HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------




World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

WSWS : News & Analysis : Asia : Korea

US steps up pressure on North Korea
By James Conachy
30 November 2001
Back to screen version | Send this link by email | Email the author

Before the war on Afghanistan is even over, the Bush administration is already naming 
other potential targets for American aggression. While the most publicised have been 
Iraq and other Middle Eastern countries, the past weeks have also seen veiled threats 
against North Korea.

Following September 11, North Korea made overtures that were clearly intended to bring 
about an improvement in its strained relations with Washington. It stridently 
condemned the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington and resumed diplomatic 
talks with South Korea, after a six-month pause. However, far from a lessening of 
tensions, North Korea has faced intensified political and military pressure.

The 37,000 US troops in South Korea and the South Korean military forces have been on 
high alert since September 11, on the grounds the North could take advantage of the 
political climate to attack the South. At the Asia-Pacific Economic Forum in October, 
Bush declared: "North Korea should not in any way think that, because we happen to be 
engaged in Afghanistan, we will not be ready to fulfil our end of the [defence] 
agreement with the South Korean government." Tensions on the border moved up another 
notch this week with North and South Korean troops exchanging gunfire for the first 
time since 1998.

Despite the North agreeing to sign two proposed UN anti-terrorism treaties and 
cooperate with the US, Washington has kept it on a list of "terrorist-supporting 
nations". The pretext given for the attack on the Taliban regime-that it was 
harbouring terrorists-is identical to one of the reasons cited by the US for listing 
North Korea. The Pyongyang regime is accused of providing sanctuary to several aging 
members of the Japanese Red Army Faction, a grouping accused of carrying out 
hijackings in the 1970s.

The US campaign against North Korea is now reaching a new stage. Without providing any 
evidence, the Bush administration is alleging that the Pyongyang government is 
constructing chemical and nuclear weapons. In the course of a November 26 press 
conference, Bush followed an ultimatum to Iraq to allow the entry of foreign weapons 
inspectors, with a similar threat against North Korea. "I made it very clear to North 
Korea that in order for us to have relations with them that we want to know: are they 
developing weapons of mass destruction? And they ought to stop proliferating," he 
declared.

On November 28, a joint statement by the US, Japanese and South Korean governments 
called on North Korea "to address the concerns of the international community" over 
its alleged nuclear weapons program and "to take further steps to confirm its 
cooperation with international anti-terrorism initiatives".

The North Korean regime, understandably, has expressed alarm. Yesterday, it denied 
having "weapons of mass destruction" and warned against the "hostile US policy". In a 
statement by its central news agency, Pyongyang said: "All circumstances show that the 
prospect of resolving problems through a dialogue with the United States have in fact 
become remote. Under these circumstances, we can no longer sit idle, and we will be 
compelled to take proper countermeasures."

Since coming to office, the Bush administration has consistently taken an aggressive 
stance toward North Korea. In January, the Republicans suspended talks over 
establishing diplomatic relations, which were initiated last year by the previous 
Clinton administration. In retaliation, North Korea suspended the political exchanges 
and economic projects with South Korea agreed at last year's inter-Korea summit, when 
South Korean President Kim Dae-jung travelled to Pyongyang for talks with the North's 
leader Kim Jong-Il.

While the Bush administration declared in June it was prepared to resume talks, it 
imposed harsher conditions than Clinton. Bush spokesmen made clear Pyongyang would be 
expected to accept the indefinite presence of American troops in South Korea, while at 
the same time reducing the size of its own conventional military forces and 
permanently halting a suspended long-range missile program, which had been North 
Korea's major export earner.

Underlying Bush's policy is a determination within sections of the US ruling class to 
assert US geo-political dominance over the strategic Korean peninsula and block the 
emergence of China as a rival regional power in East Asia. Throughout the 1990s, the 
Republican right agitated for the US to exploit North Korea's catastrophic economic 
decline, triggered by the collapse of the Soviet Union, to bring about the downfall of 
the Stalinist state and replace it with a pro-US regime.

In 1994, under pressure from a Republican-dominated Congress, the Clinton 
administration took the US to the brink of a war with North Korea over allegations 
that it was attempting to manufacture nuclear weapons with fuel from its Soviet-era 
nuclear reactors. In 1998, Clinton again threatened North Korea with military strikes 
over allegations that its long-range missiles could threaten the US.

Each time North Korea, under pressure from China, bowed to the US and reached a 
settlement, only to find itself faced with new more provocative US demands. In the US, 
however, the Republican right loudly denounced the Clinton administration for 
appeasing North Korea and called for tougher measures. Now the Republicans hold power 
and are ratcheting up the pressure on Pyongyang with the intent of provoking another 
confrontation.


The Sunshine Policy

In South Korea, the US position, combined with the North's reaction to it, has 
resulted in a marked shift away from Kim Dae-jung's "Sunshine Policy". Inaugurated in 
1998, Kim sought to bring about a political settlement with the North that benefited 
the South economically. With South Korean industry aspiring to take advantage of the 
North's low-cost, regimented labour force, natural resources and geographic location, 
Kim offered assistance to Pyongyang in exchange for opening up to investment.

As tensions escalated in the course of the year, the rightwing opponents of the 
Sunshine Policy have gained the upper hand in South Korea's political establishment. 
The conservative Grand National Party (GNP)-the instrument of the former US-backed 
military dictatorship-has continually accused Kim Dae-jung's cabinet of undermining 
the country's security. In September, Kim lost his parliamentary majority when the 
small United Liberal Party abandoned the ruling coalition and joined with the GNP.

Since then, Kim Dae-jung has tailored his policies to suit the GNP and the Bush 
administration. In response to opposition party attacks that it has given too much to 
the North for no return, the South Korean government is now considering imposing 
"barter" terms on the provision of food aid, with Pyongyang obligated to pay for rice 
with seafood or minerals. The government is also considering a GNP demand that it 
reject pleas for financial assistance from the South Korean operators of the 
loss-making tourist resort at Mount Kumgang in North Korea.

A planned special economic zone in the northern city of Kaesong appears unlikely to 
get off the ground in the near future and work has stopped on reconnecting a 
north-south rail-line. The political climate has led major South Korean companies with 
operations in the North, such as Samsung and Hanwha, to announce they are curtailing 
their investments.

The increased isolation of North Korea comes amid new UN reports of a social 
catastrophe gripping the country after 10 years of economic decline and a series of 
natural disasters. World Health Organisation representative Eigil Sorenson told a 
press conference on November 27: "The health care system has more or less collapsed." 
He recounted inspecting hospitals that lacked electricity, running water and the most 
basic medicines. The population is facing widespread malnutrition and epidemics of 
tuberculosis and malaria, with one in three now totally dependent upon foreign 
assistance for survival. According to the World Food Program, over four million 
children are malnourished and without massive new food aid, many will die.

Whether or not the Bush administration resorts to direct military aggression, its 
approach is the same as that advocated by the Republican right in the 1990s-isolate 
North Korea and, whatever the cost in human life, step up the political pressure to 
bring about its economic and political collapse.






--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 1998-2001
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: archive@jab.org

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.a9WB2D
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to