“We
Burned Down Every Town in North Korea”
By John Laforge
“We went over there and fought the
war and eventually burned down every
town in North Korea anyway, some way or
another… Over a period of three years or
so, we killed off, what, 20 percent of
the population?”
— General Curtis LeMay, in
“Strategic Air Warfare,” by Richard H.
Kohn
August
21, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The US public wants to know why North Korea is
so paranoid, militarily hostile and boastful.
And why do the leaders in the capital city
Pyongyang point their fingers at the US every
time they test another rocket or bomb?
Sixty-five years after the US burned down every
town in North Korea, the US military is now
simultaneously bombing or rocketing seven
different non-nuclear countries. The US conducts
military exercises with South Korea off the
North’s coastline twice a year.
The US
regularly tests Minuteman-3 long-range nuclear
missiles ¾ from Vandenberg Air Base in
California ¾ that can reach and obliterate
Pyongyang. Several presidential administrations
have called North Korea “evil,” a “state sponsor
of terrorism,” and “threatening.” US military
officials have called North Korea’s tiny,
backward, nearly failed state the “principle
threat” to the US security. North Korea may have
reason to worry.
North
Korea’s rocket tests mostly fail but are
nevertheless called “provocative” and
“destabilizing” by the State Dept., the Council
of Foreign Relations, and the White House. This
is regardless of which party is in power. Bill
Clinton said in 1994: “If North Korea ever used
a nuclear weapon, it would no longer continue to
exist.” Likewise today, Defense Secretary Jim
“Mad Dog” Mattis used similarly bombastic
language discussing North Korea August 8. John
Walcott reported for Reuters that Mattis said
the North must stop any action that would “lead
to the end of its regime and the destruction of
its people.”
Consider living memory
In
Robert Neer’s 2013 book “Napalm,” the author
reports that General Lemay wrote, “We burned
down just about every city in North and South
Korea both … we killed off over a million
civilian Koreans…” Eighth Army chemical officer
Donald Bode is quoted as saying, on an “average
good day” … pilots in the Korean War “dropped
70,000 gallons of napalm: 45,000 from the U.S.
Air Force, 10,000-20,000 by its navy, and
4,000-5,000 by marines” ¾ marines who nicknamed
the burning jellied gasoline “cooking oil.”
Neer
found that a total of 32,357 tons of napalm were
used on Korea, “about double that dropped on
Japan in 1945.” More bombs were dropped on Korea
than in the whole of the Pacific theater during
World War II ¾ 635,000 tons, versus 503,000
tons. “Pyongyang, a city of half a million
people before 1950, was said to have had only
two buildings left intact,” Neer wrote. This is
still living memory in North Korea.
Howard
Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States”
says, “Perhaps 2 million Koreans, North and
South, were killed in the Korean war, all in the
name of opposing ‘the rule of force.’” Bruce
Coming’s 2010 history “The Korean War” says, “of
more than 4 million casualties … at least 2
million were civilians. … Estimated North Korean
casualties numbered 2 million including about 1
million civilians… An estimated 900,000 Chinese
soldiers lost their lives in combat.”
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After
Truman fired Gen. MacArthur in May 1951, the
former supreme commander testified to Congress,
“The war in Korea has already almost destroyed
that nation of 20 million people. I have never
seen such devastation. I have seen, I guess, as
much blood and disaster as any living man, and
it just curdled my stomach, the last time I was
there. After I looked at that wreckage and those
thousands of women and children … I vomited.”
Dems take finger off the button (for a
minute)
Two
democratic presidential hopefuls said in 2007
that they’d take the threat of nuclear attack
“off the table,” hinting at their discomfort
with the idea of the Bomb’s deliberate mass
destruction. In April 2006, then New York
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton was asked in a TV
interview about her position toward Iran. She
said, “I have said publicly no option should be
off the table, but I would certainly take
nuclear weapons off the table. This [Bush]
administration has been very willing to talk
about using nuclear weapons in a way we haven’t
seen since the dawn of the nuclear age. I think
that’s a terrible mistake.”
On
August 2, 2007, Barak Obama said to the AP, “I
think it would be a profound mistake for us to
use nuclear weapons in any circumstance,”
pausing before he added, “involving civilians,”
The New York Times reported. Obama quickly
retracted the statement saying, “Let me scratch
that,” but his intent was loud and clear ¾ and
needs repeating: The long-standing U.S. threat
to “keep all options open,” that is its
willingness to use nuclear weapons against human
beings, must be abolished. H-bombs cannot be
used without indiscriminately killing of
hundreds of thousands if not millions of
civilians, creating deadly radioactive fallout
that drifts into non-conflict areas, and causing
long-term environmental damage, all in violation
of the laws of war, the UN Charter, and the
Geneva Conventions.
Clinton’s and Obama’s public put-downs of
nuclear weapons attacks are both rare and bold
in their implications for the nuclear weapons
establishment. More such talk should be
encouraged.
At
least a dozen former nuclear war planners —
Kissinger, Jimmy Carter, Melvin Laird, Generals
George Butler, Charles Horner Andrew Goodpaster,
and Admirals Stansfield Turner, Noel Gayler, and
Hyman Rickover, among others — have denounced
nuclear weapons and called for their
elimination.
What is
it exactly to threaten to destroy an entire
country’s people? Is it terrorism? Trump’s fire
and fury “the likes of which the world has never
seen” would have to be beyond the half million
dead in the US Civil War; 18 million overall
deaths in World War I and 50 to 80 million dead
in World War II; 3 million dead Vietnamese and
at least 2 million dead Koreans. As usual, Mr.
Trump cannot be taken seriously, or he is
frighteningly unhinged.
Even,
the late Paul Nitze, Reagan White House
presidential adviser, a rightwing Cold War hawk,
and a founder of the anti-Soviet Committee on
the Present Danger, wrote in the 1999, “I can
think of no circumstances under which it would
be wise for the United States to use nuclear
weapons, even in retaliation for their prior use
against us.”
John LaForge
is a Co-director of Nukewatch, a peace and
environmental justice group in Wisconsin, and
edits its newsletter.