Exchanging Fire on the Korean Peninsula
By Nile Bowie
Global Research, February 29, 2012
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=29544
The
38th parallel dividing the two Korean nation states may be the most
potent physical manifestation of antithetical idealism subsisting into
the 21stcentury. From it’s guerilla warfare induced separation in 1945,
to the highly touted present day threat of sacred war –
the ideologies of the two opposing Korean nation states have worked to
the advantage of powers largely using Korea as a proxy. In the south,
the oligarchical cadre of President Lee Myung Bak has worked ad
nauseum to dismantle the infrastructure of former President Kim
Dae-Jung’s sunshine policy toward the northward regime. In an unfettered
embrace for the military industrial complex, Lee has further aligned
with the Pentagon and the Obama administration to secure an influx of
state-of the-art-military technology.
To the North, ideology has always been far more relevant than economics. Beneath the first signs of Chinese-style market reform and
the increasing presence of special economic zones, the effectiveness of
state mythology surrounding its deified leadership may soon gently
begin to be challenged as North Koreans learn more about foreigners and
the world beyond their borders. Since its inception, the Northern
population has been subjected to vigorous domestic propaganda espousing
the pristine virtuousness of a uniquely homogenous Korean race –
protected from the evils of the outside world under the everlasting
paternal care of the Great Father Leader, General Kim il-Sung. Although
always second to firepower, economic legitimacy appears to be more of a
priority following the third dynastic handover into the remarkably
stable Kim Jong-Un regime.
The
threat of war has permanently occupied the Korean peninsula since the
existence of its two nation states, with each side seeking to wholly
absorb the other into its ideological and economic orbit. The South’s
undisputed economic dominance makes it naturally suited to lead
integrative efforts toward much needed reconciliation on the peninsula.
Under the publically loathed chaebol regime model of Lee Myung Bak, the
prospects of a mutual bloodless reunification appear stark. As one
state begins to manufacture its own fighter jets and
increasingly expands its arsenal of advanced military technology - the
other brandishes a collection ageing Soviet-made machinery, suspected to
be largely obsolete. Between the artillery exchanges of a hypothetical
Korean Holy War, it must be asked – is South Korea really prey or
predator?
Recent
tension on the peninsula in the form of US-ROK Combined Forces
Command drills reignited an ongoing stream of public analysis. The war
games conducted on February 20th, 2012 were negligently held in
a disputed area of the West Sea. Following an exchange of threatening
rhetoric, the ROK began evacuating residents of Baengnyeong Island, located just south of the maritime border with North Korea. Prior to the commencement of military exercises, the North warned the ROK “not to forget the lesson" of Yeonpyeong Island, where four civilians were killed in a Northern bombardment in 2010 after the South began firing shells into North Korean territorial waters as part of a live ammunition drill.
Fortunately,
the North did not respond to the most recent US-ROK Combined Forces
Command exercise, perceiving it to be a “premeditated military
provocation.” Korean news sources report an estimated 5,000 live rounds fired during the exercise,
all of them falling into South Korean waters. The drill was conducted
over two hours, involving Cobra attack helicopters, self-propelled
howitzers and Vulcan cannons. Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News
Agency (KCNA) warns that North Korea is fully prepared for war and the complete collapse of ties between the two Koreas. In
response to further planned exercises, the North's National Defense
Commission (NDC) has stated "Now that a war has been declared against
us, the army and people are firmly determined to counter it with a
sacred war of our own style and protect the security of the nation and
the peace of the country.”
The upcoming US-ROK drills include Key Resolve,
a computerized command post exercise involving 200,000 troops launching
on February 27th, 2012 and continuing until March 9th. Further joint
air, ground and naval field training exercises under the moniker of Foal
Eagle, will be held from March 1st to April 30th, 2012. In anticipation
of the planned joint military exercises, Kim Jong-Un has reportedly visited front-line military units in
the southwestern region responsible for the Yeonpyeong Island shelling
in 2010. Amid the tension of impending conflict, the US-ROK Combined
Forces Command has fully mobilized its surveillance radar, with reconnaissance planes and F-15K fighters on emergency standby.
The DPRK’s 4th Army Corps and other front-line units operate on
heightened alert while monitoring the mobilization of allied troops. The
Associated Press has confirmed Washington’s use of U-2 aircrafts from South Korea’s Osan Air Base to conduct monitoring over North Korean airspace.
Although
it’s irresponsible to deny South Korea’s sovereignty and the vibrant
economic achievements of the people within it, the nation’s current
leadership has worked to further reduce the country into an economic and
military protectorate of the United States. Under President Lee Myung
Bak, the globalmultifaceted strategic partnership between Seoul and
Washington has pressured the ROK into deploying its military personnel to more than a dozen countries, including Afghanistan Somalia, Lebanon and other fronts in the mythicized War on Terror. South Korean troops have also joined Cobra Gold,
the United States' largest multilateral exercise in the Asia-Pacific
region in conjunction with Thailand, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, and
Singapore.
As
policy makers in Seoul’s Blue House continue propagating an unbalanced
emphasis on US relations, the ROK is forced out of emerging markets in
the Middle East as a result of the expanding blanket of US sanctions in
the region. In addition to an increased global presence of ROK troops,
South Korea has been cajoled into the suspension of its crucial trading
partnership with Iran. Kim Keun-sik, a North Korea analyst at Kyungnam University elaborates, “Seoul’s
participation in sanctions against Iran is the worst trap of the
Korea-US alliance. It is not aimed at deterring the North (which is the
initial purpose of the alliance) nor at peacefully resolving the North
Korean nuclear issue.” As Seoul is dragged into complying with American
militarism, relations between Pyongyang and Tehran have become
increasingly more intimate.
As Korea braces for the spike in oil prices after freezing Iranian petrochemical and oil imports at the behest of US assertion,
Lee Myung Bak personally traveled to the UAE, Qatar, Turkey, and Saudi
Arabia in search of new trading partners. South Korea and Saudi Arabia
subsequently agreed to significantly bolster their economic and defense cooperation,
with talks of exporting ammunition and howitzers to the feudalistic
monarchy. Fortunately for American arms manufacturers, the ROK has a
large appetite for high-end fighter jets. Boeing is vying to be a
beneficiary in Korea’s largest ever arms procurement deal with
their F-15 Silent Eagle (F-15SE). Korea plans to further purchase 60
fighter jets with an enormous budget of $7.3 billion. Lockheed Martin
and the European Aeronautic Defense and Space Company (EADS) are also
competing to win armament deals. In an effort to counter North Korean
submarine attacks, the ROK has allocated an additional $565,000 of its 2012 budget for plans to establish a submarine command.
While the threat of provocation from Pyongyang provides an opportune pretext for militaristic expansion, South Korea’s controversial $970 million joint military base on Jeju Island (the
ROK’s southern most territory, parallel to the DMZ) exists to
fundamentally project force toward China in the event of military
conflict. With sheer disregard for the ecological physiognomies of Jeju
Island (recognized by UNESCO) and the concerns of the island’s
protesting residents, the joint base would host up to 20 American and South Korean warships, including submarines, aircraft carriers and destroyers once completed in 2014. China has further called the presence of Aegis anti-ballistic systems on Jeju island a dangerous provocation. Under
the leadership of President Lee Myung Bak, the South Korea arms
industry has expanded to new heights; with a planned increase of $4
billion in exports by 2020, the ROK would be the 7th largest exporter of
arms in the world.
Korea Aerospace Industries is currently joining with Lockheed Martin to produce a T-50 fighter jet, intended for the Israeli military.
Although Israel recently finalized a deal to purchase thirty M-346
trainer fighters from an Italian competitor, the potential for future defense contracts with Middle Eastern nations such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar seem expectant. While the ROK has recently developed the world’s fastest unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV),
it still has pressed Washington to sell its RQ-4 Global Hawk spy planes
– likely to reverse engineer the vehicle as a template for future
Korean-made models. The ROK’s state-run Agency for Defense Development
(ADD) has launched a $5.35 million bunker-buster development project to
be used for precision strikes against military strongholds in the North
by 2013. The project was announced shortly after South Korea finalized
a $71 million arms agreement with the US to import American Bunker Buster explosives.
Although
a conflict on the Korean Peninsula would almost certainly draw in
larger regional powers such as the United States and China, there is
little doubt regarding the military viability of both Korean nations on
their own. While much of their arsenal is outdated, the DPRK’s 1.2
million people under arms make the North Korean military a credible
force. In an effort to defend itself against the Yankee Colony to the
South, the DPRK is attempting to build road-mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles. The North’s BM25 Musudan has
a potential range of around 4,000 kilometers, allowing it to
potentially strike US bases in South Korea, Guam, and Japan. It also
possesses the Taep’o-dong-2, which could potentially strike the continental United States with an extremely reduced payload.
