Korea,
Afghanistan and the Never Ending War Trap
While the US-backed 'Hunger Games' in South
Korea plow on, a 'new strategy' for Afghanistan
is really all about business. But China is
already there
By Pepe
Escobar
August 24,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- There
are more parallels between an unfinished 1950s
war in Northeast Asia and an ongoing 16-year-old
war in the crossroads between Central and South
Asia than meet the eye.
Let’s start with North Korea.
Once
again the US/South Korea Hunger Games plow on.
It didn’t have to be this way.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov explained
how: “Russia
together with China developed a plan which
proposes ‘double freezing’: Kim Jong-un should
freeze nuclear tests and stop launching any
types of ballistic missiles, while US and South
Korea should freeze large-scale drills which are
used as a pretext for the North’s tests.”
Call it
sound diplomacy. There’s no conclusive evidence
the Russia-China strategic partnership floated
this plan directly to the administration of US
President Donald Trump. Even if they did, the
proposal was shot down. The proverbial “military
experts” lobbied hard against it, insisting on a
lopsided advantage to Pyongyang. Worse, National
Security Adviser H R McMaster consistently
lobbies for preventative war – as if this is any
sort of serious conflict “resolution”.
Meanwhile, that “plan for an enveloping fire”
around Guam remains on Kim Jong-un’s table. It
is essential to remember the plan was North
Korea’s
response
to Trump’s “fire and fury” volley. Kim has
stated that for diplomacy to work again, “it is
necessary for the US to make a proper option
first”. As in canceling the Ulchi-Freedom
Guardian war games – featuring up to 30,000 US
soldiers and more than 50,000 South Korean
troops.
South
Korean President Moon Jae-in dutifully repeats
the Pentagon mantra that these Hunger Games,
lasting until August 31, are “defensive”.
Computer simulations gaming a – very unlikely –
unilateral Pyongyang attack may qualify as
defense. But Kim and the Korean Central News
Agency interpret the war games in essence for
what they are: rehearsal for a “decapitation”, a
pre-emptive attack yielding regime change.
No
wonder the KCNA insists on a possible
“catastrophe”. And Beijing, crucially, concurs.
The Global Times reasonably argued that “if
South Korea really wants no war on the Korean
Peninsula, it should try to stop this military
exercise”.
Can’t pack up our troubles
It
would be a relief to defuse the drama by evoking
that great World War I marching song; “Pack up
your troubles in your old kit bag/ And smile,
smile, smile.”
But this
is extremely serious. A China-North Korea mutual
defense treaty has been in effect since 1961.
Under this framework, Beijing’s response to
Trump’s “fire and fury” was a thing of beauty.
If Pyongyang attacks, China is neutral. But if
the US launches a McMaster-style pre-emptive
attack, China intervenes – militarily – on
behalf of Pyongyang.
As a
clincher, Beijing even made it clear that its
preference is for the current status quo to
remain. Checkmate.
Hunger
Games apart, the rhetorical war in the Korean
Peninsula did decrease a substantial notch after
China made its position clear. According to a
Beltway intel source, that shows “the US and
Chinese militaries, as the US and the Russians
in Syria, are coordinating to avoid a war”.
Evidence may have been provided by a very
important meeting last week between the chairmen
of the US and Chinese Joint Chiefs of Staff,
General Joseph Dunford and General Fang Fenghui.
They
signed a deal that
the Pentagon spun as able to “reduce the risk of
miscalculation” in Northeast Asia.
Among the
prodigious fireworks inherent to his departure
as White House chief strategist, Steve Bannon
nailed it: “There’s no military solution, forget
it. Until somebody solves the part of the
equation that shows me that 10 million people in
Seoul don’t die in the first 30 minutes from
conventional weapons, I don’t know what you’re
talking about, there’s no military solution
here, they got us.”
And extra
evidence in the “they got us” department is that
B-1B heavy bomber “decapitation” practice runs –
out of Andersen Air Force Base in Guam – have
been quietly “suspended”. This crucial, largely
unreported fact in the air supersedes rhetoric
from Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and
Pentagon head James “Mad Dog” Mattis, who
previous to Bannon’s exit were stressing
“strong military consequences if North Korea
chooses wrongly”.
