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US and Japan seize on missile tests to tighten noose around
North Korea
By Peter Symonds
6 July 2006
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In a move that plays directly into the hands of the Bush administration,
the North Korean regime test-fired seven missiles yesterdaysix
short-range rockets and its longer-range Taepodong-2 ballistic
missile. Washington and Tokyo immediately condemned the tests
and called for an emergency session of the UN Security Council,
due to meet today, to impose diplomatic and economic sanctions
on Pyongyang.
Without waiting for the outcome of the UN debate, the Japanese
government has imposed sanctions on North Korea, banning ferry
services and charter flights between the two countries and barring
visits by North Korean officials. The US and Japan will undoubtedly
use the Security Council session to pressure North Koreas
neighbours, China in particular, to take action against Pyongyang.
For the Bush administration, it is another means to push for tougher
measures against Iran, as well as North Korea, at next weeks
G-8 meeting in St. Petersburg.
The US has already exploited preparations for the tests to
place its controversial anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system into
operational mode. Playing up the potential for the
Taepodong-2 to reach the United States, White House officials
hinted that the Pentagon might attempt to shoot down the North
Korean missile. In the event, Pyongyangs showpiece failed
40 seconds into its flight and fell into the Sea of Japana
fact that will not stop the push in the US to accelerate the ABM
program. The US and Japan have vowed to step up joint efforts
to build a missile defence system.
The Bush administration has responded to the missile tests
with a hypocritical call for North Korea to return to the stalled
six party talks. Beijing sponsored the six-party talks involving
the US, North Korea, Russia, South Korea, Japan as well as China,
as a means of defusing the escalating confrontation over Pyongyangs
nuclear programs. The negotiations began in 2003 and the last
round took place in September 2005.
For all its talk about a diplomatic solution, however,
the Bush administration bears the chief responsibility for escalating
tensions in North East Asia. It joined the six-party talks, not
to reach a compromise deal, but rather as a means for pressuring
the other countries into taking tougher economic and diplomatic
measures against Pyongyang. Washington has barely disguised the
fact that its objective remains regime change in North
Korea as it was in Iraq, and is in Iran. While White House officials
cynically criticise Pyongyang for refusing to attend negotiations,
the Bush administration has constantly sought to undermine the
talks.
Last Septembers round of negotiations were widely applauded
in the international media as a breakthrough. North
Korea committed to abandoning all nuclear weapons and existing
nuclear programs and to returning at an early date
to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. In return, Washington
offered very littlea rather empty promise not to attack
or invade the DPRK [North Korea] and vague pledges of cooperation
and to discuss the provision of a light water power reactor at
an appropriate time.
Actions, as the saying goes, speak louder than words. No sooner
had the joint statement been signed than the Bush administration
set about undercutting it. In the same month, Washington took
the first step in an aggressive campaign to choke off North Koreas
access to the international financial system. Alleging that Pyongyang
was involved in widespread illicit activities, US Treasury designated
the Macau-based bank, Banco Delta Asia, as a primary money laundering
concern, accusing it of facilitating the criminal activities
of North Korean government agencies and front companies.
The US has maintained harsh economic sanctions against North
Korea since the end of the Korean War in 1953, but the latest
measures are aimed at financially crippling the country by closing
off its few sources of foreign exchange. Faced with the threat
of US blacklisting, Banco Delta Asia fell into line and in February
froze $24 million in North Korean assets. Using the same method,
Washington has succeeded in bullying a number of banks and financial
institutions in Europe and Asia to end relations with North Korean
entities. In April, the Bush administration accused eight state-owned
North Korean firms of proliferating weapons of mass destruction
and froze their assets in the US.
A Knight Ridder article in May made clear that the US was not
concerned whether the targetted financial activities were illicit
or not. Its been a scattershot approach, not a pinpoint
attack, and the collateral victims include a group of British
bankers who set up a small private bank in North Korea 11 years
ago to cater to merchants and importers, the article stated.