North Korean ballistic technology appears to be constructed from components of Russian origin; analysts such as David Wright of the Union of Concerned Scientists' point out that
the engines on the North’s Unha-2 launcher are essentially based on the
Soviet Scud-B missile. In sharp contrast to the modernity of the ROK’s
military technology, the North’s most modern undertakings are based off
of the Soviet R-27 sea-launched ballistic missile, first deployed in
1968. The DPRK is also attempting to use a dated American UAV purchased
from the Middle East as a basis for its own unmanned attack aircraft
program. After North Korean modifications, the US-made MQM-107
Streaker’s 1970s-era technology would serve as an enhanced version of the German WWII-era V-1 Buzz Bomb.
The
extremely limited amount of modern equipment in circulation is largely
based on modified 1960s-era missile technology, which appears to see
little to no actual testing. Despite its large numbers, extreme
isolation has left troops in the North with a questionable amount of
practical training under its exceedingly bureaucratic chain of command.
The North’s domestic missile development program is more limited than
generally assumed, with easily visible and immobile long-range missile
launch sites. US congressmen belonging to the House Armed Services Committee have voiced concern over
the North’s road-mobile ICBM program and its capacity to hide launch
platforms. While Northern special ops forces could undertake campaigns
of guerilla war for some time and inevitably deal heavy damage onto the
South with artillery shells and missiles, the North’s capacity to
sustain a large-scale effort without Chinese backing is limited with an
American presence on the Peninsula.
Rather
than encouraging openness and trade, regime change in the North has
long been an open goal for the United States in their effort to push
sanctions against the Communist state since its inception. Documents authored in 2009 by the US think-tank, The Council on Foreign Relationsillustrate
a military contingency plan involving the stationing of up to 460,000
foreign soldiers into a post-regime North Korea to its capture nuclear
arms and ballistic missiles. The document also highlights the need to
form a compliant transitional government acquiescent to market
liberalization and privatization. Although the regime has acknowledged its possession of a nuclear deterrent in its propaganda, any further specifics on the North’s nuclear program are largely subject to speculation.
In January 2004, US nuclear scientist Siegfried Hecker visited the North’s Yongbyon Nuclear facility.
Hecker testified before US Congress that he saw no evidence of a
nuclear bomb, although he acknowledged that the North possessed
weapons-grade plutonium. Shortly after in September 2004, North Korean
Vice Foreign Minister Choe Su-Hon defended announcements that the North
has turned plutonium from 8,000 spent fuel rods into nuclear weapons
before the UN General Assembly, citing defense against the US nuclear
threat. In 2005, the North resumed its nuclear program when the US
refused to complete construction on two light-water reactors promised in
an Agreed Framework aimed to halt the North’s program. Following a
missile test in 2009, the North vowed to reject pressure to denuclearize and informed the IAEA that they would resume their nuclear weapons program.
Hecker visited the Yongbyon nuclear facility again in November 2010 and reported on its increased capabilities,
however noting that the experimental light-water reactor he was shown
was still in the early stages of construction. Former North Korean
leader Kim Jong-il presided over an economic collapse and an
unprecedented famine in the 1990’s. His entire legitimacy derived from a highly propagated military first approach that advertised the newfound security of the regime,
“the Dear General successfully saw the acquisition of a nuclear
deterrent that would protect the Korean race forever. Truly, the son had
proven himself worthy of his great father.” While the status of such a
nuclear device is largely subject to speculation, any attempts to force
denuclearization by the International Community through the Six Party
talks will likely result in failure.
Denuclearization
is akin to the regime committing political suicide, quelling its only
bargaining chip with the outside world. Regardless of the actual
progress toward constructing nuclear arms, the North’s weapon is a
source of pride for its people, aimed to further defend itself against
the US forces responsible for killing nearly a third of it’s population
in aerial bombardments during the Korean war (an amount far surpassing
the civilian causalities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki). Under foreign
invasion, the North would become increasing more belligerent if faced
with China’s military neglect.
China
would almost certainly stand to defend its North Korean ally under
siege. In addition to a heavily militarized Peninsula, each side is
backed by opposing military superpowers. The sensitivity of the region
is marked by wild fluctuations in the South Korean stock market at the
first sign of tension or instability. China maintains the largest
standing army in the world with 2,285,000 personnel and is working
to challenge the regional military hegemony of America’s Pacific
Century with its expanding naval and conventional capabilities. China has moved to begin testing advanced anti-satellite (ASAT) and Anti Ballistic Missile (ABM) weapons systems in
an effort to bring the US-China rivalry into Space warfare. The
conflict on the Korean peninsula has the potential to further threaten
global security, not due to North Korean belligerence, but rather to the
ramifications of warring super powers.
