DANGEROUS CROSSROADS:
US-JAPAN CONFRONT NORTH KOREA:
Tension ahead of Pyongyang Missile Test
By Nile Bowie
Global Research, April 7, 2012
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=30185
As
China declares fresh warnings of retaliation against any strike on Iran
[1], the regime in Pyongyang shows no signs of aborting its upcoming
controversial satellite launch, scheduled to take place on April
12th through to April 16th. The Kwangmyongsong-3 satellite will be
launched southward from the Sohae satellite launch station in Cholsan
County, North Phyongan Province, using a long-range Unha-3 rocket; North
Korean officials assured the international community that it would
"strictly abide by relevant international regulations and usage
concerning the launch of scientific and technological satellites for
peaceful purposes." [2] As Barack Obama and South Korean President Lee
Myung-bak insinuate that Pyongyang’s upcoming satellite launch is a
pretext to expand a program of nuclear terrorism [3], North Korea has invited
the space agencies of eight countries, including Japan, the United
States, China and Russia, and the European Space Agency to observe the
launch [4].
While
North Korea attempts to assure the transparency of its space program to
the international community, the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space
Administration and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency have both declined
the invitation from Pyongyang [5]. Additionally, Japan
has announced the extension of unilateral sanctions on North Korea for
another year [6], including a trade freeze and visa ban, while the US
has announced a suspension of 240,000 tones of food aid to North Korea,
reportedly allocated for children and pregnant women [7]. While the
feasibility of the proposed $850 million satellite launch is
questionable given North Korea’s economic instability in recent times
[8], the Washington consensus has used UN Resolution 1874 to impede what
may rightfully be a peaceful technological investment to monitor the
country's crops and natural resources, in a move to prevent further food
insecurity.
UN Resolution 1874 was passed unanimously following the underground detonation of a nuclear device conducted on May 25th,
2009 in North Korea, imposing further economic sanctions on the country
and authorizing UN member states to inspect North Korean cargo and
destroy any materials suspected to be involved with the Pyongyang’s
nuclear weapons program [9]. While the 2009 test produced seismic
activity measured at magnitude 4.7 [10], the Comprehensive
Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization’s (CTBTO) announcement that no radionuclides had
been detected following Pyongyang’s test makes it difficult to prove
that nuclear technology was in fact used at all [11]. Following a 2004
visit to North Korea’s Yongbyon Nuclear facility, US nuclear scientist
Siegfried Hecker testified before US Congress that he saw no evidence of
a nuclear bomb [12]; after visiting the facility again in November
2010, Hecker acknowledged the system’s increased capability, however
noting that the experimental light-water reactor he was shown was still
in the early stages of construction [13].
The
accusations of North Korea’s ill-intentioned nuclear program appear
highly suspect when tracing back the routes of technology it is accused
of possessing. 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 [14]. 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 [15].
Although the US 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.” [16] In 2002,
the Bush Administration released $95 million US taxpayer dollars to
begin construction of Pyongyang’s light water reactors, as part of the
Agreed Framework [17].
The upcoming satellite test follows the failed launch of the Kwangmyongsong-2,
which had fallen into the Pacific Ocean in April 2009 [18]. Mirroring
the present day scenario, the United States, South Korea and Japan then
accused the launch of being an opportunity to test technology that could
be used in the future to launch an intercontinental ballistic missile
[19]. Following a Presidential Statement issued by the United Nations
Security Council condemning the launch [20], North Korea withdrew from
the Six Party Talks [21], claiming that the UNSC infringed its right to
peaceful space exploration embodied in the Outer Space Treaty of 1967
[22]. The upcoming launch of the Kwangmyongsong-3 satellite coincides with the 100th anniversary
of North Korea’s founding deity, Kim il-Sung. Both Japan [23] and South
Korea [24] have vowed to intercept the Unha-3 rocket using AEGIS
warships if it flies over the country’s territories. Pyongyang insists
the launch does not violate any UN resolutions, following a Foreign
Ministry spokesman who assured the international community that “North
Korea will never give up the launch of a satellite for peaceful
purposes." [25]
The double standards imposed on North Korea remain ever apparent, as the international community remains silent as South Korea expands
its arsenal of advanced military technology in an effort to become the
world’s seventh largest arm exporter [26]. South Korea intends to import
60 fighter jets from Boeing with an enormous budget of $7.3 billion
[27] and has recently agreed to an American Bunker Buster explosives
arms agreement valued at $71 million [28], while North Korean ballistic
technology appears to be constructed from components of Soviet origin
suspected to be largely obsolete; analysts such as David Wright of the
Union of Concerned Scientists' point out that the engines on the North’s
Unha-2 launcher are based on Soviet technology developed in 1964 [29].
Upon closer examination, the threat on the Korean Peninsula is not as
one-sided as the Washington consensus claims.
Following Pyongyang’s announcement in February assuring its readiness for “total war” with
South Korea and the United States during joint war drills conducted
near North Korea’s border and territorial waters [30], the isolated
nation has yet again warned against the interception of its missile,
“Nobody should dare encroach upon the sky above Pyongyang, sacred
capital of the DPRK, and they are gravely mistaken if they think they
can survive after attacking Pyongyang. Whoever intrudes into the
territorial air and seas even an inch under any pretext and intercepts
the DPRK satellite or collects its debris will meet immediate, resolute
and merciless punishment by the DPRK” [31]. Furthermore, Pyongyang has
accused Obama of exploiting instability on the Korean Peninsula to
strengthen his re-election campaign, citing the Korean threat as a
pretext to allow the US Congress to mandate further executive expansion
in the Asia-Pacific region, despite the Pentagon’s serious budget
shortage [32].
