Is the
US Preparing for War Against North Korea?
By Peter
Symonds
March 14,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"
- A dangerous confrontation is rapidly emerging on
the Korean Peninsula between the United States and
North Korea, with the potential to plunge North East
Asia and the rest of the world into a catastrophic
conflict between nuclear-armed powers.
Amid a
barrage of commentary in the American and
international media inflating the threat posed by
the Pyongyang regime, the Trump administration is
actively considering “all options” to disarm and
subordinate North Korea.
The
immediate pretext is North Korea’s test-firing of
four medium-range ballistic missiles last week,
following the launch in February of a new
intermediate-range missile. However, the drumbeat of
US military threats has been preceded by months of
high-level discussions in American foreign policy
and military circles over action to prevent North
Korea building an intercontinental ballistic missile
(ICBM) capable of hitting the continental United
States.
President
Barack Obama, who, according to the New York
Times, was considering the most extreme
measures against Pyongyang, urged
then-President-elect Donald Trump to make North
Korea his highest security priority. Since taking
office, the Trump administration has been conducting
a top-level review of US strategy toward Pyongyang,
considering every option, including, as a White
House official told the Wall Street Journal,
those “well outside the mainstream” such as
“regime-change” and military strikes on North Korean
nuclear facilities and military assets.
A worried
New York Times editorial last week,
headlined “Rising Tensions with North Korea,”
underscored the dangers of war breaking out in North
East Asia. “How Mr. Trump intends to handle this
brewing crisis is unclear, but he has shown an
inclination to respond aggressively,” the newspaper
wrote. “On Monday, the White House denounced the
missile tests and warned of ‘very dire
consequences.’”
The
editorial pointed out that the Obama administration
had been engaged in cyber and electronic warfare
against the North Korean missile systems, then
continued: “Other options include some kind of
military action, presumably against missile launch
sites, and continuing to press China to cut off
support. The Trump administration has also discussed
reintroducing nuclear weapons into South Korea, an
extremely dangerous idea.”
The Chinese
government is acutely concerned at the prospect of
war on its doorstep involving its ally, North Korea.
In unusually blunt language, China’s foreign
minister, Wang Yi, warned that the United States and
North Korea were like “accelerating trains coming
toward each other with neither side willing to give
way.” The Trump administration flatly rejected
China’s proposal for a “dual suspension”—of North
Korea’s missile and nuclear programs and massive US
war games underway in South Korea—as the basis for
renewed negotiations.
By ruling
out talks, the White House is setting course for
confrontation, not only with North Korea, but also
with China. By preparing for military action against
North Korea, the US is also menacing China, which it
has identified as the most immediate challenge to
American global hegemony.
The Trump
administration has already threatened trade war
measures against China and military action against
Chinese islets in the South China Sea. The US
deployment of a Terminal High Altitude Area Defence
(THAAD) anti-ballistic-missile battery in South
Korea, which began last week, is part of a network
of integrated anti-missile systems designed to
facilitate nuclear war with China or Russia.
A
pre-emptive US attack on North Korea would be an act
of war with incalculable consequences. While no
match for the military power of US imperialism and
its allies, North Korea has a huge army, estimated
at more than a million soldiers, and a large array
of conventional missiles and artillery, much of it
entrenched along the heavily fortified Demilitarized
Zone and able to strike the densely populated South
Korean capital of Seoul.
In the
event of war, the scale of devastation would be
immense just on the Korean Peninsula alone, even
without the use of nuclear weapons. In 1994, the
Clinton administration was on the brink of attacking
North Korea’s nuclear facilities but pulled back at
the last minute after the Pentagon gave a sober
assessment of the likely outcome—300,000 to 500,000
South Korean and American military casualties.
A war now
is unlikely to be conventional or limited to the
Korean Peninsula. The Pentagon has been actively
planning for a far broader conflict. In December
2015, US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Joseph
Dunford said any conflict with North Korea would
inevitably be “trans-regional, multi-domain and
multifunctional”—in other words, a world war
involving other powers and the use of all weapons,
including nuclear bombs.
The
immediate danger of war is compounded by the acute
political, economic and social crises of all the
governments involved, as epitomised by last Friday’s
impeachment and removal of South Korean President
Park Geun-hye. Faced with an early election and the
prospect of defeat, the ruling right-wing Liberty
Korea Party has a definite incentive to whip up war
tensions with North Korea to divert attention from
the political crisis at home.
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Moreover,
the current US-South Korean military exercises,
involving more than 320,000 military personnel
backed by the most sophisticated US air and naval
power, provide an ideal opportunity for striking
North Korea. As of last year, the annual drills,
which amount to a rehearsal for war with Pyongyang,
have been conducted on the basis of aggressive new
operational plans, which include pre-emptive strikes
on North Korean military sites and “decapitation
raids” to assassinate the country’s leadership.
The
response of both the Chinese and North Korean
governments to US threats is utterly reactionary: on
the one hand looking for a deal with Washington, on
the other, engaging in an arms race that only
heightens the danger of war. Neither regime has
anything to do with socialism or represents the
interests of the working class. Their whipping up of
nationalism acts as a barrier to the development of
unity among workers in Asia and the US in opposition
to imperialist war.
The most
destabilising factor in this extremely tense
situation is the United States, where the political
establishment and state apparatus are embroiled in
factional warfare over foreign policy and hacking
allegations. There is a real danger that the Trump
administration will turn to war with North Korea in
an attempt to project internal social and political
tensions outward against the common “enemy.”
The
prospect of a catastrophic war stems not from
particular individuals or parties. It is being
driven by the deepening crisis of international
capitalism and the insoluble contradiction between
world economy and the division of the globe into
rival nation states. The same crisis of the profit
system, however, creates the objective conditions
and political necessity for the working class to
fight for its own revolutionary solution—a unified
anti-war movement of the international working class
based on a socialist perspective to put an end to
capitalism before it plunges humanity into
barbarism.
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