Why
Can’t Wheeler-Dealer Trump Cut a Deal with North
Korea?
By Mike Whitney
August
25, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The United States and South Korea are
currently engaged in large-scale, joint-military
war games that simulate an invasion of the
North, the destruction of the DPRK’s nuclear
weapons sites, and a “decapitation operation” to
take out the supreme leader, Kim Jong-un. The
objective of the operation is to intensify
tensions between North and South thereby
justifying the continued US occupation of the
peninsula and the permanent division of the
country.
Imagine
if North Korea decided to conduct massive “live
fire” military drills, accompanied by a Chinese
naval flotilla, just three miles off the coast
of California. And, let’s say, they decided to
send formations of strategic high-altitude
aircraft loaded with nuclear bombs to fly along
the Canada and Mexico borders while tens of
thousands of combat troops accompanied by
hundreds of tanks and armored vehicles rehearsed
a “shock and awe” type blitz onto US territory
where they would immediately crush the defending
army, level cities and critical civilian
infrastructure, and topple the regime in
Washington.
Do you
think the Trump administration would dismiss the
North’s provocative war games as merely
“defensive maneuvers” or would they see them as
a clear and present danger to US national
security warranting a prompt and muscular
response from the military?
It’s a
no brainer, isn’t it? If North Korea treated the
US like the US treats North Korea, then
Washington would turn everything north of the
38th Parallel into a smoldering wastelands. That
much is certain.
But
double standards aside, the United States has
always treated Korea with contempt and
brutality. The ongoing war games are just the
latest in a long line of provocations dating
back more than a hundred years. In 1871, the US
launched its infamous Korean Expedition in
which US warships were deployed to the peninsula
to force open markets and seize whatever wealth
was available. Not surprisingly, the so called
“diplomatic” mission quickly devolved into a
full-blown conflagration as an armed contingent
of 650 US troops landed on the Korean island of
Ganghwa where they captured several Korean forts
and slaughtered over 300 Korean soldiers. The
battle culminated in a ferocious struggle for a
citadel called Gwangseong Garrison. The Korean
forces defended the fortress honorably, but
their ancient matchlocks were no match for the
American’s vastly-superior Remington
rolling-block carbines. The Korean forces were
butchered defending their own country while the
invading American army barely suffered a
scratch. (Just three Marines were killed in the
fighting.) This was Korea’s first taste of US
savagery.
Washington’s hatred for Korea reached its apex
during the Korean War, a conflict in which the
meddlesome US had no reason to be involved. The
nationalist militias that had finally triumphed
over 40-years of Japanese occupation, now had to
face the full-force of the US military which was
committed to containing communism wherever it
popped up. In its demented attempt to impose its
own values on the rest of the world, the US
killed upwards of 3 million people, reduced most
of the North to rubble, razed the main
population centers to the ground, and viciously
carpet-bombed reservoirs, irrigation dams, rice
crops, hydroelectric dams, and all of the other
life-sustaining infrastructure and food sources.
The magnitude of the devastation was
unimaginable, everything north of the 38th
parallel was transformed into a moonscape.
Washington wanted to make sure that survivors
would face widespread famine, disease and Stone
Age-type conditions for years to come. The US
couldn’t win the war, so it destroyed every
trace of civilization.
According to the Asia-Pacific Journal:
“By
the fall of 1952, there were no effective
targets left for US planes to hit. Every
significant town, city and industrial area
in North Korea had already been bombed. In
the spring of 1953, the Air Force targeted
irrigation dams on the Yalu River, both to
destroy the North Korean rice crop and to
pressure the Chinese, who would have to
supply more food aid to the North. Five
reservoirs were hit, flooding thousands of
acres of farmland, inundating whole towns
and laying waste to the essential food
source for millions of North Koreans.10 Only
emergency assistance from China, the USSR,
and other socialist countries prevented
widespread famine.” (“The Destruction and
Reconstruction of North Korea, 1950 – 1960”,
The Asia-Pacific Journal, Japan Focus)
The
idea that the conflict was a “civil war” was a
charade to conceal what was actually taking
place. In reality, the US was engaged in a
battle to the death with a weaker but more
determined national liberation movement that
sought to break to bonds of foreign occupation.
The US could not prevail in the conflict, but
they did manage to force a compromise on their
adversary, the partitioning of the state along
the 38th parallel followed by the installing of
a military dictatorship in Soule. This is the
bitter peace the US imposed on Korea.
Had the
US had been defeated in Korea as they had been
in Vietnam, the situation on the peninsula would
probably be similar to that of Vietnam today.
The country would be integrated under a central
government, standards of living would have
likely improved as the economy strengthened, and
many of the ideological trappings of communism
would have been discarded as the nation became
more actively engaged in global trade.
But the
US was not defeated in the Korean War, it merely
withdrew to military bases in the south where
more than 30,000 US combat troops reside to this
day. As a result, the southern part of the
peninsula remains occupied territory, its
government in Seoul largely complies with
Washington’s diktats, and the country is still
split along the 38th parallel. Also, as the
recent verbal confrontation between Washington
and Pyongyang illustrates, hostilities could
flare up at any time.
