COUNTERPUNCH.ORG
JANUARY 8, 2016
Here’s
your U.S. foreign policy quiz for the day:
Question
1– How many governments has the United States overthrown or tried to overthrow
since the Second World War?
Answer: 57 (See William Blum.)
Question
2– How many of those governments had nuclear weapons?
Answer— 0
Does that mean North Korea needs nuclear weapons to deter
US aggression?
Yes and no. Yes, nuclear weapons are a credible deterrent but,
no, that’s not why North Korea set off a hydrogen bomb last Tuesday.
The reason North Korea detonated the bomb was to force the Obama
administration to sit up and take notice. That’s what this is all about. North
Korea’s supreme leader, Kim Jong Un, wants the US to realize
that they’re going to pay a heavy price for avoiding direct
negotiations. In other words, Kim is trying to pressure
Obama back to the bargaining table.
Unfortunately, Washington isn’t listening. They see
the North as a threat to regional security and have decided
that additional sanctions and isolation are the best remedies. The
Obama administration thinks they have the whole matter under control and don’t
need to be flexible or compromise which is why they are opting for sticks over
carrots. In fact, Obama has refused to conduct any bilateral
talks with the North unless the North agrees beforehand to abandon its
nuclear weapons programs altogether and allow weapons inspectors to
examine all their nuclear facilities. This is a non-starter for the DPRK.
They see their nuclear weapons program as their “ace in the hole”,
their only chance to end persistent US hostility.
Now if we separate the “hydrogen bomb” incident from the
longer historic narrative dating back to the Korean War, it’s possible to
twist the facts in a way that makes the North look like the “bad
guy”, but that’s simply not the case. In fact, the reason the
world is facing these problems today is because of US adventurism in the
past. Just as ISIS emerged from he embers of the Iraq War, so too, nuclear
proliferation on the Korean peninsula is a direct result of failed US
foreign policy in the ’50s.
US involvement in the Korean War precluded a final
settlement, which means the war never really ended. An
armistice agreement that was signed on July 27, 1953,
ended the hostilities, but a “final peaceful settlement” was
never achieved, so the nation remains divided today. The reason that
matters is because the US still has 15 military bases in South
Korea, 28,000 combat troops, and enough artillery and missiles to
blow the entire country to smithereens. The US presence in South
Korea effectively prevents the reunification of the country and a
final conclusion to the war unless it is entirely on Washington’s
terms. Bottom line: Even though the cannons have stopped firing, the war drags
on, thanks in large part to the ongoing US occupation.
So how can the North normalize relations with the US
if Washington won’t talk to them and, at the same time, insists
that the North abandon the weapons program that is their
only source of leverage? Maybe they should do an
about-face, meet Washington’s demands, and hope that by extending the
olive branch relations will gradually improve. But how can that
possibly work, after all, Washington wants regime change so it can install
a US puppet that will help create another capitalist dystopia for its corporate
friends. Isn’t that the way US interventions usually turn out? That’s
not compromise, it’s suicide.
And there’s another thing too: The leadership in Pyongyang
knows who they’re dealing with which is why they’ve taken the hardline.
They know the US doesn’t respond to weakness, only strength. That’s why
they can’t cave in on the nukes project. It’s their only hope.
Either the US stands down and makes concessions or the stalemate
continues. Those are the only two possible outcomes.
It’s worth noting, that before
Syria, Libya, Iraq, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Vietnam and the long catalogue of
US bloodbaths across the decades, there was the Korean War. Americans
have swept it under the rug, but every Korean, North and South,
knows what happened and how it ended. Here’s a short
refresher that explains why the North is still wary of the US 63
years after the armistice was signed. The excerpt is from an
article titled “Americans have forgotten what we did to
North Korea”, at Vox World:
“In the early 1950s, during the Korean War, the US dropped more
bombs on North Korea than it had dropped in the entire Pacific theater during
World War II. This carpet bombing, which included 32,000 tons of napalm, often deliberately
targeted civilian as well as military targets, devastating the country far
beyond what was necessary to fight the war. Whole cities were destroyed, with
many thousands of innocent civilians killed and many more left homeless and
hungry….
According to US journalist Blaine Harden…
“Over a period of three years or
so, we killed off — what — 20 percent of the population,” Air Force Gen. Curtis
LeMay, head of the Strategic Air Command during the Korean War,told the Office of
Air Force History in 1984. Dean Rusk, a supporter of the war and
later secretary of state, said the United States bombed “everything that moved
in North Korea, every brick standing on top of another.” After running low on
urban targets, U.S. bombers destroyed hydroelectric and irrigation dams in the
later stages of the war, flooding farmland and destroying crops……
You can glimpse both the humanitarian and political consequences
in an alarmed diplomatic cable that North Korea’s foreign minister sent to the
United Nations… in January 1951:
“On January 3 at 10:30 AM an armada of 82 flying fortresses
loosed their death-dealing load on the city of Pyongyang …Hundreds of tons of
bombs and incendiary compound were simultaneously dropped throughout the city,
causing annihilating fires, the transatlantic barbarians bombed the city with
delayed-action high-explosive bombs which exploded at intervals for a whole day
making it impossible for the people to come out onto the streets. The entire
city has now been burning, enveloped in flames, for two days. By the second
day, 7,812 civilians houses had been burnt down. The Americans were well aware
that there were no military targets left in Pyongyang….
The number of inhabitants of Pyongyang killed by bomb splinters,
burnt alive and suffocated by smoke is incalculable…Some 50,000 inhabitants
remain in the city which before the war had a population of 500,000.”
(“Americans have
forgotten what we did to North Korea“, Vox World)
Get the picture? When it became clear that the US was not
going to win the war, they decided to teach “those rotten Commies” a
lesson they’d never forget. They reduced the entire North to
smoldering rubble condemning the people to decades of starvation and poverty.
That’s how Washington fights its wars: “Kill ’em all and let God
sort it out.”
This is why the North is building nukes instead making
concessions; it’s because Washington is bent on
either victory or annihilation.
So
what does North Korea want from the United States?
The North wants what it’s always wanted. It wants the US to stop
its regime change operations, honor its obligations under the 1994 Agreed
Framework, and sign a non aggression pact. That’s all they want,
an end to the constant hectoring, lecturing and
interference. Is that too much to ask? Here’s how Jimmy Carter
summed it up in a Washington Post op-ed (November 24, 2010):
“Pyongyang has sent a
consistent message that during direct talks with the United States, it is ready
to conclude an agreement to end its nuclear programs, put them all under IAEA
inspection and conclude a permanent peace treaty to replace the ‘temporary’
cease-fire of 1953. We should consider responding to this offer. The
unfortunate alternative is for North Koreans to take whatever actions they
consider necessary to defend themselves from what they claim to fear most: a
military attack supported by the United States, along with efforts to change
the political regime.” (“North Korea’s
consistent message to the U.S.”, President Jimmy Carter, Washington
Post)
There it is in black and white. The US can end the conflict
today by just meeting its obligations under the terms of the Agreed Framework
and by agreeing that it will not attack North Korea in the future. The path
to nuclear disarmament has never been easier, but the chances of
Obama taking that road are slim at best.
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