BUSH'S
REAL CRISIS IN KOREA: NORTH AND SOUTH, KOREANS WANT U.S.
TROOPS OUTBy Deirdre Griswold
Workers
World 09.01.02 More than at any other time in the last half-century,
the people of Korea, north and south, are today united in their resistance to
the United States occupation of their country. They are appalled at
the Bush administration's threats of war against the north, they want greater
cooperation and contact between the two halves of the divided peninsula, and
they want Washington to sign a peace treaty and remove its troops from the south. In
South Korea, this sentiment is being expressed in constant demonstrations of tens
and even hundreds of thousands of people against the U.S. military presence there.
It was reflected in the recent presidential election, where the candidate who
promised to continue a "sunshine policy" toward the north, Roh Moo-hyun,
won a decisive majority over Lee Hoi-chang, the candidate favored by Washington. Roh's
victory was made even more remarkable given the predictions of his defeat in all
of South Korea's major media the day before the election. Chung Mong-joon, heir
to the Hyundai fortune and head of the National Alliance 21 party, had pulled
out his support for Roh just two days before the election. The reason he gave
was a speech by Roh implying that South Korea would be neutral in any war
between the north and the U.S. Chung's support had been considered crucial
by the big business media. But Roh won anyway, with a decisive majority. The whole
incident just heightened anti-U.S. popular sentiment, which has been growing
in South Korea. While the struggle against U.S. occupation comes primarily
from the masses of people, it also reflects contradictions within the South Korean
ruling class, exacerbated by Washington's arrogant demands and the desire
of many Korean capitalists to do business with the north. Several large north-south
construction and commercial projects have been underway, but they are now jeopardized
by Washington's threatening stance toward the north, which was escalated last
January when Bush included North Korea in a presumed "Axis of Evil"
in his State of the Union speech. BUSH'S REAL CRISIS IS NOT NUCLEAR For
the Bush administration, this growing rejection of its Cold War policies constitutes
a crisis of the first order. The further the two Korean states proceed in knocking
down the barriers erected between them, the more threatening is the stance
taken by Washington. The focus of media attention right now is the determination
expressed by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)--socialist North
Korea-- to resume construction of two nuclear power plants. The Bush administration
presents this as a terrible threat to the whole area. Interestingly, "danger
from the north" is not the view of the South Koreans, whose capital, Seoul,
is just a few miles from the demilitarized zone dividing Korea. They are calling
on the U.S. not to make threats but instead to move toward normalizing the situation
on the Korean peninsula. President-elect Roh is expected to maintain the
approach to averting a nuclear crisis on the Korean peninsula that was articulated
by the Kim Dae-Jung government in December 1998. It involved four steps: (1)
the United States lifting economic sanctions against North Korea, (2) the
United States normalizing relations with North Korea, including opening diplomatic
missions, (3) North and South Korea reaching an agreement on arms control,
and (4) North and South Korea converting the current cease- fire accord into
a permanent peace system. (Korea Times [Seoul], Dec. 8, 1998) This
stance paved the way for the historic north-south summit meeting between DPRK
leader Kim Jong Il and Kim Dae-jung in June 2000. While the U.S. government appeared
favorable to the summit, its subsequent actions show that it is doing everything
it can to torpedo rapprochement between the two states. The North Korean
socialist state was born out of the Korean people's long struggle against Japanese
colonialism. The U.S. capitalist establishment, however, has presented the DPRK
as a dangerous threat to the world ever since its founding in 1948. This is how
it has justified its more than 50-year military occupation of the south. CASHING
IN ON FEAR Promoting fear of the DPRK has been a lucrative business
for U.S. companies. South Korea for years was one of the largest purchasers of
U.S. weapons in the world. For example, in November 1993 the Pentagon announced
the U.S. intended to sell South Korea 317 air-to-air missiles, produced by Raytheon
and Hughes Aircraft, for $169 million. The Japanese newspaper Daily
Yomiuri on Sept. 17, 1997, reported that South Korea had imported $1.7 billion
worth of weapons in 1996, almost as much as China, which has more than 20 times
the population. Most of those weapons came from the United States. But when
the Asian economic crisis hit South Korea in 1997, this enormous burden could
no longer be sustained. The Far Eastern Economic Review of Feb. 5, 1998, reported
that, due to the crisis, South Korea was postponing 220 military projects, including
airborne early warning systems and submarine purchases. In this period,
the South Korean government had its hands full dealing with a militant labor movement
that was resisting draconian measures forced on the country by the International
Monetary Fund and the U.S. The workers were demanding jobs and a living wage,
not missiles. The U.S. had been putting intense pressure on the South Korean
