North Korea and the “Axis of Evil”
By Brian Willson
Global Research, April 04, 2013
Global Research 22 April 2004
http://www.globalresearch.ca/north-korea-and-the-axis-of-evil/5329800


 
This article by award winning author, peace activist  and Vietnam war veteran 
Brian Willson brings to light the process of demonization directed against the 
people of North Korea. 
In the words of General Curtis Lemay who led the bombing raids 
during the Korean war:  “Over a period of three years or so we killed 
off – what – twenty percent of the population.”  
According to Brian Willson: 
“It is now believed that the 
population north of the imposed 38th Parallel lost nearly a third its 
population of 8 – 9 million people during the 37-month long “hot” war, 
1950 – 1953, perhaps an unprecedented percentage of mortality suffered 
by one nation due to the belligerance of another.”
Let us carefully analyze the current context of confrontation between 
Washington and Pyongyang. Since the end of the Korean War, the DPRK has 
repeatedly put forward a 
proposal involving  a peace treaty, the reunificaiton of North and South Korea, 
 the withdrawal of US troops from South Korea, the end of the conduct, on a 
yearly basis of  a month-long U.S-South Korean war games. 
This year’s US-South Korea war games involving a “hypothical” US 
nuclear attack against the DPRK initiated in mid-March constitute an act of 
provocation. 
The media consensus which nobody dare to challenge is that North Korea is a 
“rogue state”  and a threat to global security.  
Where is the threat, North  Korea or the US? 
A pre-emptive nuclear war against North Korea has been on the drawing board of 
the Pentagon for over half a century. 
Lets ask ourselves the question: Who is the Killer State? Who 
Possesses the WMDs? Who has the money and military hardware to pursue a 
global military agenda, in Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East?

How could a small country of 25 million which lost 30 percent of 
its population as a result of US bombings in the 1950s constitute a 
threat to global security.
Why is this impoverished country –which has been the object of economic 
sanctions for the past sixty years– being threatened?  
Since the end of the Korean war the threat of a US led nuclear has been 
relentless, over more than half a century.  Is Washington committed to world 
peace or do want to literally “wipe off the map” 
countries whichare openly opposed to US expansionism? 
Michel Chossudovsky, Global Research, April 5, 2013
________________________________
 
[This article was first published by Global Research in April 2004]
North Korea and the “Axis of Evil” 
by S. Brian Willson
The demonization of North Korea by the United States government 
continues unrelentlessly. The wealthy oil and baseball man who claims to be 
president of the United States, used his first State of the Union 
address on January 29, 2002 to brand perennial enemy North Korea, along 
with former allies Iran and Iraq, as “the world’s most dangerous 
regimes” who now now form a threatening “axis of evil.” Unbeknown to the 
public, because it was intended to have remained a secret (whoops!), 
was the fact that this claimed president presented a “Nuclear Posture 
Review” report to Congress only three weeks earlier, on January 8, which 
ordered the Pentagon to prepare contingency plans for use of nuclear 
weapons. The first designated targets for nuclear attack were his newly 
identified members of the “axis of evil,” along with four other lucky 
nations as well – Syria, Libya, Russia, and China. That this is nothing 
short of a policy of ultimate terror remains unaddressed in the U.S. 
media.
That Koreans are deeply concerned is an understatement. However, they 
understand the context in which their “evil” is being portrayed, not an 
altogether new threat levelled at them. However, the dangerous 
escalation of policy rhetoric following the 9-11 tragedy now boldly 
warns the world of virtual total war. Vice-president Richard Cheney, 
another oil man from Texas, declares that the U.S. is now considering 
military actions against forty to fifty nations, and that the war “may 
never end” and “become a permanent part of the way we live.”1 The 
Pentagon has declared that the widening gap between the “Haves” and 
“Have-nots” poses a serious challenge to the U.S., requiring a doctrine 
of “full spectrum dominance.” Thus, the U.S. demands total capacity to 
conquer every place and its inhabitants in and around the Earth, from 
deep underground bunkers, including those in North Korea and Iraq, 
through land, sea, and air, to outer space. All options for achieving 
global and spatial hegemony are now on the table. Already, the U.S. 
military is deployed in 100 different countries.2 Total war, permanent 
war. Terror!
