Happy
Birthday H-Bombs Marshall Kim
By Eric
Margolis
January 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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“Let’s begin 2016…with the thrilling
explosion of our first hydrogen bomb, so
that the whole world will look up to our
socialist, nuclear-armed republic and the
great Workers’ Party of Korea!” - Kim
Jong-un
January 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- North Koreans may be happy, but the rest of the
world certainly is not. Predictably, the US, Japan,
China, Australia and South Korea seethed with fury
at the explosive North Koreans. China scowled and
muttered.
This
hypocrisy and hysteria made world equity markets,
already reeling from new Chinese financial
blundering, crazy as uninformed investors ran for
the lifeboats. The UN shook its tiny fist at North
Korea, ignoring that the US, Britain, France, Russia
and China are all in violation of the 1963 Nuclear
Test Ban Treaty.
There was
not a peep about nuclear scofflaws, Israel, Pakistan
and India. Nor mention that today’s outraged South
Korea and Taiwan had been caught by CIA red-handed
trying to make their own nuclear weapons.
Is North
Korea’s claim of a hydrogen weapon true? The 6-7
kiloton underground nuclear blast – close to China’s
northern border was not indicative of a true
thermonuclear weapon. It may, however, have been a
test of the atomic trigger used to detonate a full
hydrogen weapon.
In any
event, whether or not the device was an H-bomb or
not, what really mattered was that Pyongyang’s
crowing that the device had been “miniaturized.”
North Korea’s foes have long feared that it would
shrink and lighten a nuclear warhead sufficiently to
be carried atop some of the North’s 1,000
medium-range missile arsenal. North Korea is
believed to have about ten nuclear devices, but they
are heavy and unsuited to high-stress ballistic
flight.
Still,
there appears little doubt that North Korea is well
on its way to deploy a respectable strategic nuclear
force. North Koreans have been eating grass for
decades to achieve just this goal.
In
Pyongyang’s view, the US, Japan and South Korea all
plan to invade North Korea, oust the Kim dynasty,
and turn it into yet another western satrapy. Only
North Korea’s redoubtable if obsolescent million-man
armed forces prevent this invasion, says Pyongyang.
Annual, massive US-South Korean military exercises
mimicking an invasion of North Korea do nothing to
lessen Pyongyang’s paranoia.
There was
also an important element of inter-Korean politics
at play here. The North claims it is the only true,
authentic Korea. South Korea, spits Pyongyang, is an
American colony, garrisoned by US troops, and run by
puppets. South Korea’s armed forces are still
commanded in wartime by a US four-start general.
North Korea’s nuclear progress stands in sharp
contrast to the South’s, which was shut down by
Washington.
In spite of
its blood-curdling threats against the US, North
Korea is far from producing long-ranged missiles
that can deliver nuclear warheads to North America.
The real target for North Korea’s missiles would be
US bases in South Korea, Okinawa, Japan and Guam.
But most likely only in the event of a full-scale
US-led assault on the North.
The US
military does not like to fight opponents who have
real armies. A US invasion of the north was
estimated to produce upwards of 200,000 American
military casualties. The most likely cause of US and
South Korean military intervention in North Korea
would be the collapse or overthrow of the Kim
dynasty. China might sweep into North Korea to
prevent it from falling under western and Japanese
control.
Japan is
quietly content to see Korea remain divided. A
united Korea would be a determined geopolitical and
economic competitor with Japan. Koreans remains
deeply hostile to Japan. South Korea sees its
highest threat as “unexpected reunification:” a
collapse of North Korea that sends millions of
starving refugees south, forcing Seoul to feed and
rebuild the north.
The biggest
concern in the US is that North Korean nuclear and
missile technology will be sold to Israel’s Arab and
Iranian foes. Pro-Israel neocons sabotaged a nuclear
reduction deal with Pyongyang in 1994. Besides, the
US likes keeping powerful, nuclear-armed forces in
South Korea and around its highly strategic region.
North
Korea’s Kim Jong-un may be zany and provocative, but
he shows no desire to court nuclear suicide by
attacking the US. So happy upcoming birthday,
Marshall Kim. Revealing a supposed
submarine-launched missile was his last year’s
birthday surprise. Please try to calm down the West.
Copyright
Eric S. Margolis 2016
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