Trump,
North Korea and the danger of world war
By
Peter Symonds
September 04, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The North Korean nuclear test yesterday, its
sixth and most powerful, has once again exposed
the extremely volatile and precarious state of
global geopolitics and the great danger of a
descent into a nuclear world war.
The
unstable regime in Pyongyang has concluded that
its only hope of self-preservation, in the face
of provocative threats from an unstable Trump
administration, is to try and expand its nuclear
arsenal as quickly as possible. North Korean
leader Kim Jong-un is acutely conscious of the
brutal end of Iraq’s Saddam Hussein and Libya’s
Muammar Gaddafi, after they abandoned their
so-called weapons of mass destruction.
While
the actions of North Korea are certainly
compounding the risk of conflict, prime
responsibility for pushing the world to the
brink of nuclear war rests with US imperialism.
Moreover, as the reckless and belligerent
statements from Trump and his officials
demonstrate, North Korea’s limited nuclear
weaponry and reactionary nationalist bombast
will not prevent the US from using its military
might, including its huge nuclear arsenal,
against the North Korean people.
After a
meeting between Trump and his top military and
national security advisers, US Defence Secretary
James “Mad Dog” Mattis warned North Korea that
it faced “a massive military response” to any
threat to the US or its allies. “We are not
looking to the total annihilation of a country,
namely North Korea,” Mattis continued, “but as I
said, we have many options to do so.” President
Trump “wanted to be briefed on each one of
them,” he added.
Trump
himself warned of a US nuclear attack against
North Korea when he declared last month that it
confronted “fire and fury like the world has
never seen.” A White House readout from his
phone call yesterday with Japanese Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe explicitly declared that the
US stood ready to use “the full range of
diplomatic, conventional and nuclear
capabilities at our disposal.”
Trump
was asked on Sunday: “Will you attack North
Korea?” He refused to rule out pre-emptive
military strikes, simply declaring: “We’ll see.”
The US
president has repeatedly said that he would not
signal a military attack in advance, compounding
the uncertainty, and hence fears in Pyongyang.
Furthermore, as the crisis on the Korean
Peninsula has escalated, the divisions in the
Trump administration have resulted in an
incoherent policy, which swings wildly between
threats of all-out war and suggestions of talks,
further inflaming the already explosive
situation.
In the
aftermath of yesterday’s nuclear test, the White
House, along with the American media, has turned
its fire on China and Russia, underscoring the
fact that the US confrontation with North Korea
is bound up with far broader strategic aims.
American strategists regard domination of the
vast Eurasian land mass as the key to US global
hegemony and China as the chief obstacle to that
goal.
NBC
presenters Andrea Mitchell and Chuck Todd on
yesterday’s “Meet the Press,” repeatedly
emphasised the accusation that China and Russia
were providing “economic help” to North Korea.
Republican Senator Roy Blunt added: “There’s
some sense that they have been more helpful than
they should have been and more sustaining to the
economy than they should have been.”
Last
month, both China and Russia voted for, and have
begun implementing, crippling UN sanctions on
North Korea that will slash its exports by one
third. What is now being actively discussed in
Washington is a total economic embargo—itself an
act of war—and the cutting of trade with those
who continue to conduct any with North
Korea—above all China and Russia.
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Trump,
who is already preparing trade war measures
against China over its alleged “theft” of
intellectual property, tweeted yesterday: “The
United States is considering, in addition to
other options, stopping all trade with any
country doing business with North Korea.”
Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin confirmed on
Fox News Sunday that he was preparing “a
sanctions package to send to the president, for
his strong consideration” to do just that.
The
implications for the global economy are
immense—a collapse of trade, plunging the world
into economic depression, as in the 1930s. That
such a possibility is being actively considered
is a measure of the depth of the economic and
geo-political tensions wracking the world.
Moreover, the threat of all-out trade war
between the world’s two largest economies is
being accompanied by the preparations for
all-out military conflict.
The
Trump administration has accelerated the
diplomatic, economic and military challenge to
China begun by President Obama under his “pivot
to Asia.” The massive US military build-up in
North East Asia, including the installation of
anti-ballistic missile systems and huge and
highly provocative joint US-South Korean war
games, is directed more at fighting a nuclear
war with China than a conflict with the small,
backward country of North Korea.
As well
as ramping up the confrontation on the Korean
Peninsula, the Trump administration has given
the green light for more “freedom of navigation”
operations in another of the region’s volatile
flashpoints—the South China Sea. The Wall
Street Journal reported on Friday that the
US Pacific Command is preparing to sail warships
and send military aircraft directly into waters
and airspace claimed by China around its islets,
two or three times in the next few months as
part of a regular schedule.
In
Europe, the US is escalating its confrontation
with Russia by taking the first steps towards
annulling the 1987 Intermediate Range Nuclear
Forces Treaty with the former Soviet Union. As
Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung warned,
the danger is “that the US will construct new
missiles and station them in Europe,” raising
the terrifying spectre of a nuclear war in
Europe between the two countries—the US and
Russia—that both possess thousands of nuclear
warheads.
The
most dangerous factor in this highly volatile
situation is the profound economic, social and
political crisis of US imperialism—of which
Trump is the most malignant expression. His
administration confronts deep internal divisions
and a huge and mounting social crisis, which is
generating massive domestic opposition, as a
result of its incompetence and indifference to
the human suffering caused by the Houston
flooding. The danger is that Trump will resort
to a war against North Korea with incalculable
consequences, as a means of directing acute
domestic class tensions outwards against an
external foe.
At the
same time, these social tensions, in America and
around the world, are fuelling the coming
revolutionary upheavals of the working class.
The crucial issue is the building of a
revolutionary leadership, to forge a unified
international movement of workers guided by a
scientific socialist program and perspective to
put an end to the capitalist system and its
outmoded division of the world into rival nation
states. That is the perspective for which the
International Committee of the Fourth
International and its sections fight.
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