Addiction to use of terror by the United States is nothing new. The 
civilization was founded and has been sustained by use of terror as a 
primary policy. For example, in 1779, General George Washington ordered 
destruction of the “merciless Indian savages” of upstate New York, 
instructing his generals to “chastize” them with “terror.” The generals 
dutifully carried out these orders. In 1866, General William Tecumseh 
Sherman ordered “extermination” with vindictive earnestness of the 
Sioux. They were virtually exterminated. Secretary of War Elihu Root 
(1899-1904) under President’s McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt, justified the 
ruthless U.S. military conduct in the Philippines that savagely 
killed a half-million citizens by citing “precedents of the highest 
authority:” Washington’s and Sherman’s earlier orders.3
War against nations around the world is not new either. The U.S., 
over its history, has militarily intervened over 400 times, covertly 
thousands of times, in over one hundred nations.4 Virtually all these 
interventions have been lawless. It has bombed at least eighteen nations since 
it dropped Atomic bombs on Japan in 1945. It has used chemical 
warfare against Southeast Asia, and has provided chemical warfare agents for 
use by other nations such as Iraq. It has used biological warfare 
against China, North Korea, and Cuba. The Koreans are quite aware of 
most of this history. Most U.S. Americans are not. But now the U.S. has 
declared a unilateral terrorist war on the whole world.5
Two of the interventions in the Nineteenth Century were inflicted 
against Korea, the first in 1866. The second, larger one, in 1871, 
witnessed the landing of over 700 marines and sailors on Kanghwa beach 
on the west side of Korea seeking to establish the first phases of 
colonization. Destroying several forts while inflicting over 600 
casualties on the defending Korean natives, the U.S. withdrew realizing 
that in order to assure hegemonic success, a much larger, permanent 
military presence would be necessary. The North Korean people regularly 
remark about this U.S. invasion, even though most in South Korea do not 
know of it due to historic censorship. Most in the U.S. don’t know about it 
either, for similar reasons, even though in all of the Nineteenth 
Century, this was the largest U.S. military force to land on foreign 
soil outside of Mexico and Canada until the “Spanish American War” in 
1898.
Pyongyang. Capital of the DPRK
I believe it important for U.S. Americans to place themselves in the 
position of people living in targeted countries. That North Korea, a 
nation of 24 million people, i.e., one-twentieth the population of the 
U.S., many of them poor, a land slightly larger in area than the U.S. 
state of Pennsylvania, continues to be one of the most demonized nations and 
least understood, totally perplexes the Korean people. It is 
worthwhile to seek an understanding of their perspective.
I recently visited that nation and talked with a number of her 
citizens. I travelled 900 ground miles through six of North Korea’s nine 
provinces, as well as spending time in Pyongyang, the capital, and 
several other cities. I talked with dozens of people from all walks of 
life. Though times have been hard for North Koreans, especially in the 
1990s, they long ago proudly rebuilt all of their dozens of cities, 
thousands of villages, and hundreds of dykes and dams destroyed during 
the war.
U.S. interference into the sovereign life of Korea immediately upon the 1945 
surrender of the hated Japanese, who had occupied the 
Korean Peninsula for forty years, is one of the major crimes of the 
Twentieth Century, from which the Korean people have never recovered. 
(SEE “United States Government War Crimes,” Spring 2002 – issue # 1 of Global 
Outlook). From a North Korean’s perspective they (1) have vigorously opposed 
the 
unlawful and egregious division of their country from day one to the 
present, (2) were blamed for starting the “Korean War” which in fact had been a 
struggle between a minority of wealthy Koreans supporting 
continued colonization in collaboration with the U.S. and those majority 
Koreans who opposed it, (3) proudly and courageously held the U.S. and 
its “crony U.N. allies” to a stalemate during the “War,” and (4) have 
been tragically and unfairly considered a hostile nation ever since. 
They have not forgotten the forty years of Japanese occupation that 
preceded the U.S. imposed division and subsequent occupation that 
continues in the South. They deeply yearn for reunification of their 
historically unified culture.
Everyone I talked with, dozens and dozens of folks, lost one if not many more 
family members during the war, especially from the 
continuous bombing, much of it incendiary and napalm, deliberately 
dropped on virtually every space in the country. “Every means of 
communication, every installation, factory, city, and village” was 
ordered bombed by General MacArthur in the fall of 1950. It never 
stopped until the day of the armistice on July 27, 1953. The pained 
memories of people are still obvious, and their anger at “America” is 
often expressed, though they were very welcoming and gracious to me. Ten 
million Korean families remain permanently separated from each other 
due to the military patrolled and fenced dividing line spanning 150 
miles across the entire Peninsula.
