US
Aircraft Carrier Deployed in Direct Threat to
North Korea
By Peter
Symonds
April
11, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"
-
Just days
after launching its criminal cruise missile
attack on Syria, the Trump administration has
provocatively authorised the US aircraft carrier
Carl Vinson, together with its full strike group
of guided missile destroyers and a cruiser, to
waters off the Korean Peninsula. The move is a
direct military threat to North Korea, which was
at the top of the agenda in talks last weekend
between the US and Chinese presidents.
An
unnamed US official told the Financial Times
that the deployment was designed to be a “show
of force.” The carrier strike group had taken
part in joint US-South Korean war games but was
heading south for port calls in Australia before
being ordered to turn north from Singapore. The
Navy Times noted that “announcing
carrier movements in advance is rare, and
generally done to send a clear message.”
US
Pacific Command spokesman Dave Benham declared
the decision was “a prudent measure to maintain
readiness and presence in the Western Pacific,”
then castigated North Korea in blunt terms. “The
number one threat in the region continues to be
North Korea,” he said, “due to its reckless,
irresponsible and destabilising program of
missile tests and pursuit of a nuclear weapons
capacity.”
The
Navy Times boasted that “the strike group
brings with it a ton of firepower, including the
strike- and air-combat capacities of the Hornets
[fighter aircraft], early warning radars,
electronic-warfare capabilities and more than
300 missile tubes on the carrier’s escorts.”
The
dispatch of the Carl Vinson is a deliberate
escalation of tensions on the Korean Peninsula
following the Trump administration’s completion
of a lengthy review of US strategy toward North
Korea. NBC revealed last Friday that three
military options were under active
consideration: the return of US nuclear weapons
to the Korean Peninsula, “decapitation” attacks
to kill the North Korean leadership and covert
operations inside North Korea to sabotage
nuclear, military and industrial targets.
Speaking on “Fox News” on Sunday, President
Donald Trump’s national security adviser,
General H. R. McMaster, justified the deployment
of the Carl Vinson as “prudent,” adding: “This
is a rogue regime that is now a nuclear-capable
regime. The president has asked [us] to be
prepared to give him a full range of options to
remove that threat to the American people and to
our allies and partners in the region.”
Citing
US officials, the Navy Times reported
that “the Pentagon and US Pacific Command have
been sharpening plans for military strikes on
the North as an option should the administration
want to pursue that action.”
All
these highly provocative “options” threaten to
trigger a devastating war on the Korean
Peninsula that could kill millions. The Navy
Times suggested that “an all-out regional
conflict” would bring “the US and its allies
head-to-head with not only North Korea, but
perhaps with China”—that is, a conflict between
the world’s two largest economies, both
nuclear-armed.
Trump
undoubtedly exploited the threat of military
action against North Korea to pressure Chinese
President Xi Jinping to take tougher action
against the Pyongyang regime. Speaking after
talks between Trump and Xi last weekend, US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told CBS’s
“Face the Nation” yesterday that Xi “clearly
understands ... that the situation has
intensified and has reached a certain level of
threat that action has to be taken.”
Tillerson ruled out any talks with North Korea
at present, saying only that “we can work
together with the Chinese to change the
conditions in the minds of the DPRK [North
Korean] leadership.” But if Beijing fails to
bully Pyongyang into accepting Washington’s
demands, Tillerson left no doubt that the US
would take aggressive measures against North
Korea. Trump bluntly told the Financial
Times last week: “If China is not going to
solve North Korea, we will.”
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In an
interview yesterday with ABC’s “This Week,”
Tillerson was asked whether North Korea’s
development of an intercontinental ballistic
missile would constitute “a red line.” He
answered ominously: “If we judge that they have
perfected that type of delivery system, then
that becomes a very serious stage of their
further development.”
Drawing
a link with last week’s attack on Syria,
Tillerson said: “The message that any nation can
take is if you violate international norms, if
you violate international agreements, if you
fail to live up to commitments, if you become a
threat to others, at some point, a response is
likely to be undertaken.”
The
North Korean regime denounced the US missile
strikes on Syria as “an unforgiveable act of
aggression,” adding that “the US has been
picking only on countries without nuclear
weapons.” A spokesman declared: “The reality of
today shows that we must stand against power
with power and it proves a million times over
that our decision to strengthen our nuclear
deterrence has been the right one.”
In
reality, Pyongyang’s limited nuclear arsenal has
only provided US imperialism with a pretext for
a massive build-up of its military forces in
Asia, which are not primarily directed against
North Korea, but China. Trump is continuing and
expanding the Obama administration’s “pivot to
Asia” in a bid to ensure the continued US
dominance of the Asia Pacific region.
While
North Korea is not the same as Syria, the US
will not hesitate to use military force against
Pyongyang to further its strategic ambitions. US
Defence Secretary James Mattis has already
warned North Korea that any attempt to use its
nuclear weapons will be met with an “effective
and overwhelming response.” The Carl Vinson
strike group alone has the capacity to carry and
deliver enough nuclear weapons to obliterate
North Korea’s industrial and military
capabilities.
Moreover, no one should conclude that the
strikes on Syria will preclude a US attack on
North Korea. Damascus and Pyongyang are just the
proxy targets for a far broader strategy of
subordinating Russia and China—and thus the
Eurasian landmass—to the hegemony of US
imperialism. The bitter infighting within the
American political, military and intelligence
establishment over tactics—whether to confront
Moscow or Beijing first—does not rule out
attacks on both Syria and North Korea, with
devastating consequences for humanity.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.