government to continue buying weapons. On June 11, 1997, the New York Times reported
that the Pentagon was telling Congress that South Korea planned to buy 1,065 FIM-92
Stinger anti-aircraft missiles and 213 launchers from the United States. However,
South Korea's Defense Ministry denied that any decision had been made on the purchase,
and said it had not decided between the French Mistral, British Starburst, or
U.S. Stinger. Some Korean officials reportedly believed that the U.S. made
the announcement prematurely to give an advantage to the Stingers. The deal would
have been worth $307 million. Of particular importance to the U.S. military-industrial
complex in this period was the projected theater missile defense program. The
Korea Herald of May 4, 1999, reported that Seoul had no plans to join the U.S.-
led program. A high-ranking official said that "at this stage, [South
Korea has] neither an intention nor ability to take part in the TMD plan,
which requires a huge sum of investment and up-to-date technology." Meanwhile,
the U.S., which claimed it was in South Korea to protect it, was reventing South
Korea from producing its own medium-range missiles. During the 1990s, in
response to this furious arming of the south, the DPRK was able to develop and
manufacture missiles on its own at a much lower cost. WHY U.S. UNDERMINED
AGREED FRAMEWORK What seemed to be the beginning of a relaxation of
tensions between the DPRK and the U.S. had begun on Oct. 21, 1994, with the
signing of the Agreed Framework. At that time, it was the view in Washington that
socialist North Korea would not survive long because the Soviet Union and
its allies had collapsed. Korea's legendary leader, Kim Il Sung, who led the anti-colonial
forces during World War II and then established the DPRK, had died on July 8 of
that year. The way the U.S. imperialists looked at it, it was just a matter of
time before the socialist north would be absorbed by the capitalist south, similar
to what had happened to the German Democratic Republic in Europe. The year
had begun with an announcement by the U.S. that it would deploy Patriot missiles
in South Korea and would continue its annual nuclear war games known as "Team
Spirit." It sent 48 launching ramps and 192 warheads to South Korea. With
this club firmly in its belt, the U.S. then entered into the agreement with the
DPRK. It seemed to open up a process that would end the official state of war
between the two countries, which has existed since 1950. With the signing
of the Agreed Framework, the DPRK stopped construction of its graphite nuclear
reactors, which the U.S. claimed could be used to produce plutonium for nuclear
weapons, and agreed to allow in UN inspectors. In return, Washington was to help
the DPRK build two light-water reactors (LWRs). The Korean Peninsula Energy Development
Organization (KEDO) was set up by the U.S., Japan, South Korea and the European
Union to implement the agreement. In the meantime, the U.S. was to keep North
Korea supplied with fuel oil until the reactors were ready. It is now eight
cold winters later. The DPRK has not collapsed. It has weathered extremely difficult
material shortages but has consolidated its political structure and defense
under the leadership of Kim Jong Il. It has also successfully reached out to South
Korea in this period. In these eight years, no construction has been done
on the LWRs. By 2000, the ground for the sites had still not been prepared. The
South Koreans in charge of the project cited "financing problems"--a
euphemism for U.S. foot-dragging. Nor has the U.S. lived up to the other
part of the agreement. The DPRK has complained that promised oil deliveries from
the U.S. and Japan were frequently held back until the worst of the winter weather
was over. This November, just at the onset of cold weather, the Bush administration
and the Japanese government both announced they were stopping oil shipments altogether. This
brutal move precipitated the current crisis. Without the promised light-water
reactors or fuel oil, what was the DPRK to do? Lie down and freeze to death? The
Bush administration may act startled and alarmed by North Korea's announcement
that it would resume work on its original nuclear power plants, and its order
to the UN inspectors to leave, but it is obvious to any thinking person that Washington
knew all along it was forcing the DPRK into a corner. So the Bush administration
is using the threat of war, famine and freezing temperatures, telling the DPRK
that it can't build the reactors and tightening an economic blockade of the country. ENERGY
AND DEFENSE The DPRK, a far northern country that suffers severe winters,
has decided it needs nuclear power. South Korea, with a somewhat milder climate,
has 16 operating nuclear power plants and four more under construction. The
DPRK also needs to defend itself against the most destructive military machine
the world has ever known. For over half a century, the U.S. has brandished its
nuclear weapons to terrorize smaller nations into submission. The crisis Bush
faces now is not that the DPRK will be a nuclear danger to the world, but that
it may be able to develop enough of a retaliatory capacity that U.S. nuclear
blackmail will cease to be effective. Some in the U.S. ruling establishment
are now advising Bush to resume a policy of "engagement" and tone down
his rhetoric against the DPRK, at least until the war with Iraq has been resolved.
In general, this administration has shown little patience with diplomacy and much
desire to wield its big stick. However, despite all its insulting caricatures
of the north as a "hermit kingdom" ready to implode, it is forced to
reckon with the DPRK leaders' skill at defending the socialist base of their society
even while opening political and commercial relations with the south. Furthermore,
the threats are not working. In fact, they seem to be having the opposite effect.
After Bush's hints of a "preemptive military strike" on the reactors
brought a strong rebuke from the DPRK and led to turmoil in South Korea, including
a drop in the stock market there, the U.S. president on Dec. 31 tried to soften
his rhetoric. Responding to a reporter's question on possible military action
against North Korea, he said, "We can resolve this peacefully." The
aggressive grouping now running the White House has long trumpeted the ability
of the Pentagon to fight two wars at the same time. However, they may have to
put Korea on the back burner right now, while they focus on preparing a criminal
assault on Iraq. WHY KOREANS DON'T TRUST U.S. Korea was the
first battleground of the Cold War. An estimated 3 million Koreans and over 50,000
U.S. troops were killed there during the 1950-53 war. Terrible atrocities were
committed by U.S. troops in both the north and south, as the recent exposures
of the massacre at Nogun-ri confirm. The Cold War strategists of both the
Truman and Eisenhower administrations saw this bloody conflict, in which the Pentagon
came close to using nuclear weapons on China's border, as essential to rolling
back the anti-colonial, anti-capitalist revolutions that transformed China, Korea
and Vietnam after World War II. The intense frustration of the U.S. ruling
class with its inability to establish domination over all of Asia after the military
defeat of Japanese imperialism led to a vicious debate within the political
establishment over "Who lost China?" Even as the Korean War raged, Sen.
Joseph McCarthy was unleashed to purge thousands of progressives from the
unions, schools and government bureaucracy. In this witch-hunt atmosphere--some
feared incipient fascism in the U.S.--there was little expression of the kind
of anti-war sentiment that later emerged during the Vietnam War. Now, however,
progressives in the U.S. need to understand and sympathize with Korea's long struggle
against colonialism and imperialism. It closely parallels that of Vietnam,
another country divided after World War II that only achieved reunification after
a bitter liberation struggle. At least 37,000 U.S. troops have been stationed
in the south ever since the Korean War ended in a cease-fire. During both
the Carter and Clinton administrations, attempts to reduce the size of this military
occupation and move toward normalizing relations with the socialist north
were scuttled under pressure of the militarist far right in the U.S. U.S.
propaganda depicts the DPRK--with 25 million people--as a grave threat to world
peace. It never mentions that this country has been ringed by U.S. nuclear weapons
for more than half a century. Not only do nuclear-armed submarines cruise its
coastal waters, not only have U.S. planes with nuclear bombs been constantly within
striking distance, not only are long-range missiles focused on its cities, but
for years the U.S. stationed nuclear weapons right in South Korea itself. And
they may still be there. According to the Washington Times--a newspaper
with strong ties to South Korea's right wing--President George Bush Sr. announced
on July 2, 1992, that all 2,400 U.S. battlefield nuclear weapons in South
Korea, made up of 500 tactical weapons from naval aircraft, 1,000 nuclear artillery
shells, 700 Lance missile warheads, and 200 B-57 nuclear depth-charge bombs, had
been removed to the United States for storage or destruction. (See
www.nti.org - a very large database on nuclear
issues set up by Ted Turner and Sam Nunn, for abstracts of this and other articles
from the world press on Korea and nuclear weapons.) Who can verify that
everything in this huge arsenal was truly removed? Two years ago, U.S. forces
in South Korea denied having depleted uranium weapons there, but had to retract
that after being confronted with the truth by activists. Have there ever
been the kinds of obtrusive weapons inspections of U.S. military facilities in
South Korea that Washington demands of Iraq? More and more, the demonstrators
in the south are asking these questions. Se også
Pop-Quiz om
USA og Korea Af Gary Leupp. Counterpunch. Eng
- END
-
|