Why Trump
is Winding Up Tensions with North Korea
By Finian Cunningham
December 25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - After 18
months of on-off diplomacy with North Korea, the Trump
administration seems determined now to jettison the
fragile talk about peace, reverting to its earlier
campaign of “maximum pressure” and hostility. It’s a
retrograde move risking a disastrous war.
In a
visit to China this week, South Korean President Moon
Jae-in and Chinese leader Xi Jinping both
urged for greater
momentum in the diplomatic process with North Korea,
saying that renewed tensions benefit no-one. The two
leaders may need to revise that assertion. Tensions
greatly benefit someone – Washington.
Why Trump is winding up tensions again with Pyongyang
appears to involve a two-fold calculation. It gives
Washington greater leverage to extort more money from
South Korea for the presence of US military forces on
its territory; secondly, the Trump administration can
use the tensions as cover for increasing its regional
forces aimed at confronting China.
In recent
weeks, the rhetoric has deteriorated sharply between
Washington and Pyongyang. The Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea (DPRK) has resumed references to Trump
being a senile “dotard”, while the US president earlier
this month at the NATO summit near London dusted off his
old disparaging name for Kim Jong-un, the North Korean
leader,
calling him “rocket
man”.
On
December 7 and 15, North Korea
tested rocket engines
at its Sohae satellite launching site which are believed
to be preparation for the imminent test-firing of an
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). North Korea
unilaterally halted ICBM test-launches in April 2018 as
a gesture for diplomacy with the US. Its last launch was
on July 4, 2017, when Pyongyang mockingly called it a
“gift” for America’s Independence Day.
Earlier
this month, Pyongyang
said it was preparing a
“Christmas gift” for Washington. That was taken as
referring to resumption of ICBM test launches. However,
Pyongyang said it was up to the US to decide which gift
it would deliver.
On the
engine testing, Trump said he was “watching closely” on
what North Korea did next,
warning that he was
prepared to use military force against Pyongyang and
that Kim Jong-un had “everything to lose”.
The turning away from diplomacy may seem odd. Trump
first met Kim in June 2018 in Singapore at a
breakthrough summit, the first time a sitting US
president met with a North Korean leader. There were two
more summits, in Hanoi in February 2019, and at the
Demilitarized Zone on the Korean border in June 2019.
The latter occasion was a splendid photo-opportunity for
Trump, being the first American president to have
stepped on North Korean soil.