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Spoiling For A Fight? Waging Imperial Wars For Global Dominance Called Peace, Stability And Democracy
25 December 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
Washington is a world class
menace, waging imperial wars for global dominance
called peace, stability and democracy. In the run-up
to the 1950 Korean War, Truman used South Korea to
goad Pyongyang into a conflict it didn't want. Nor
does it now, but events may spiral out of control
unless cooler heads prevail.
Last March, the latest
confrontation began when North Korea was falsely
blamed for sinking a South Korean ship. At the time,
evidence suggested a false flag, manufactured to blame
Pyongyang.
Then on November 23, US media
reports said North Korea incited the gravest incident
since the July 1953 armistice. Analysts called it a
deliberate provocation, even though South Korean
forces fired first, goaded by the Obama administration
for what Pyongyang, with good reason, called a
rehearsal for invasion.
Decades of sanctions crippled its
economy. Ten years under Bush/Obama were intimidating.
South Korea's right-wing Lee Myung-bak Grand National
Party replaced Uri Party's Roh Moo-hyun's Sunshine
Policy, initiating hostile, provocative relations.
Lee rescinded his cooperative
economic agreements, cancelled emergency
communications between both sides to avoid possible
conflict, stopped family reunions, ended the North's
Mt. Kumgang tourist operations, and closed the
North-South railroad benefitting both sides, keeping
only a Kaesong, North Korea industrial park
operating.
He also violated a 2004 agreement
to halt propaganda campaigns, sending 400,000
disinformation leaflets north on balloons. Annual
South Korean/US military exercises heighten tensions,
especially with extra Washington/Seoul saber rattling.
Pyongyang warned about current ones, calling them
"reckless military provocations (in) our maritime
territory." Promising another response, Reuters, on
December 20, said:
"North Korea stepped back from
confrontation over 'reckless' military drills by the
South on Monday and reportedly issued a new offer on
nuclear inspections, drawing a cautious response from
Seoul and Washington," preferring confrontation to
diplomacy.
On December 19, an emergency
Security Council meeting failed to reach consensus
urging peninsula calm with language condemning only
Pyongyang. China and Russia want both sides blamed.
They also urge reducing tensions and above all
avoiding conflict.
Reuters said US, British and
French delegations rejected Russia's proposal for a UN
envoy mission to Seoul and Pyongyang, seeking "maximum
restraint."
On December 21, Al Jazeera said
Security Council negotiations "ended in an impasse,
with Russia and China resisting an explicit
condemnation of North Korea for last month's attack."
As a result, a planned December 20 meeting was
cancelled.
Korea Policy Institute analyst
Christine Ahn believes "the threat of war with North
Korea is very real." If so, Washington and Seoul will
provoke it, not Pyongyang, with nothing strategic to
gain. Moreover, it would "draw in both the United
States, and potentially China, into a larger conflict
that nobody wants....I think that (both US and South
Korean) leaders are playing a very dangerous game that
could really escalate into a full-blown war."
No one in the region wants one.
With America embroiled in two unwinnable conflicts,
it's hard imagining Washington does either. No matter.
Given Obama's reckless agenda, no possibility can be
ruled out.
Russia's UN ambassador, Vitaly
Churkin, said:
"Now we have a situation of very
serious political tension and no game plan on the
diplomatic side." He also warned that "within hours
there may be a serious aggravation of tensions, a
serious conflict for that matter."
A statement from Wang Min,
China's ambassador and permanent UN representative
said:
"We strongly appeal (for)
relevant parties to exercise maximum restraint, act in
a responsible manner and avoid increas(ing)
tensions....Calm rather than tension, dialogue rather
than confrontation, peace rather than warfare, this is
the strong aspiration and voice of the peoples from
both sides of the Peninsula and the international
community."
He also called the situation
"perilous." Washington and Seoul were unmoved, blaming
Pyongyang unfairly. They also participated jointly in
South Korea's provocative December 20 military
exercises.
Held on Yeonpyeong Island, they
included 90 minutes of live artillery fire with US
trainers and observers present. Local residents stayed
in bunkers in case Pyongyang retaliated. South Korean
officials went on emergency standby. Washington and
Seoul's military were on high alert. Provocative
overhead flights threated attack. Warships patrolled
the Yellow Sea near the disputed Northern Limited
Line, unilaterally imposed by Washington in 1953, one
of many thorns affecting relations.
Earlier, South Korea's Defense
Minister, Kim Kwan-jin, said Pyongyang's artillery
batteries would be bombed if its territory again was
shelled. Instead of cooling tensions, Seoul and
Washington exploit them to the fullest, including
inflammatory media reports condemning the North as
aggressor, the South a victim, and America as neutral
arbiter.
Nonetheless, Pyongyang showed
restraint, cooling tensions that heightened fears
along one of the world's most heavily fortified
frontiers. Its official KCNA news agency said:
"The revolutionary armed forces
of the DPRK did not feel any need to retaliate against
every despicable military provocation," calling the
drills "childish play with fire."
In a show of good faith,
Pyongyang also agreed to let UN inspectors return to
its Yongbyon nuclear complex, offered to sell its
12,000 fuel rods to another country, and proposed
creating a joint military commission and hotline with
Seoul and Washington to avoid future conflict. Hardly
proposals from a belligerent, yet they were quickly
dismissed, US State Department spokesman PJ Crowley
saying:
"We've seen a string of broken
promises by North Korea going back many, many years.
We'll be guided by what North Korea does, not (what)
it might do under certain circumstances."
Unmentioned was Washington half
century of broken promises, intimidation, threats,
isolation, and economic aggression against Pyongyang
to force its adoption of a market oriented economy
dominated by US capital. Resistance draws ire and
provocations that could escalate to war, no matter the
risks of pitting a potential Pyongyang/Beijing/Moscow
alliance against Washington and Seoul.