The banks managing director Nigel Cowie told the reporter:
They are tarring everyone with the same brush, whether theyre
legal or illegal. He added that humanitarian and UN agencies
operating in North Korea were also being hit by the US financial
sanctions.
International Crisis Group director for North East Asia, Peter
Beck, explained: The Bush administration has been pleasantly
surprised by the effect of the financial sanctions... They will
be in place as long as the Bush administration is in office.
According to Beck, the South Korean government felt that the US
was showing it had no appetite for further negotiations.
South Korea and China have been attempting to restart the six-party
talks, which were due to recommence soon after September 2005.
Not surprisingly, North Korea has denounced Washingtons
financial sanctions as a sign of bad faith and refused to return
to the negotiating table until they are lifted. In a rare meeting
between US and North Korean officials in March, North Koreas
top delegate Li Gun appealed to his counterparts to end the sanctions
and offered to take joint measures to address US concerns about
counterfeiting and other illicit activities. We cannot go
into the six-party talks with this hat over our head, he
reportedly declared. The US rejected the offer.
The Bush administration is not interested in a peaceful resolution
to the issue of North Koreas nuclear or missile programs.
Its perspective is to crash the North Korean economy, regardless
of its impact on the countrys population, and precipitate
a political crisis that can be exploited to bring about regime
change. Even if North Korea were to finally agree to all
US demands on its nuclear programs, Washington would find a new
pretext to continue its relentless campaign. Increasingly boxed
into a corner, Pyongyang has predictably lashed out by conducting
yesterdays missile tests.
While the US is chiefly responsible for the present crisis,
the actions of Pyongyang are completely reckless and only invite
an aggressive military response from Washington. The autarkic
regime headed by Kim Jong-il is not socialist or communist
but rather is based on a mixture of extreme nationalism, Stalinism
and Maoism, which has proved to be a complete economic and social
disaster for the North Korean people.
Kims response to Washingtons belligerence is invariably
the issuing of bloodcurdling threats and a display of bravado.
Following a US buildup of warships in waters near North Korea
and calls in the US media for action against the pending missile
tests, the state-run Korean Central News Agency declared on Monday:
The army and the people of the DPRK are now in full preparedness
to answer a pre-emptive attack with a relentless annihilating
strike and a nuclear war with a mighty nuclear deterrent.
The suggestion that North Korea armed with a handful of nuclear
weapons, which have never been tested and may not even exist,
and a long-range ballistic missile is any match for the US military
is simply absurd. In fact, far from defending North Korea, the
successful demonstration of a nuclear-armed missile would only
heighten the danger of a devastating US military strike, to which
Pyongyang would have no response. In an article in the Washington
Post on June 22, William Perry and Ashton Carter, former defence
secretary and assistant defence secretary under US President Clinton,
openly advocated pre-emptive air strikes to destroy the Taepodong-2
ballistic missile on its launch pad.
Pyongyangs empty bluster is a demonstration of the regimes
political bankruptcy. Organically incapable of making any appeal
to the international working class, its rhetoric only heightens
fear and uncertainty, divides the working people and provides
grist to the mill of the most right-wing, nationalist politicians
in Japan and South Korea as well as in the US. No one should be
under any illusion that North Koreas posturing has anything
to do with waging a genuine struggle against imperialism. As the
Bush administration is well aware, the missile tests amount to
a rather desperate attempt by Pyongyang to normalise its relations
with the USin other words, for a more advantageous relationship
with imperialism.
For the US administration, North Koreas actions come
as a political godsend, enabling it to whip up a climate of fear
and deflect public attention from the deepening quagmire in Iraq
and opposition to its domestic policies. As well as pressing for
further punitive measures against North Korea, the Bush administration
will undoubtedly use the opportunity to ratchet up the diplomatic
pressure on China. Washingtons objectives in North Korea
are not so much economic, but strategicto add another link
in US plans to encircle rival China by establishing bases in and
alliances with neighbours. In doing so, it is laying the basis
for a far broader conflict.
See Also:
North Korean "missile
crisis"--another example of unbridled US militarism
[29 June 2006]
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