Once again, it’s all about
BRI
Now let’s
move to Afghanistan. “Mad Dog” Mattis once
famously said it was fun to shoot Taliban
fighters. “Known unknowns” Don Rumsfeld was more
realistic; he moved out of Afghanistan (toward
Iraq) because there were not enough good targets
to bomb.
Anyone
who spent time working/reporting on the Afghan
Hindu Kush and the southwestern deserts knows
why the proverbial “there’s no military
solution” applies. There are myriad reasons,
starting with the profound, radicalized Afghan
ethnic divide (roughly, 40% are mostly rural,
tribal Pashtun, many recruited by the Taliban;
almost 30% are Tajik, a great deal of them
urban, literate and in government; more than 20%
are Hazara Shiites; and 10% are Uzbek).
The
bulk of Washington’s “aid” to Kabul throughout
these past 16 years has been on the bombing, not
the economy, front. Government corruption is
cataclysmic. Warlords rule. The Taliban thrive
because they offer local protection. Much to
Pashtun ire, most of the army is Tajik. Tajik
politicians are mostly close to India while most
Pashtun favor Pakistan (after all, they have
cousins on the other side of the Durand line;
enter the dream of a future, reunited
Pashtunistan).
On the
GWOT (Global War on Terror) front, al-Qaeda
would not even exist if the late Dr Zbig “Grand
Chessboard” Brzezinski had not come up with the
idea of a sprawling, well-weaponized private
army of demented jihadis-cum-tribal Afghans
fighting the communist government in Kabul
during the 1980s. Add to this the myth that the
Pentagon needs to be on the ground in
Afghanistan to prevent jihadis from attacking
America. Al-Qaeda is extinct in Afghanistan. And
Daesh does not need territory to concoct/project
its DIY jihad.
When
the myth of the US in Afghanistan as a
categorical imperative is exposed, that may
unveil what this is all about: business.
And
we’re not even talking about who really profits
from large-scale opium/heroin trade.
No
Advertising
- No
Government
Grants
-
This
Is
Independent
Media
|
Two months ago the Afghan ambassador to
Washington, Hamdullah Mohib, was breathlessly
spinning how “President Trump is keenly
interested in Afghanistan’s economic potential”,
as in “our estimated $1 trillion in copper, iron
ore, rare-earth elements, aluminum, gold,
silver, zinc, mercury and lithium”. This led to
the proverbial unnamed “US
officials” telling Reuters last month that what
Trump wants is for the US to demand some of that
mineral wealth in exchange for “assisting”
Kabul.
A US
Geological Survey study a decade ago did
identify potential Afghan mineral wealth – gold,
silver, platinum, iron ore, uranium, zinc,
tantalum, bauxite, coal, natural gas and copper
– worth as much as US$1 trillion, with much spin
dedicated to Afghanistan as “the Saudi Arabia of
lithium”.
And the competition – once again, China – is
already there, facing myriad infrastructure and
red-tape problems, but concentrated on incorporating
Afghanistan,
long-term, into the New Silk Roads, aka Belt and
Road Initiative (BRI), along with its security
cooperation arm, the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization.
It’s no
secret the Russia-China strategic partnership
wants an Afghan solution hatched by Afghans and
supervised by the SCO (of which Afghanistan is
an observer and future full member). So from the
point of view of neocon/neoliberalcon elements
of the War Party in Washington, Afghanistan only
makes sense as a forward base to
harass/stall/thwart BRI.
What
Russia and China want for Afghanistan – yet
another node in the process of Eurasia
integration – is not much different from what
Russia, China and South Korea want for North
Korea: increased connectivity as in a
future Trans-Korean Railway linked
to the Trans-Siberian.
As
for Washington and the proverbially bombastic,
failed futurists
across the Beltway, do they even know what is
the end game of “investing” in two never-ending
wars with no visible benefits?
This article was first
published by
Asia Times
-