By allowing international experts to observe the planned launch of the Kwangmyongsong-3
satellite, Pyongyang’s attempt to legitimize its peaceful intentions
should be acknowledged. Although the Obama administration would like to
appear as if they are in command of the situation on the Korean
Peninsula, their actions indicate the limited leverage they have to
affect the situation. The threat of North Korea has proven itself to be a
valuable pretext for the continued presence of US military personnel in
both South Korea and Japan. The US has worked to further marginalize
North Korea to contain China, as construction begins for a controversial
$970 million joint military base on South Korea’s Jeju Island [33],
which would host up to 20 American and South Korean warships, including
submarines, aircraft carriers and destroyers once completed in 2014.
Washington’s
decision to suspend food aid to North Korea ultimately works against
its objectives of weakening the regime, as many citizens would further
rely on Pyongyang’s food distribution system – irrespective to the moral
argument of barring nutritional necessities to a nation that has
previously experienced famine and cases of cannibalism [34]. An influx
of foreign currency has ensured Pyongyang’s stability under its new
leadership as China secures contracts to extract North Korea’s vast
natural resources such as iron ore and coal, roughly valued at $6.1
trillion as of 2008 [35]. The US will continue to exploit the new
regime’s eagerness to prove itself to the populace, as reports issued by
the Council on Foreign Relations indicate its long-term program. The
2009 document entitled “Preparing for Sudden Change in North Korea” [36]
advocates 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. As the potential for debilitating
conflict on the Korean Peninsula remains ever present, the international
community must approach Pyongyang with increased diplomacy and embrace
its attempts at transparency in whichever medium.
Notes
[1] China steps up pressure to prevent any attack on Iran, Reuters, April 6, 2012
[2] Department of Defense: Satellite Launch Would Be A Destabilizer (Launch), Satnews, March 19, 2012
[3] World leaders: Nuclear terrorism a ‘grave threat’, BBC, March 27, 2012
[4] N. Korea invites 8 nations, Europe to observe satellite launch, The Mainichi, April 5, 2012
[5] Ibid
[6] Japan won’t send observers to N. Korea rocket launch, Russia Today, April 3, 2012
[7] US confirms it has suspended North Korea food aid plans, BBC, March 28, 2012
[8] Satellite shows $850 mln NK rocket launch imminent? Russia Today, April 2, 2012
[9] Resolution 1874 (2009), United Nations, June 12, 2009
[10] Earthquake Details: Magnitude 4.7 - NORTH KOREA, United States Geological Survey, May 28, 2009
[11] Verification Experts Puzzled Over North Korea's Nuclear Test, Science, June 19, 2009
[12] Visit to the Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center in North Korea, Los Alamos National Laboratory, University of California, January 21, 2004
[13] North Korea's Yongbyon Nuclear Complex: A Report by Siegfried S. Hecker, Center for International Security and Cooperation, University of Stanford, November 20, 2010
[14] Rumsfeld was on ABB board during deal with North Korea, Swissinfo, February 24, 2003
[15] Rummy's
North Korea Connection What did Donald Rumsfeld know about ABB's deal
to build nuclear reactors there? And why won't he talk about it?, CNN Money, May 12, 2003
[16] US grants N Korea nuclear funds, BBC, April 23, 2012
[17] Ibid
[18] North Korea space launch 'fails', BBC, April 5, 2009
[19] Obama Condemns North Korea Launch, Calls for Nuclear Free World, Voice of American News, April 5, 2009
[20] Statement by the President of the Security Council, United Nations, April 13, 2009
[21] DPRK Foreign Ministry Vehemently Refutes UNSC's "Presidential Statement", Korean Central News Agency, April 14, 2009
[22] Treaty
on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and
Use of Outer Space, including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, October, 1967
[23] Japan issues destroy order as NK rocket launch looms, Russia Today, March 31, 2012
[24] S. Korea threatens to gun down North’s rocket, Russia Today, March 26, 2012
[25] N. Korea: We will never give up satellite launch, Russia Today, March 27, 2012
[26] Drifting apart? The U.S. - ROK alliance at risk, The Korean Journal of Defense Analysis, Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, March 2009
[27] Boeing backtracks on stealthy jet offer, February 14, 2012
[28] US Approves Sale of Earth Penetrator Bombs to South Korea, NTI, December 7, 2011
[29] A post-launch examination of the Unha-2, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, June 29, 2009
[30] N. Korea 'ready for war' as South Korea, US stage war games, Russia Today, February 27, 2012
[31] Interception of Satellite Would Be Regarded as Act of War: CPRK Spokesman, Korean Central News Agency, April 5, 2012
[32] Voice of Russia Snubs Reaction of U.S., Japan and S. Korea to DPRK's Projected Satellite Launch, Korean Central News Agency, April 6, 2012
[33] Island’s Naval Base Stirs Opposition in South Korea, The New York Times, August 18, 2011
[34] Alleged N. Korean police document reports case of cannibalism, The Korea Herald, June 20, 2011
[35] South losing race for the North’s resources, Korea JoongAng Daily, January 18, 2011
[36] Preparing for Sudden Change in North Korea, The Council on Foreign Relations, January 2009
