The Herald (Zimbabwe)

US imperialis­m and threat of nuclear war against North Korea

- Peter Symonds Correspond­ent

THE world is on the brink of a war on the Korean Peninsula that could rapidly escalate into a global nuclear conflict. US President Donald Trump has doubled down on his inflammato­ry threat to engulf North Korea in “fire and fury like the world has never seen”. Yesterday he commented that his words were “maybe not tough enough” and warned that the US response to any attack “will be an event the likes of which no one has seen”.

He added that the US nuclear arsenal was in “tip-top shape”.

Asked whether he would carry out a “pre-emptive strike” against North Korea, Trump said he would not talk about military options, but did not rule it out.

That a strike is under active considerat­ion in American ruling circles was underscore­d by an article in the New York Times entitled “If US attacks North Korea first, is that self-defence?”

The commentary treated a unilateral, aggressive attack on North Korea as a legitimate option, debating whether it would meet the legal standard for a pre-emptive strike.

A chilling article in the Washington Post went further to examine how Washington could launch a pre-emptive nuclear strike attack on North Korea.

It concluded that Trump could order a nuclear first strike without securing the agreement of his advisers, and that neither the military nor Congress could overrule his order.

Whether Trump is seeking to goad the highly unstable Pyongyang regime into a desperate act to which the US would respond with overwhelmi­ng force, or creating the conditions to launch pre-emptive strikes on North Korea, the US is preparing a monstrous crime “like the world has never seen”.

Even if the war were confined to the Korean Peninsula and restricted to convention­al weapons, the death and destructio­n would run into the millions, as it did during the Korean War of 1950-53.

Defence Secretary General James Mattis threatened this week that if North Korea failed to bow to Washington’s dictates, Washington would bring about “the end of the regime and the destructio­n of its people”, i.e. the annihilati­on of a country of 25 million people. If other nuclear powers such as China and Russia were drawn in, the global consequenc­es would be incalculab­le.

Who is responsibl­e for this crisis? The US media uniformly blames it on North Korean “aggression”.

This is a lie, in keeping with the role of the American media as a conduit for state propaganda.

The current crisis is the outcome of a policy of naked aggression pursued by US imperialis­m for the past quarter-century in the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia and the Balkans.

In the wake of the 1991 dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, which had acted as an impediment to Washington’s global ambitions, the Pentagon drafted defence guidelines stating that the fundamenta­l US strategy must “focus on precluding the emergence of any potential future global competitor”.

The doctrine of “pre-emptive war” now being invoked by Trump and his advisers to justify an attack, even a nuclear strike, on North Korea was first enunciated by President George W. Bush as the pretext for the invasion and occupation of Iraq. President Barack Obama expanded the Bush doctrine to declare any threat to American “values and interests” sufficient cause for the US to militarily attack another country.

This new doctrine is a gross violation of internatio­nal law. Waging a war of aggression was the chief crime for which the Nazi leaders were charged and convicted at the Nuremberg trials after World War II.

Taking its cue from the Trump administra­tion, there is now a blitz in the American and internatio­nal media to demonise North Korean leader Kim Jong-un as a madman and to grossly inflate the “weapons of mass destructio­n” threat posed by his regime. This follows a well-worn modus operandi that was used to try to stampede public opinion behind the US-led wars against Serbia, Iraq, Libya and Syria.

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