US
media airs pretexts for preemptive attack on North Korea
By
James Cogan
WSWS,
3
March 2018
Over
the past week, the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal have
sought to manufacture justifications for the Trump administration to
implement its threats to launch an illegal war of aggression to
“totally destroy” North Korea.
On
February 27, a lengthy New York Times article featured allegations by
unnamed “United Nations’ experts” that North Korea “has been
shipping supplies to the Syrian government that could be used in the
production of chemical weapons.” It asserted that “possible
chemical weapons components” were “part of at least 40 previously
unreported shipments by North Korea to Syria between 2012 and 2017 of
prohibited ballistic missile parts and materials that could be used
for both military and civilian purposes.”
The
article claims the newspaper “reviewed” a 200-page report by the
purported UN experts. It admits that the document has not been
officially released and, according to a UN official cited in the
article, there are no plans to publish it. The article further
concedes that “experts who viewed the report said the evidence it
cited did not prove definitively that there was current, continuing
collaboration between North Korea and Syria on chemical weapons”
[emphasis added].
In
other words, the New York Times chose to highlight assertions
contained in an unpublished report, without any other substantiation.
The credentials of its unnamed authors are not identified, but they
are eight, hardly impartial, members of a UN panel appointed to
investigate “possible” violations by North Korea of the sanctions
imposed upon it. Moreover, even the “experts” who allegedly read
the report concluded that it proved nothing at all.
None
of this prevented the New York Times from headlining its article: “UN
links North Korea to Syria’s chemical weapons program.” The
newspaper repeats entirely unproven allegations that the
Russian-backed Syrian government has used chemical weapons against
rebel-held areas of the country. The sole aim of the article is to
have readers conclude that sinister North Korean assistance is
facilitating horrific crimes against civilians in Syria.
The
article obviously has one intended audience, in particular. An entire
layer of ex-liberals and ex-lefts, who in 2003 voiced opposition to
the US invasion of Iraq, are today at the forefront of demanding that
Washington step up its military operations to overthrow the Syrian
government (see: “A new ‘left’ appeal for imperialist
intervention in Syria”). By linking North Korea to lurid claims of
atrocities by the Syrian regime, the objective is to secure the
complicity and support of this milieu for war against Pyongyang as
well.
On
February 28, the Wall Street Journal published a comment by former
Bush administration official John Bolton that set out another
rationale to justify a pre-emptive war.
North
Korea, Bolton wrote, is an “imminent threat” to the United States
because it possibly has the capability to arm an intercontinental
ballistic missile with a nuclear warhead. He insisted it was a
“necessity of self-defense” for US imperialism—with its 4,000
nuclear weapons, massive military apparatus and $18 trillion
economy—to attack North Korea. The US had to “strike first” and
unleash “fire and fury” against a poverty-stricken nation of just
25 million people with a gross domestic product of barely $25
billion.
A
war crime of historic dimensions is being prepared. American
imperialism is not concerned about, or threatened by, the crude North
Korean weapons programs. Its aim is to undermine China, which it has
identified as its “strategic competitor” in Asia and around the
world. One objective behind the plans to attack North Korea is to
provide the US military with a testing ground for its newest
hardware, including F-35 “fifth generation” fighters,
conventional bombs such as the Massive Ordnance Air Blast, dropped
for the first time last year in Afghanistan, and “tactical”
nuclear weapons. A second objective is to turn the entire Korean
peninsula into a US military staging base for a future war with China
itself.
Preparations
for war are very advanced. The day after publishing its claims about
North Korea and Syrian chemical weapons, the New York Times reported
on “a classified military exercise” held in late February in
Hawaii. The exercise consisted of top military commanders
brain-storming on how to “totally destroy” North Korea and
reviewing the likely consequences of war.
According
to the newspaper, the commanders were told the US military could
expect 10,000 casualties in the first several days. Civilian
casualties “would likely be in the thousands or hundreds of
thousands.” Among issues the commanders considered were how many
special forces troops would be needed to attack North Korean nuclear
facilities; whether US airborne divisions could be relied upon to
fight in the dozens of tunnels under the border between North and
South Korea; and how to “take down” North Korea’s air defences,
so the country was totally at the mercy of constant American air
bombardment.
The
exercise underscored the complicity of the South Korean capitalist
class and government in facilitating what would be a catastrophic
war. A US attack, the New York Times commented, “is almost wholly
dependent on cooperation from South Korea—not only in committing
its troops or other assets to the battle but also accepting the risk
of widespread bloodshed on its civilian population if the North fires
back.”
There
is, on the part of the American military-intelligence apparatus and
its media mouthpieces, a calculated and horrifying purpose behind the
continuous reports on the enormous casualties likely in a
“conventional” war with North Korea. It is intended to justify
using nuclear weapons on the same grounds that the Truman
administration adopted in destroying the Japanese cities of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki in 1945: it was necessary to “save lives.”
Comments
by top Republican senator and Trump confidante Jim Risch during last
month’s Munich security summit confirmed that a preemptive nuclear
attack on North Korea is being not only contemplated, but actively
planned.
Risch
told a seminar that the Trump administration and US military had no
plans for a “bloody nose” attack on North Korea—limited strikes
intended to destroy only its purported nuclear weapons facilities and
capabilities. Such an assault would enable North Korea to launch a
counter-attack.
“And
if you think about it,” the senator continued, “it absolutely
makes sense. If this thing starts, it’s going to be probably one of
the worst catastrophic events in the history of our civilisation. It
is going to be very, very brief. The end of it is going to see mass
casualties the likes of which the planet has never seen. It will be
of biblical proportions.”
Risch
was clearly referring to strikes with nuclear weapons, including on
North Korea’s major cities, and the indiscriminate slaughter of
millions of people. He told his audience: “Anyone who doubts that
this president isn’t committed to that, I would suggest that they
step back, take a breath, listen to what he has said, review the
facts on the ground.”
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