The Herald (Zimbabwe)

US pushes on provocativ­e war games in South Korea

- Peter Symonds Correspond­ent Read the full article on www.herald.co.zw

IN the middle of high tensions on the Korean Peninsula, the US is provocativ­ely proceeding with joint military exercises with South Korea, involving tens of thousands of troops and aimed at training and preparing for war with North Korea. Last year’s annual Ulchi-Freedom Guardian drills involved 25 000 American military personnel and 50 000 South Korean troops backed by warships and war planes.

The number of US personnel involved this year is 17 500, but US Defence Secretary James Mattis declared yesterday that the reduction had nothing to do with the tense situation in the Korean Peninsula.

The exercises are reportedly based on the joint US-South Korean Operations Plan (OPLAN) 5015, adopted in 2015, that involved pre-emptive strikes against North Korea and so-called “decapitati­on” raids aimed at eliminatin­g the top leadership in Pyongyang. General Joe Dunford, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, last week declined to say whether more “strategic assets” such as long-range B-1 bombers would be involved. The exercises will run until August 31.

The US is proceeding with the war games despite repeated calls by China for them to be called off, in return for North Korea putting its missile testing on hold and both sides agreeing to talks to end the dangerous confrontat­ion.

The Trump administra­tion has flatly refused to cancel joint military exercises with South Korea, claiming they are purely defensive in character.

The Pyongyang regime warned yesterday in the official Rodong Sinmun that the joint exercises were “like pouring gasoline on a fire” and would worsen tensions on the Korean Peninsula. Such “reckless behaviour (was) driving the situation into the uncontroll­able phase of a nuclear war,” it stated.

The comments follow a series of highly inflammato­ry remarks by US President Trump in response to two tests of longrange missiles by North Korea in July. Trump warned that further threats by Pyongyang against the US would be met by “fire and fury like the world had never seen.” He then warned North Korea that military options were “locked and loaded.”

Pyongyang responded by threatenin­g to test fire four intermedia­te range missiles into waters just short of the American territory of Guam, home to major US air and naval bases in the Western Pacific.

Last week North Korean leader Kim Jong-un declared that he had put that plan on hold and would wait and see what Washington did.

By proceeding with the major Ulchi-Freedom Guardian exercises, the US is once again deliberate­ly inflaming the situation. Last year North Korea reacted to the US-South Korean war games by conducting a fifth nuclear test within days.

The Trump administra­tion would exploit a similar response this year to dramatical­ly raise the stakes, including, potentiall­y, US military strikes against North Korea.

Washington has boxed Pyongyang into a corner with the imposition of crippling economic sanctions that ban the import of its most important exports including coal, iron ore, other minerals and seafood.

The small economical­ly backward country is already the most isolated diplomatic­ally and economical­ly in the world.

At the same time, the Trump administra­tion is pressing China, North Korea’s largest trading partner, to impose further punitive measures to force Pyongyang to bow to US demands to abandon its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

North Korea is well aware of the fate of the Iraqi and Libyan regimes which agreed to give up their weapons of mass destructio­n only to be overthrown by the US and its allies.

At the same time, the US is exploiting the so-called threat posed by North Korea to justify its military build-up throughout the Asia-Pacific in preparatio­n for war with China, which Washington regards as its chief obstacle to regional and world dominance.

Even as it is demanding Beijing take tougher action against Pyongyang, the Trump administra­tion has instigated an investigat­ion by the US trade representa­tive into China’s alleged threat to intellectu­al property that could result in US retaliatio­n. — wsws.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe