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The Militant (logo)
Vol. 81/No. 18 May 8, 2017
(front page)
Washington seeks alliances to press imperialist interests in Pacific, Asia
BY TERRY EVANS
As one of Washington’s nuclear submarines docked in Busan, South Korea,
April 25, and the U.S. naval force led by the aircraft carrier USS Carl
Vinson nears Korean waters, the U.S. rulers continue to seek allies to
pressure the leaders of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea to
back off from further nuclear or long-range missile tests. President
Donald Trump seeks collaboration with the rulers in Beijing to press
Pyongyang and is promoting further United Nations sanctions aimed at
punishing working people in North Korea.
Washington’s threats and military maneuvers are not aimed at launching a
new war on the Korean Peninsula — though, intended or not, they could
precipitate one. They are part of decades of efforts by both Democratic
and Republican administrations to come up with a solution that would
force North Korea to back down.
The liberal bourgeois media has stoked war hysteria, talking up
predictions of looming military provocations by the DPRK — like carrying
out its sixth nuclear weapon test — during two recent national holidays
there. Instead, North Korea marked the April 25 anniversary of the
founding of its armed forces after the end of decades of Japanese
colonial rule by deploying long-range artillery units for a live-fire
drill on the coast.
The message? Any preemptive assault by Washington and its allies would
mean a rapid response. Pyongyang has 10,000 artillery pieces capable of
hitting Seoul — just 35 miles south of the border — and U.S. troop bases
further south.
The U.N. Security Council will discuss North Korea April 28. Previous
rounds of U.N. sanctions demanded Pyongyang give up its nuclear weapons,
but said nothing about Washington’s deployment of nuclear weapons on
submarines, planes and missiles that can easily target Korea.
On top of the carrier strike group, Washington has led military
exercises in Korea involving tens of thousands of troops, including
practice “decapitation” of the North Korean leadership.
Japanese navy destroyers are currently staging drills with the U.S.
strike group as it approaches Korean waters, while the South Korean navy
conducts live-fire exercises with U.S. destroyers west of the peninsula.
The air forces of the U.S. and South Korea are in the middle of the
April 14-28 Max Thunder annual exercise, with over 100 warplanes
conducting “precision strike drills.”
Decades of Washington’s aggression
Washington’s claims to be the injured party in Korea fall apart in the
face of its more than 70-year division of the peninsula and aggression
there. The U.S. rulers occupied Korea at the end of the second
imperialist world war. U.S. troops drowned in blood widespread protests
for independence across Korea.
They imposed the Syngman Rhee dictatorship on the people of the South
and ultimately provoked a war with the North. U.S. warplanes
carpetbombed the North and parts of the South, leveling the major cities
down to the ground. Some 4 million people were killed during the war.
Still their conquest of the North failed when Beijing sent 260,000
troops to aid Korean fighters and drive Washington’s “United Nations”
army back to the 38th Parallel. For the first time U.S. imperialism had
failed to win a war. Washington refuses to this day to sign a peace
agreement with the DPRK.
Washington seeks Beijing’s help
Washington wants Beijing’s compliance. China accounts for more than 90
per cent of all North Korea’s foreign trade. Following speculation that
China would agree to sanction oil sales, the North Korean government
restricted fuel sales — prices rose and shortages were reported. Chinese
backing for an oil embargo would have a serious impact on the DPRK,
which gets almost all its oil from Beijing.
The Chinese rulers have urged Pyongyang to suspend its missile tests in
exchange for an end to U.S. military maneuvers, a proposal U.S.
Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley ruled out. Beijing’s deeper concern
is preventing the collapse of the government of the DPRK, leading to
Washington’s troops being stationed on the Chinese border. Chinese
President Xi Jinping called President Trump April 26 and urged
Washington to exercise restraint while the two powers continue to seek a
common way forward.
Tensions between Beijing and Washington continue over the deployment of
the Terminal High Altitude Aerial Defense system, a radar and
anti-missile battery in South Korea. Protests broke out in South Korea
April 25 when U.S. forces began moving components of the system to the
former golf course where it will be set up.
Beijing sees THAAD as a spy station that violates China’s sovereignty.
It has restricted Chinese travel to South Korea in retaliation.
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