Ignored also was America's
refusal to resume six-party talks to ease tensions and
avoid what no one, except perhaps Washington, may
want. It includes greater confrontation with China,
its main economic rival that, if unchecked, will
surpass the US in the current century as the world's
dominant economy. A potential showdown looms to
prevent it - the unthinkable, another Asian land war
against a super-power far stronger than Vietnam and a
land mass the size of America.
America's
Global Dominance Agenda
Imperial America also threatens
Russia, its main military rival with a near-matching
nuclear capability and strength to strike globally if
attacked. Pentagon strategists regard Afghanistan as
strategically crucial to project military power
against Russia, China, Iran, and other oil-rich
Eurasian states, including Middle East ones.
Russia and China know the stakes
- that Washington wants unchallengeable military power
to assure control of global resources, as well as
"full spectrum dominance" over all land, surface and
sub-surface sea, air, space, electromagnetic spectrum
and information systems with enough overwhelming
strength to fight and win global wars against any
adversary, including preemptively with nuclear
weapons.
As a result, nuclear war by
miscalculation or design remains as conceivable under
Obama as Bush - a reckless possibility for "mutually
assured destruction." During the Cold War, it was
prevented. The two Koreas, are just pawns in this
reckless game for dominance that potentially could
consume everyone, including an American aggressor.
After nearly 60 years of
confrontation and hostility, any nation would feel
paranoid. More recently, Pyongyang recalls that, in
2003, George Bush, told Chinese President Jiang Zemin
that if North Korea's nuclear issue wasn't resolved
peacefully (meaning entirely abandoned for commercial
use) he'd "have to consider a military strike."
The possibility remains,
especially with Obama as belligerent as Bush. He also
rejects diplomatic efforts to cool tensions and
resolve differences peacefully. Instead, US policy
remains aggressive and confrontational, risking
nuclear war, an unthinkable alternative anywhere, but
design or miscalculation may cause it.
Targeting North
Korea
A charter "axis of evil" member,
imperial America targets North Korea, perhaps more
aggressively than earlier with help from the
International Criminal Court (ICC). On December 7,
Washington Post writer John Pomfret headlined, "Court
looks into alleged war crimes by N. Korea," saying:
The ICC "launched a preliminary
investigation into allegations that North Korean
forces committed war crimes when they shelled civilian
areas in South Korea and allegedly sank a South Korean
warship, the court announced Monday."
Chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo
said complaints prompted its action, notably from
South Korea. In fact, the alleged ship sinking was a
red herring, and Seoul's belligerence precipitated
Pyongyang's response, shelling military, not civilian,
targets on Yeonpyeong Island, eight miles from its
coast.
Instead of holding responsible
parties culpable for crimes against humanity, war
crimes, illegal aggression and genocide, the ICC
serves US, Western, and Israeli interests, guilty of
enough criminality to demand prosecution for decades.
Instead, victims, not aggressors are charged and
convicted. Pyongyang's leaders may be next if they
travel abroad and become vulnerable. The rule of might
over right prevails, justice always denied.
A Final
Comment
For decades, Israel has been a
regional bully and global menace, more proof from Amos
Harel's December 20 Haaretz article headlined, "IDF to
deploy super-armored tanks along Gaza border,"
saying:
Equipped with "active armor
(Windbreaker) protection, they'll deploy in January
"following assessments that the threat of anti-tank
missile attacks in the area is on the rise. (Israeli)
security sources (claim Gazan) militants upgraded
their anti-tank missile capabilities. (Windbreaker)
neutraliz(es) advanced anti-tank missiles at different
ranges."
In fact, Palestinians don't
initiate attacks. In self-defense, they occasionally
respond legally to Israeli aggression. On December 18,
Reuters reported a recent incident involving Israeli
air strikes killing five Gazans. Israel called them
"terror operatives who were preparing to launch
rockets toward Israeli territory." They're always
freedom fighters or civilians.
On December 21, Al Jazeera
headlined, "Israeli fighter jets attack Gaza,"
saying:
Two Palestinians were wounded
according to witnesses. "The overnight raids came
after the Israeli army accused Palestinian fighters of
firing nine mortar shells into southern Israel, which
fell on open ground and caused no deaths."
Seven raids were conducted
against Khan Younis and northern Gaza locations,
"targeting the Jabailya refugee camp and the towns of
Beit Lahya, Beit Hanoun and Zeitoun." No casualties
were reported, but often civilians are killed or
wounded. A tunnel near Rafah was also attacked, again
with no casualties. Israel, in fact, reported that
throughout 2010, only around 200 rockets or shells
were fired, causing little damage and few casualties.
In contrast, Israel launches
regular air and ground attacks, destroying
non-military targets, targeting civilians, and causing
frequent deaths and injuries, including Gazan farmers,
workers and fishermen. In the West Bank and East
Jerusalem, homes and communities are assaulted,
property destroyed, and civilians attacked, including
women and children.
Virtually daily, Israel violates
international law with impunity. Western leaders and
ICC justices stay silent despite decades of criminal
acts. Silence makes them complicit.
Instead, might rules over right.
Victims, not aggressors, are blamed, even 1.5 million
Gazans suffocating lawlessly under siege since June
2007. They're denied enough food, medicine,
electricity, fuel and other essentials to survive.
In mid-2010, Israel cut wheat and
animal feed let in by 25%, making conditions more
dire. As a result, Gazans' fundamental human rights,
dignity, and right to life are compromised. No one
cares enough to act, nor in Asia where nuclear war
might erupt unless global pressure prevents it.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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