Let us make it very clear here for western readers. North Korea was 
virtually totally destroyed during the “Korean War.” U.S. General 
Douglas MacArthur’s architect for the criminal air campaign was 
Strategic Air Command head General Curtis LeMay who had proudly 
conducted the earlier March 10 – August 15, 1945 continuous incendiary 
bombings of Japan that had destroyed 63 major cities and murdered a 
million citizens. (The deadly Atomic bombings actually killed far fewer 
people.) Eight years later, after destroying North Korea’s 78 cities and 
thousands of her villages, and killing countless numbers of her 
civilians, LeMay remarked, “Over a period of three years or so we killed off – 
what – twenty percent of the population.”6 It is now believed 
that the population north of the imposed 38th Parallel lost nearly a 
third its population of 8 – 9 million people during the 37-month long 
“hot” war, 1950 – 1953, perhaps an unprecedented percentage of mortality 
suffered by one nation due to the belligerance of another.
Virtually every person wanted to know what I thought of Bush’s recent 
accusation of North Korea as part of an “axis of evil.” Each of the 
three governments comprising Bush’s “axis of evil” of course immediately 
condemned the remarks, North Korea being no exception. I shared with 
them my own outrage and fears, and they seemed relieved to know that not all 
“Americans” are so cruel and bellicose. As with people in so many 
other nations with whom the U.S. has treated with hostility, they simply cannot 
understand why the U.S. is so obsessed with them.
Koreans were relieved to learn that a recent poll had indicated 
eighty percent of South Koreans were against the U.S. belligerant stance 
against their northern neighbors. The North Korean government described Bush as 
a “typical rogue and a kingpin of terrorism” as he was visiting the South in 
February, only three weeks after presenting his 
threatening State of the Union address.7 It was also encouraging that 
the two Koreas resumed quiet diplomatic talks in March just as the U.S. 
and South Korea were once again conducting their regular, large-scale, 
joint military exercises so enraging to the North, and to an increasing 
number of people in the South among the growing reunification movement 
there.8
In the English-language newspaper, The Pyongyang Times, (February 23, 2002) 
there were articles entitled “US Is Empire of the 
Devil,” Korea Will Never Be a Threat to the US,” and “Bush’s Remarks 
Stand Condemned.” Quite frankly, all three of these articles relate a 
truth about the U.S. that would draw a consensus from many quarters 
around the world.
While in country, together we listened to Bush’s March 14 Voice of 
America (VOA) radio chastizement of North Korea. First, he stated that 
the North’s 200,000 prisoner population was proof of terrible 
repression. Though I had no way of knowing the number of prisoners in 
the North, any more than Bush did, I do know that the United States has 2 
million prisoners which is similar in per-capita detention rate to that of 
North Korea if the 200,000 figure is accurate. Furthermore, the U.S. has a 
minimum of 3 million persons, mostly minority and poor, under 
state supervision of parole and probation. The U.S. sweeps its class and race 
problems into prison.
Second, Bush declared that half the population was considered 
unreliable and, as a result, received less monthly food rations. The 
Koreans are a proud people living in a Confucian tradition, having 
rebuilt their nation from virtual total destruction during the Korean 
war. I did not notice any obvious display of dissent. That some Koreans 
are desperate due to lack of food, water, and heat, especially in some 
rural areas, does not necessarily translate into dissent, though some 
are seeking relief by travel to neighboring countries.9
Third, Bush claimed that Koreans who listen to foreign radio are 
targeted for execution. Together we regularly listened to U.S.VOA radio 
broadcasts and they freely discussed the content of the broadcasts 
without fear of reprisals.
Fourth, Bush condemned the DPRK for spending too much on its 
military, causing food shortages for the people. Note: Again it must be 
remembered that it was the U.S. that unilaterally divided Korea 
following the Japanese surrender in August 1945, and subsequently ruled 
with a military occupation government in the south, overseeing the 
elimination of virtually the entire popular movement of (majority) 
opposition to U.S. occupation, murdering hundreds of thousands of 
people. The consequent Korean civil war that openly raged in 1948-1950 
was completely ignored when the U.S. defined the beginning of the Korean War in 
1950. The U.S. remains at war with the DPRK, never having signed a peace treaty 
with her. The war has left a deep scar in the Korean 
character with a memory that is regularly provoked by continued 
belligerance directed at the DPRK. The U.S. regularly holds joint 
military exercises with South Korean military forces aimed at the DPRK. 
