destruction, and global terrorism: Either we act
aggressively to shape the world and change regimes where necessary,
or we accept living in a world in which our very existence is
contingent on the whims of unstable tyrants.
Just how far these layers are prepared to go was underscored
by another comment in the Weekly Standard in March by Jim
Doran, a senior staff member with the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. He concluded: Until North Korea is free, it must
continually be reminded that aggressive action on its part will
immediately result not in mere retaliation but in a decisive blow
that will end the regime. Horan explained what he meant
by a decisive blow in the next sentence: The
Bush administrations inclusion of North Korea as a potential
target in the recent Nuclear Posture Review is an excellent step
in that direction. In order words, if North Korea steps
out of line, it should be obliterated with nuclear weapons.
Two issues flow from the open advocacy in US ruling circles
of regime change in North Korea.
Firstly, from the standpoint of Pyongyang, its efforts to build
nuclear weapons to defend itself are by no means irrational or
paranoid. What regime change signifies is all too
apparent in the Persian Gulf where the US is massing troops, warships
and warplanes armed to the teeth with the latest weaponry to invade
Iraq and oust Hussein. Presiding over an economically crippled
nation of around 20 million people, the North Korean Stalinists
are engaged in a desperate exercise of, on the one hand, seeking
to reach a deal with Washington, while on the other, building
some sort of threat to deter US military action.
Secondly, there is no doubt that further US provocations against
North Korea can be expected. Revelations that North Korea has
a uranium enrichment program have not yet had the desired effect
in Seoul and Tokyo. Japan recently conducted talks with North
Korea in Kuala Lumpur. Neither Japan nor South Korea has called
for an end to talks, the abandonment of the 1994 Agreed Framework
or for a more aggressive stance to isolate North Korea. Both countries
are acutely aware that they could bear the brunt of any military
conflict on the Korean peninsula. Following the logic of the Bush
administrations policy of hawk engagement, this
means that fresh lessons will be necessary to teach its allies
the virtues of a harsher line.
See Also:
Pyongyang summit: North Korean prostration
answered with more Japanese demands
[1 October 2002]
US seeks Japanese government
support for war on Iraq
[3 September 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]
Bush visit to Japan cements
closer ties against China
[1 March 2002]
Bushs evil axis
speech destabilises the Korean peninsula
[15 February 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |