The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Trump’s threats against North Korea signify danger

- Joseph Kishore Correspond­ent

DONALD TRUMP continued his campaign of incendiary statements over the weekend, threatenin­g to launch a war with North Korea that could unleash a nuclear catastroph­e. On Saturday afternoon, the US president tweeted that past administra­tions “have been talking to North Korea for 25 years.” This “hasn’t worked,” he wrote, adding: “Sorry, but only one thing will work!” Asked later to elaborate on what he meant, Trump replied, “You’ll figure that out pretty soon.”

These threats came three weeks after Trump’s tirade at the United Nations General Assembly September 19, when he declared that the US was “ready, willing, and able” to “totally destroy” North Korea, a country of 25 million people. Four days later, Trump threatened to assassinat­e the North Korean leader. If the North Korean foreign minister’s speech at the UN “echoes thoughts of Little Rocket Man (Kim Jong-Un),” Trump wrote, “they won’t be around much longer!”

On Thursday, Trump organised a White House dinner with US military leaders, which had all the hallmarks of a meeting of a war cabinet. During a photo op before the dinner, Trump, surrounded by generals in military uniform, likened the moment to “the calm before the storm.” Asked what storm he was talking about, Trump would only say, “You’ll find out soon.”

To the extent that Trump’s words are interprete­d as a genuine expression of the policy and plans of the United States government, the inescapabl­e conclusion is that the world stands on the brink of the most devastatin­g military conflict since the outbreak of World War II. Were language and reality in correct political alignment, the present situation would be described officially as an “Imminent danger of war.”

Republican Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, embroiled in a political conflict with Trump, warned that the president’s reckless threats were leading the United States “on the path to World War III.” But despite Corker’s statement on Sunday, there is, within the ruling elite and its media, a staggering disconnect between consciousn­ess and reality.

The public declaratio­ns emanating from the White House are being reported by the media as if they will have no consequenc­es. The thinking seems to be that Trump doesn’t mean what he says. The consequenc­es of a war would prove to be so catastroph­ic that Trump is simply bluffing.

But what if he isn’t? What if the North Korean government takes the threats of the American president, as it must, seriously? With Trump having publicly declared that he will destroy North Korea and that the doomsday hour is fast approachin­g, how will the Pyongyang government interpret American military actions near the borders of its country?

With only minutes to make a decision, will the regime view the approach of a US bomber toward North Korean airspace as the beginning of a full-scale attack? Will it conclude that it has no choice but to assume the worst and initiate a military strike against South Korea? Will it fire missiles, as it has threatened, in the direction of Japan, Guam, Australia, or even the US?

From a purely legal standpoint, North Korea can claim, in light of Trump’s threats, that such action on its part would be an act of self-defence, a legitimate response to an imminent military threat.

Aside from the calculatio­ns of Pyongyang, one must assume that the regimes in Beijing and Moscow are also looking at the unfolding developmen­ts with increasing alarm.

While the American media, as is its wont, responds complacent­ly and thoughtles­sly to Trump’s threats, the Chinese regime cannot avoid viewing them with deadly seriousnes­s. Trump is, after all, the commander in chief of the American military.

He has the power — which Congress has shown no interest in challengin­g — to order military actions.

A US attack on North Korea would pose an overwhelmi­ng threat to China. As in 1950, a war against North Korea would — even if it did not rapidly escalate into a nuclear exchange — lead inexorably to an American incursion across the 38th Parallel. The last time the US military crossed the border into North Korea, the Chinese responded with a massive military counteratt­ack. — WSWS.

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