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Bush administration intensifies pressure on North Korea
By Peter Symonds
8 June 2005
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Further signs are emerging that the US is moving toward a more
aggressive stance over North Korea. While there are internal differences
over timing and tactics, the Bush administration has taken a series
of new steps to isolate and menace Pyongyang over its nuclear
programs.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice reaffirmed on Monday
that Washington remained committed to restarting six-party talks
on North Korea, dismissing comments by an unnamed senior US defence
official on Sunday that the US was about to take the issue to
the UN Security Council. She did not, however, completely rule
out the possibility, instead describing the remarks as a
little forward-leaning. She declared that no timetable had
been set.
Rice and Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld both played down
the issue, but there is no doubt that Washington is contemplating
tougher action against North Korea. In mid-April, Rice publicly
reminded Pyongyang that the US had a very strong alliance
on the Korean peninsula and warned that the US reserved
the right and the possibility of going to the Security Council
if North Korea failed to return to six-party talks.
The six-party talks, which include China, Japan, South Korea
and Russia as well as the US and North Korea, have been stalled
since last June. North Korea has responded to US efforts to compel
it to dismantle its nuclear facilities in return for minimal economic
and security guarantees by refusing to take part in the discussions.
In February, Pyongyang declared publicly for the first time that
it had manufactured nukes for self-defencea
claim that the US seized upon in April to accuse North Korea of
preparing to carry out a nuclear test.
From the outset, the Bush administration has refused to hold
bilateral negotiations with North Korea. It has also rejected
Pyongyangs offer to freeze its nuclear program in return
for a non-aggression pact guaranteeing its security and normalising
economic and diplomatic relations. Washingtons aim in insisting
on multilateral talks has been as much to pressure other participants,
particularly China, into taking harsh measures against North Korea,
as it has been to bully Pyongyang.
However, while pushing North Korea to return to talks, China
has refused to support any economic blockade against its ally
and extended its investment from $1.3 million in 2003 to $200
million last year. South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun has sought
to continue the so-called Sunshine policy of his predecessoroffering
economic concessions to North Korea in return for it opening up
as a cheap labour platform.
These measures cut across US attempts to isolate North Korea.
Even if Washington were to scrap the six-party talks and proceed
to the UN Security Council, there is no guarantee, at this stage,
that Beijing, or for that matter the other major powers, would
back economic or military action against Pyongyang. For its part,
the North Korean regime has repeatedly declared that it would
regard an economic blockade as an act of war and would react accordingly.
The current impasse has fuelled tensions within the Bush administration.
While there is general agreement to ratchet up the pressure on
North Korea, the so-called Pentagon hawks are clearly impatient
with the diplomatic approach of Rice and the State Department.
The unnamed senior defence official, who told a group
of reporters on Sunday that a decision on UN Security Council
action was imminent, was accompanying Rumsfeld to a security conference
in Singapore and obviously had his tacit support.
Rumsfeld made an oblique reference to the threat in his conference
speech, which focussed on criticising China for its military spending.
He urged Beijing to put more pressure on Pyongyang to return to
the six-party talks, adding that the UN may need to decide what
to do about North Koreas nuclear programs. Significantly,
in scotching speculation about UN action, Rice also downplayed
Rumsfelds claims about the Chinese military, declaring that
US-Chinese relations were the best ever.
Differences were also on display during a CNN interview with
Vice President Richard Cheney last week. On May 30, Cheney described
North Korea as a major problem and dismissively declared:
To date, you know, those [six-party] talks have not produced
much. Then in comments calculated to inflame Pyongyang,
Cheney described North Korean leader Kim Jong Il as one
of the worlds most irresponsible leaders, who runs
a police state and does not care about his people. The vast
bulk of the population live in abject poverty and stages of malnutrition,
he said.
The following day, President Bush stepped in to smooth over
North Koreas ruffled feathers, pointedly referring to the
North Korean leader as Mr Kim. Then, in remarks unmistakably
directed at the internal debate, Bush declared: I see either
diplomacy or military, and I am for the diplomacy approach. And
so for those who say that we ought to be using our military to
solve the problem, I would say that, while all the options are
on the table, weve got a ways to go to solve this diplomatically.
Economic and military measures
That Bush has a ways to go diplomatically before
endorsing military action against North Koreaa reckless
enterprise with potentially catastrophic consequencesis
hardly cause for comfort. The Bush administration has already
put in place a series of measures aimed at tightening the economic
and military noose around North Korea. These include:
* Washington has not as yet indicated whether it will make
any contribution this year to the UNs emergency food aid
program for North Korea, despite signs of a growing humanitarian
crisis. Last year the US donated 50,000 tonnes. Anthony Banbury,
Asia director for the World Food Program, told a press conference
in South Korea on May 27 that the UN agency had received only
6 percent of 230,000 tonnes of food needed this year. What
the government is able to provide the people now, these 250 grams
a day, is a starvation ration, he said.
The appalling conditions facing North Koreans underscore the
hypocrisy of Cheneys demagogic criticisms of Kim Jung Il
for starving his people. While the North Korean regime
is obviously repressive, the Bush administration has no more concern
for the democratic rights and living conditions of North Koreans,
than it does for those of the Iraqi people. The US has maintained
economic sanctions against North Korea ever since the 1950-53
Korean War and is now seeking to tighten them, deliberately compounding
the countrys deep social and economic crisis.
* According to an article in the Wall Street Journal
on June 1, a group of US officials, known as the Illicit Activities
Initiatives, is seeking to choke off North Koreas alleged
trade in counterfeit goods and money. It is part of a wider effort
aimed at blocking Pyongyangs sources of foreign incomelegal
and illicitincluding from missile sales. The
groups aims were spelled out by US official Larry Wilkerson,
who told the Wall Street Journal that the US had to show
that we could severely cut off North Koreas economic
lifeline if Pyongyang does not return to the negotiating
table.
* The Pentagon has suspended its only joint activity with the
North Korean militarythe recovery of the remains of American
servicemen killed during the Korean War. Announcing the decision
on May 25, US military spokesmen cited concerns about the security
of the US recovery teams in conditions of rising tensions over
North Koreas nuclear programs. As well as cutting off a
source of foreign exchange, the decision clears an obstacle to
any military strikean implication that will not be missed
in Pyongyang.
* The Bush administration failed to appoint a successor to
Charles Kartman as head of Korean Peninsula Energy Development
Organisation. The organisation was charged with carrying out the
construction of a lightwater nuclear power reactor in North Koreaan
element of the 1994 Agreed Framework under which Pyongyang agreed
to shut down and allow international monitoring of its nuclear
facilities. The Republican Party rightwing repeatedly denounced
the deal as an unpardonable concession to North Korea.
As soon as it came to office in 2001, the Bush administration
immediately froze relations with North Korea. In October 2002,
Washington used the alleged admission by Pyongyang that it had
a secret uranium enrichment program to scuttle the Agreed Framework
and end supplies of fuel oil to North Korea. Construction of the
lightwater reactor, which was barely started, even though it was
due to be completed by 2003, ground to a halt. While the US is
not in a position to unilaterally terminate the project, it has,
one commentator put it, essentially decapitating it by getting
rid of Kartman.
* On May 27, the Pentagon confirmed that 15 F-117A stealth
fighter-bombers had been sent to South Korea, claiming they were
part of a long-planned training exercise with South Korean forces.
Regardless of the pretext, the presence of warplanes in South
Korea capable of evading radar and air defences is obviously designed
to menace North Korea. The F-117A was used extensively in bombing
Iraqi infrastructure in 2003. Pyongyang denounced the decision
as a risky prelude to war and called for the withdrawal
of the fighters.
Taken together, these measures are clearly aimed at putting
North Korea under intense pressure. Speaking to the Los Angeles
Times, L. George Flake, head of Mansfield Centre for Pacific
Studies in Washington, commented: The US is shutting down
anything that is in any way remotely beneficial to North Korea.
He described the US decisions as gearing up for the next
phase in the event that six-party talks fail. A former US
State Department official told the newspaper: They are putting
all the pieces in place to shut everything down around North Korea.
Some indications emerged this week that North Korea might be
prepared to attend a new round of talks. The US State Department
reported that US officials met in New York on Monday with North
Korean representatives to the UN. Even if six-party negotiations
are reconvened, however, there is little chance of agreement as
the US insists on what amounts to North Koreas complete
capitulation: the complete, verifiable, irreversible dismantlementCVID
for shortof all its nuclear programs.
Despite Bushs rather empty public declarations of support
for this diplomacy, the US has taken a series of measures that
can only heighten tensions in North East Asia and increase the
danger of conflict.
See Also:
US steps up provocations against
North Korea
[3 May 2005]
North Korea pulls out of nuclear
talks
[14 February 2005]
US backflip over North
Korean nuclear programs
[28 June 2004]
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