It’s
worth mentioning that since the war ended in
1953, the United States has toppled or
attempted to topple over 50 sovereign
governments. In that same period of time, the
North has not attacked, toppled or invaded
anyone, nor have they leveled sanctions on
anyone, nor have they armed and trained neo
Nazis, Islamic jihadists or other fanatical
militants to execute their proxy wars in
far-flung regions around the globe, nor have
they established black sites where they
brutalize their kidnapped victims with extreme
forms of torture. North Korea may be a
seriously-flawed and, perhaps, even tyrannical
regime, but it has not pummeled entire nations
into dust sending millions fleeing across
continents to seek refuge. It has not bombed
wedding parties, hospitals, mosques etc wreaking
havoc while plunging the world deeper into chaos
and despair. North Korea is far from perfect,
but compared to the United States, it’s looks
like a paragon of virtue.
The
North Korean’s want peace. They want a formal
end to the war and they want guarantees that the
United States won’t preemptively attack them. Is
that too much to ask?
But the
United States won’t sign a treaty with the North
because it is not in its interests to do so.
Washington would prefer for things to stay just
the way they are today. In fact, Hillary
Clinton said as much in a speech she made to
Goldman Sachs in 2013. Here’s an excerpt:
CLINTON: “We don’t want a unified Korean
peninsula, because if there were one South
Korea would be dominant for the obvious
economic and political reasons.
We
[also] don’t want the North Koreans to cause
more trouble than the system can absorb. So
we’ve got a pretty good thing going with the
previous North Korean leaders [Kim Il-sung
and Kim Jung-il]. And then along comes the
new young leader [Kim Jung-un], and he
proceeds to insult the Chinese. He refuses
to accept delegations coming from them…..So
the new [Chinese] leadership basically calls
him [Kim Jung-un] on the carpet. …Cut it
out. Just stop it. Who do you think you
are? You are dependent on us [the Chinese],
and you know it. (WikiLeaks)
There
it is in black and white. The US does not want a
unified Korea. (“for obvious economic and
political reasons.”) The US wants to keep the
country split up so it can keep the North
isolated and underdeveloped, maintain the
South’s colonial dependence on the US, and
perpetuate the occupation. That’s what
Washington wants. The goal is not security, but
power, greed and geopolitical positioning.
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From
Washington’s point of view, the status quo is
just dandy which is why there is no incentive to
end the war, sign a treaty, wind down the
occupation, or provide security guarantees for
the North. As Hillary cheerily opines,
“We’ve got a pretty good thing going on.”
Indeed.
The only fly in the ointment is that young Kim
is now toying with nuclear weapons which seems
to have caught Washington by surprise.
But how
could Washington be surprised when they’ve known
the DPRK has had a nuclear weapons program since
the early 1990s? Clearly, the issue should have
been seriously addressed much earlier.
Even
so, Washington’s elite powerbrokers have yet to
settle on a remedy for this fast emerging
crisis, which is why the Trump administration is
running around twisting arms (Russia and China)
and escalating his bombast rather than taking
the rational approach and engaging the North
Koreans directly in bilateral negotiations.
Has
anyone even considered that option yet?
The
North is eager to negotiate because the North
wants peace, it’s as plain as the nose on your
face. The North does not want a confrontation
with the US because they know what the outcome
would be. Complete and total annihilation. They
know that and they don’t want that. Nor do they
want to unilaterally disarm and end up like
Gadhafi or Saddam. That’s why they built nukes
in the first place, to avoid the Gadhafi
scenario.
At this
stage of the game, the US has just two options:
1/
Ignore the issue until the North develops the
ballistic missile technology needed to strike
the mainland USA, thus, putting American cities
and civilians at risk.
2/
Negotiate an end to the war, provide security
guarantees, and some economic inducements (oil
and light-water reactors for electricity) in
exchange for denuclearization and routine
weapons-and-facilities inspections.
So
what’s it going to be: Door Number 1 or
Door Number 2?
We’ve
been down this road before. In the 1990s the
Clinton administration worked out the terms for
the so called Agreed Framework which could have
succeeded had Washington kept up its end of the
deal. But it didn’t. Washington failed to meet
its obligations, so now we’re back to Square 1,
and the Trump administration has to decide
whether they’re capable of making a rational
decision or not. (Don’t hold your breath) Here’s
how Jimmy Carter summed up the previous
agreement in a Washington Post op-ed in 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’s
a peaceful way out of this crisis. Just sit down
and negotiate. It’s no big deal. People do it
all the time. Heck, if Trump is half the
wheeler-dealer he claims to be in his
autobiography, it should be a piece of cake.
Let’s
hope so.
Mike Whitney
lives
in Washington state. He is a contributor to Hopeless:
Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK
Press). Hopeless is also available in a Kindle
edition. He can
be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.
This
article was first published by
Counterpunch
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