The U.S. retains 37,000 military troops at 100 installations south of 
the 38th parallel. The U.S. has its largest Asian bombing range where it 
practices bombs five days a week, fifty-two weeks a year, despite 
opposition from many South Koreans. And now Bush has identified North 
Korea as part of an “axis of evil” targeted for nuclear attack. This is 
no remote idea to North Koreans. The U.S. possesses nuclear weapons on 
ships and planes in the Pacific region surrounding North Korea. 
Virtually every nation in this perilous position would be concerned 
about their defense.
It is worth noting that the United States is the leading military 
spender in the world resulting in substantial underfunding of its own 
indispensable social programs.
Fifth, Bush accused the DPRK of selling weapons to other nations. 
That is like the pot calling the kettle black. The U.S. is by far the 
largest manufacturer of conventional, nuclear, chemical, and biological 
weapons in the world. It is also the largest seller of these weapons, 
and has used conventional (against dozens of nations), biological (Cuba, China, 
Korea, perhaps others), chemical (Southeast Asia), and nuclear 
(Japan, and threatened to use them on at least 20 other occasions) 
weapons. In addition it has armed other nations with these weapons of 
mass destruction, including Iraq, one of those countries now identified 
as part of the “axis of evil.” In the year 2000, international arms 
sales were nearly $37 billion, with the U.S. being directly responsible 
for just over half of those sales. South Korea was the third largest 
buyer of weapons from the United States with $3.2 worth of military 
hardware.10  And in January 2002, South Korea was seriously 
contemplating purchasing an additional $3.2 billion worth of 40 F-X 
fighter jets from U.S. arms giant Boeing.
At the conclusion of this VOA radio broadcast, Koreans and I looked 
at each other in disbelief. But we also knew that we were in solidarity 
with each other as part of the human family. When I said goodbye to my 
new friends we embraced knowing that we live in a single world made up 
of a rich diversity of ideas and species. We know that we are going to 
live or die together, and hope that the arrogant and dangerous 
rhetoric and militarism of the United States will soon end so we can all live 
in peace. However, for that to happen, there will need to be a 
dramatic awakening among the people and a corresponding expression of 
massive nonviolent opposition that will make such threatening behavior 
impossible to carry out.
Notes
1. Bob Woodward, “CIA Told To Do ‘Whatever Necessary’ to Kill Bin Laden,” The 
Washington Post, October 21, 2001.
2. Bradley Graham, “Pentagon Plans New Command For U.S. Four Star Officer, 
Would Over See Homeland Defense,” The Washington Post, January 26, 2002.
3. Richard Drinnon, Facing West: The Metaphysics of Indian Hating and Empire 
Building. New York: Schocken Books, 1990, p. 329.
4. B.M. Blechman and S.S. Kaplan, Force Without War: U.S. Armed Forces As A 
Political Instrument. Wash., D.C.: The Brookings Institution, 1978, Appendix B; 
Congressional Research Service (Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division), 
Instances of United States Armed Forces Abroad, 1798-1993. Wash., D.C.: 
Congressional Research Service, 1993; William Blum, Killing Hope: U.S. Military 
and CIA Intervention Since World War II. Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press, 
1995; John Stockwell, The Praetorian Guard. Cambridge, MA: South End Press, 
1991.
5. William Blum, Rogue State. Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press, 2000; Stephan 
Endicott and Edward Hagerman, The United States and Biological Warfare: Secrets 
From the Early Cold War and Korea. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 
1998.
6. Richard Rhodes, “The General and World War III,” The New Yorker, June 19, 
1995, p. 53.
7.”North Korea Calls Bush ‘Kingpin of Terrorism,” Reuters wire story, February 
23, 2002.
8.”South Korea Envoy to Travel 
North,” BBC News Online: World: Asia-Pacific, March 25, 2002. Retrieved 
March 26, 2002, from 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1891000/1891457.stm
9. Ji-Yeon Yuh, “North Korean Enemy Should Be Made Friend,” The Baltimore Sun, 
February 27, 2002.
10. Thom Shanker, “Global Arms Sales Rise Again, and the U.S. Leads the Pack, ” 
The New York Times, August 20, 2001.
S. Brian Willlson is a Vietnam veteran, 
long-time peace activist, and writer. He has visited a number of 
countries studying the impacts of U.S. policy. His essays are posted on 
his website, brianwillson.com. He published a small autobiography, On 
Third World Legs (Charles Kerr, 1992), which describes his ordeal of 
having been intentionally run over by a U.S. Government munitions train 
accelerating to over three times the 5 mph legal speed limit during a 
peaceful protest in California in 1987. He now walks on two prostheses 
after losing each leg below the knee. Brian Willson possesses two 
honorary Ph.D.s and a Juris Doctor degree.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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