The
North would only ever use a nuclear device if its existence were
directly threatened, as a last resort if the nation came under attack
from outside forces. For this reason, the diplomatic strength of the
next South Korean President is crucial to peace on the Peninsula. Lee
Myung Bak has negligently encouraged a hardline stance on relations to
the North, a far cry away from the policies of his predecessor, Kim
Dae-Jung, the only South Korean President to visit the North during a
summit in 2000. The South will host two upcoming elections this
year, the National Assembly in April 2012, and a Presidential election
in December 2012; the actions of the next administrationwill be not only
fundamental inter-Korean relations, but also to economic cooperation
with the United States.
President Lee Myung Bak’s approval ratings now stand at an appalling 27.6%,with
the opposition Democratic United Party (DUP) seen as the most
proficient with regards to handling job creation, North-South relations,
and the redistribution of wealth. Lee, along with his relatives and
other members of his administration are currently being investigated by
prosecutors for illicitly using insider information to gain profits from purchasing stocks from a Korean firm awarded exclusive rights to develop a diamond mine in Cameroon in 2010. The Lee family has been involved in several unprecedented stock manipulation and money laundering schemes. In addition to presiding over a 23% increase in consumer inflation, Lee has been accused of using public funds to purchase a private residence, while spearheading the increase ofdomestic internet censorship and surveillance.
Under the ROK’s National Security Act (NSA), Lee’s regime has targeted an
organization called ‘Solidarity for Peace and Reunification of Korea’
due to their advocating the closure of US army bases and stance against
military drills. The organization has been involved in the campaign
against the construction of the planned Jeju Island naval base and the
heavy-handed conduct of the police and military in quelling dissenting
villagers and activists. Members of an NGO which presented alternative
findings regarding the alleged North Korean sinking of the Cheonan
corvette ship in 2010 were heavily threatened by the South Korean
government, which mobilized citizens to protest against experts who
doubted the official conclusion. Under President Lee, the NSA has been
used to indefinitely detain human rights defenders and citizens for
voicing their political views on sites such as Twitter. In late 2011, a political opposition candidate was sentenced to a year in jail for participating in a radio podcast championing free speech.
Lee Myung Bak’s government has also been exposed for selling informationsuch
as the resident registration numbers, names, and addresses of South
Korean citizens en masse to private bond firms and other civilian
institutions.DUP opposition leader, Han Myeong-sook has called for the mass resignation of the cabinet and an apology from President Lee Myung Bak for the corruption and irregularities that have plagued his administration. The DUP has ignited public appeal for pledging to scrap the publically loathed KOR-US Free Trade Agreement when
it enters office, much to the dismay of the US government. The FTA
would be the largest U.S. trade pact since the 1994 North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
As
the United States advertises its stake in the Asia-Pacific century,
officials have used the threat of North Korea to maintain an unpopular
military presence in the region, declaring it central to 21st century
national security. In the face of aggressive opposition by the South
Korean & Japanese public, the U.S. Pacific Command may further its
agenda by conveniently exacerbating the belligerent rhetoric of
Pyongyang – only to further encircle a far more powerful China in their effort to develop new weapons, such as the world’s first anti-ship ballistic missile.
Much to the dismay of US political elites such as the cantankerous
Senator John McCain, the Obama administration has approved the planned
consolidation of American troops in South Korea to bases south of Seoul
by 2016.
The United States currently maintains 28,500 troops in more than 100 bases across South Korea. The planned consolidation does not warrant a personnel reduction,
nor does it address the rising demands of the Korean public and their
longing for national sovereignty – rather, it highlights the fact that the Pentagon is having an increasingly more difficult time balancing their chequebook. Former CIA director turned United States Secretary of Defense,Leon
Panetta assured lawmakers that US military power in the Asia-Pacific
region won't be debilitated by proposed steep budget cuts. The US already has eleven carriers in the Pacific area and has established deals with Australia for a permanent presence in the Northern Territory; policy makers are working steadfastly for a similar agreement with the Philippines.
Under the proposed consolidation cited in the Strategic Alliance 2015 Roadmap,
the wartime operational control of Korean forces will transition from
the US-ROK Combined Forces Command to the ROK Joint Chiefs of Staff by
December 2015. The US forces based in Korea will consolidate into the
United States Korea Command, or US KORCOM. The US will maintain its
current level of 28,500 troops, while cutting nearly half of its bases
immediately South of the DMZ due to proposed budget restructuring. The
next South Korea administration would aggregate mass public support by
reasserting the ROK’s national sovereignty and further working to build a
conducive relationship with the North by proposing new economic ties
and eliminating US presence on the Peninsula.
