SEPTEMBER
4, 2017
Here’s
what the media isn’t telling you about North Korea’s recent missile tests.
Last
Monday, the DPRK fired a Hwasong-12 intermediate-range ballistic missile over
Japan’s Hokkaido Island. The missile landed in the waters beyond the island
harming neither people nor property.
The media
immediately condemned the test as a “bold and provocative act” that showed
the North’s defiance of UN resolutions and “contempt for its neighbors.” President
Trump sharply criticized the missile test saying:
“Threatening
and destabilizing actions only increase the North Korean regime’s isolation in
the region and among all nations of the world. All options are on the table.”
What
the media failed to mention was that, for the last three weeks, Japan,
South Korea and the US have been engaged in large-scale joint-military drills
on Hokkaido Island and in South Korea. These needlessly provocative war games
are designed to simulate an invasion of North Korea and a “decapitation” operation
to remove (Re: Kill) he regime. North Korea’s supreme leader, Kim Jong-un
has asked the US repeatedly to end these military exercises, but the US has
stubbornly refused. The US reserves the right to threaten anyone, anytime and
anywhere even right on their doorstep. It’s part of what makes the US
exceptional. Check out this excerpt from an article at Fox News:
“More
than 3,500 American and Japanese troops kicked off a weeks-long joint military
exercise Thursday against the backdrop of an increasingly belligerent North
Korean regime. The exercise, known as Northern Viper 17, will take place on
Hokkaido — Japan’s northern-most main island — and will last until Aug. 28….
“We
are improving our readiness not only in the air, but as a logistical support
team,” Col. R. Scott Jobe, the 35th Fighter Wing commander, said in a
statement. “We are in a prime location for contingency purposes and this
exercise will only build upon our readiness in the case a real-world scenario
occurs.” (US, Japanese troops begin joint military exercise amid North Korea
threat”, Fox News)
Monday’s
missile test (which flew over Hokkaido Island) was conducted just hours after
the war games ended. The message was clear: The North is not going to be
publicly humiliated and slapped around without responding. Rather than show
weakness, the North demonstrated that it was prepared to defend itself against
foreign aggression. In other words, the test was NOT a “bold and
provocative act” (as the media stated) but a modest and well thought-out
response by a country that has experienced 64 years of relentless hectoring,
sanctions, demonization and saber rattling by Washington. The North responded
because the Washington’s incitements required a response. End of story.
And
the same is true of the three short-range ballistic missiles the North
tested last week. (two of which apparently fizzled out shortly after
launching.) These tests were a response to the 3 week-long joint-military
drills in South Korea which involved 75,000 combat troops
accompanied by hundreds of tanks, armored vehicles, landing craft, heavy
artillery, a full naval flotilla and flyovers by squadrons of state of the art
fighters and strategic bombers. Was the North supposed to sit on its hands
while this menacing display of brute military force took place right under its
nose???
Of
course not. Imagine if Russia engaged in a similar operation over the border in
Mexico while the Russian fleet conducted “live fire” drills three miles outside
of San Francisco Bay. What do you think Trump’s reaction would be?
He’d
blow those boats out of the water faster than you could say “Jackie Robinson”,
right?
So
why the double standard when it comes to North Korea? Sauce for the goose is
sauce for the gander.
North
Korea should be applauded for showing that it won’t be intimidated by the
schoolyard bully. Kim knows that any confrontation with the US will end badly
for the North, even so, he hasn’t caved in or allowed himself to be pushed
around by the blustering, browbeating thugs in the White House. Booyah, Kim.
By
the way, Trump’s response to Monday’s missile test was barely covered in the
mainstream media, and for good reason. Here’s what happened two days later:
On
Wednesday, a US-led flight-group of F-35B fighters, F-15 fighters
and B-1B bombers conducted military operations over a training range east
of Seoul. The B-1B’s, which are low-altitude nuclear bombers, dropped their
dummy-bombs on the site and then returned to their home base. The show of force
was intended to send a message to Pyongyang that Washington is unhappy with the
North’s ballistic missile testing project and is prepared to use nuclear
weapons against the North if it fails to heed Washington’s diktats.
So
Washington is prepared to nuke the North if they don’t straighten up and do as
they are told?
It
sure looks that way, but who really knows? In any event, Kim has no
choice but to stand firm. If he shows any sign of weakness, he knows he’s going
to end up like Saddam and Gaddafi. And that, of course, is what’s driving the
hyperbolic rhetoric; the North wants to avoid the Gaddafi scenario at all cost.
(BTW, the reason Kim has threatened to fire missiles at the waters surrounding
Guam is because Guam is the home of Anderson Airforce Base which is the
point-of-origin for the B-1B nuclear-capable bombers that have been making
threatening flyovers on the Korean Peninsula for some time now. The North feels
like it has to respond to that existential threat.
Wouldn’t
it help if the media mentioned that fact or does it better serve their agenda
to make it look like Kim is barking mad by lashing out against the ‘totally
innocent’ United States, a country that only seeks to preserve the peace
wherever it goes?
Give
me a break!
It
is so hard to find anything in the media that doesn’t reflect Washington’s bias
and hostility. Surprisingly, there was pretty decent article at CBS News
last week written by a former Western intelligence officer with decades of
experience in Asia. It’s the only article I’ve found that accurately explains
what’s really going on beyond the propaganda. Check it out:
“Prior
to President Trump’s inauguration, North Korea made it clear it was prepared to
give the new U.S. administration time to review the policy and come up with
something better than President Obama’s. The only wrinkle was that if the
U.S. went full-steam ahead with its annual joint exercises with South Korea
(especially if that were accompanied by more talk of “decapitation” and more
flights of strategic bombers over the Korean peninsula), the North would react
strongly.
In
short, the U.S. did, and the North reacted.
Behind-the-scenes
contacts went up and down, but couldn’t get traction. In April, North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un paraded new missiles as a warning, to no
effect. The regime launched the new systems, one after another.
Still, Washington’s approach didn’t change.” (Analysis: Pyongyang’s view of the
North Korea-U.S. crisis”, CBS News)
Okay,
so now we know the truth: The North gave it their best shot and came up
snakeeyes, mainly because Washington doesn’t want to negotiate, they’d rather
twist arms (Russia and China), tighten the embargo and threaten war. That’s
Trump’s solution. Here’s more from the same piece:
“On
July 4, after North Korea’s first successful intercontinental ballistic missile
(ICBM) launch, Kim sent a public signal that the North could put the nuclear
and missile programs “on the table” if the U.S. changed its approach.
The
U.S. did not, so the North launched another ICBM, very deliberately deeming it
a warning to the U.S. that they were to be taken seriously. Still, more B-1
bombers flew over the Peninsula, and the U.N. Security Council passed new
sanctions.” (CBS News)
So,
the North was ready to do some serious horse-trading, but the US balked. Kim
probably heard what a wheeler dealer Trump was and figured they could work
something out. But it hasn’t happen. Trump has turned out to be a bigger
bust than Obama, which is pretty bad. He not only refuses to negotiate
but he also delivers bellicose threats almost every day. This isn’t what the
North was expecting. They were expecting a “non interventionist” leader
who might be receptive to a trade-off.
The
current situation has left Kim with no good options. He can either cave in and
terminate his missile program altogether or increase the frequency of the tests
and hope that they pave the way for negotiations. Kim chose the latter.
Did
he make a bad choice?
Maybe.
Is
it a rational choice?
Yes.
The
North is betting that its nuclear weapons programs will be valuable bargaining
chits in future negotiations with the United States. The North has no plan to
nuke the west coast of the United States. That’s ridiculous! That doesn’t
accomplish anything. What they want is to preserve their regime, procure
security guarantees from Washington, lift the embargo, normalize
relations with the South, extricate the US from the political affairs of
the peninsula, and (hopefully) end the irritating and endlessly provocative 64 year
US occupation. Yankee go home. Please.
Bottom
line: The North is ready to deal. They want negotiations. They want to end the
war. They want to put this whole nightmare behind them and get on with their
lives. But Washington won’t let them because Washington likes the status quo.
Washington wants to be a permanent feature in South Korea so it can encircle
Russia and China with lethal missile systems and expand its geopolitical grip
bringing the world closer to nuclear Armageddon.
That’s
what Washington wants, and that’s why the crisis on the peninsula will continue
to boil.
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