The leadership of both Korean nations must avert further conflict at all costs. Experts at the Pentagon have estimated that the first ninety days of such a conflict may produce 300,000 to 500,000 US-ROK military casualties, in
addition to a civilian causality rate in the millions. The negative
ramifications for such a conflict would destabilize the global economy
and potentially lead the United States and China into direct military
conflict. China has already secured rights to many of North Korea’s natural resources such as iron ore and coal; the
DPRK has begun cheaply selling off the development rights of mineral
resources to China in exchange for foreign currency. The North Korean
government has indicated that the value of the minerals buried in its
soil was roughly $6.1 trillion as of 2008. As the prospects for a new
Korean war never fade, China is now the beneficiary of wealth that
should rightfully be used to fund reunification efforts on the
peninsula.
The
propagation of a future Korean conflict has the potential to serve as a
mechanism to further restructure the world economic power structure, to
the dictates of the grand chessboard. Geopolitical events of the
20th century follow a directed history of managed conflict, where
powerful Western banking families and their surrogate agencies employed a
strategy of Hegelian Dialectic to bring Democracy, Capitalism and
Communism to the world stage.The work of British researcher and author
Atony Sutton detailed how the global banking elite financed and nurtured the Soviet Union from its inception, providing economic and military aid with US taxpayer dollars. In the concluding chapter of his book, “The Best Enemy Money Can Buy,” Sutton
exposes how the Soviet-backed North Korean Army used machinery either
built in plants with U.S. Lend-Lease equipment or from Russia’s Gorki
automobile plant, built by Henry Ford.
China and the Soviet Union contributed heavily to North Korea’s first missile program in the early 1960s,
based on technology developed by the United States. In 1994, the Swiss
multinational giant Asea Brown Boveri (ABB) was awarded a $200 million
contract with the North Korean government to install two light water
nuclear power stations on the nation’s east coast following a deal with
the US to freeze Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program. Donald
Rumsfeld, one of the Bush administration's most vocal opponents to North
Korea, presided over the contract with Pyongyang when
he was an executive director of ABB. The U.S. State Department claimed
that the light water reactors could not be used to produce weapons-grade
plutonium.
Henry Sokolski, head of the Non-proliferation Policy Education Centre in Washington disputed the claims of the US Government,
offering, “These reactors are like all reactors, they have the
potential to make weapons. So you might end up supplying the worst
nuclear violator with the means to acquire the very weapons we’re trying
to prevent it acquiring.” In 2002, theBush Administration released $95 million US taxpayer dollars to begin construction of Pyongyang’s light water reactors,
as part of the Agreed Framework. Just as Iraq became a threat to US
security after Donald Rumsfeld armed Saddam Hussein with chemical and
biological weapons, agents of globalism have engineered the North Korean
threat.
The
purpose of Globalism is to form a centrally managed sociopolitical
system based on the Chinese model of authoritarian-capitalism. In order
for this to be implemented, the livings standards of so-called developed
countries must be eroded while the standards of developed countries
must be raised. Under the practice of fractional reserve banking,
Central Banks have manipulated an economic climate favorable to BRICs
nations, while simultaneously bankrupting the United States and Europe
with unregulated money printing and destabilizing Free Trade
Agreements. Much to the enthusiasm of Goldman Sachs,
trade between developing countries will soon to overtake trade between
developed nations. In the expanding economies of developing countries, the number of households earning over US$50,000 is set to double by 2020. The utter decay of the United States manufacturing sector is not due to corporate maleficence, it is to reposition China in the world power structure.
In
exchange for economic incentives and national security, nearly every
South Korean administration has played junior to American interests,
most prominently with President Lee Myung Bak. If another major conflict
emerges on the Korean peninsula, joint US-ROK forces backed by an
exhausted Pentagon would struggle against the military capabilities of
China – Russia may be drawn into the conflict as well to protect their
economic interests in North Korea. In the case of a joint Chinese-North
Korean victory, China would formally emerge as the world’s military
super power. Irrespective of geopolitical speculation, the Korean
Peninsula once hosted warring superpowers – the continual orchestration
of conflict for over six decades shows potential for another such
conflict and its capacity to shift the world power structure to the
managed dictates of globalism.
Article originally posted here: Exchanging Fire on the Korean Peninsula
Nile Bowie is a freelance writer and photojournalist based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; he regularly contributes to Tony Cartalucci's Land Destroyer Report and Professor Michel Chossudovsky's Global Research Twitter: @NileBowie