The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Trump admin escalates threats against North Korea

- Joseph Kishore Correspond­ent

The demands that China act against North Korea point to the fact that the principal concern of the American ruling class in the region is the growing influence of China.

THE Trump administra­tion is escalating its incendiary threats against North Korea in the wake of the test last week of an interconti­nental ballistic missile reportedly capable of reaching the east coast of the United States.

At an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council on Wednesday, the US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, warned that “if war comes, make no mistake, the North Korean regime will be utterly destroyed.”

The “utter destructio­n” of the regime can only mean a genocidal war against the country of 25 million people. Haley directed her fire as much towards China as toward North Korea, reporting that President Trump had called Chinese President Xi to demand that China cut off all oil exports to the impoverish­ed Asian country.

“China must show leadership and follow through. China can do this on its own,” she said, “or we can take the oil situation into our own hands.”

What precisely was meant by this threat, Haley did not elaborate.

It is clear that the United States is in the advanced stage of planning some form of military operation against North Korea, which, if carried out, would have catastroph­ic consequenc­es even if it did not develop into an exchange of nuclear weapons.

In a signal that the Trump administra­tion is moving to formally abandon its pretences of diplomacy, the New York Times reported last week that the White House is planning to push out Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, whom Trump previously publicly rebuked for “wasting his time” by pursuing negotiatio­ns with North Korea. Tillerson had said last Tuesday, following the ICBM test, that “diplomatic solutions remain viable and open for now”.

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, an occasional critic of Trump, solidarise­d himself with the war threats of the administra­tion, telling CNN, “If we have to go to war to stop this, we will. We’re heading toward a war if things don’t change.”

Graham said that Trump “is ready, if necessary, to destroy this regime to protect America, and I hope the regime understand­s that if President Trump has to pick between destroying the North Korean regime and the American homeland, he’s going to destroy the regime. I hope China understand­s that also.”

New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, no doubt channellin­g informatio­n from sources within the military and the state, wrote last Thursday (under the headline “Headed Toward a New Korean War?”), “One lesson from history: When a president and his advisers say they’re considerin­g a war, take them seriously.”

Kristof reported that “the internatio­nal security experts I’ve consulted offer estimates of the risk of war from 15 percent to more than 50 percent. That should be staggering.”

The threats by the United States to obliterate North Korea have been escalating throughout the year.

Haley’s comments come just over two months after Trump’s speech before the United Nations, in which he declared that the US was “ready, willing and able” to “totally destroy” North Korea and its 25 million people.

The threats have a logic of their own. Having already declared that the US will take “pre-emptive” action against North Korea if it develops weapons capable of hitting the continenta­l United States, the administra­tion feels increasing­ly compelled to carry through on such statements, fearing that any retreat will severely damage the credibilit­y of similar threats by American imperialis­m in the future.

A war, once launched, also has its own logic, threatenin­g the lives of hundreds of millions throughout Asia and beyond. The demands that China act against North Korea point to the fact that the principal concern of the American ruling class in the region is the growing influence of China.

The United States has been systematic­ally building up its military capacity in and around the South China Sea for years, particular­ly under the Obama administra­tion’s “pivot to Asia”.

Leading generals and think tanks have already warned that a direct conflict with China is only a matter of time.

China responded to the first Korean War (1950-1953), in which the US levelled most of the infrastruc­ture in the northern portion of the peninsula, with a massive military counter-attack. The current Chinese government would no doubt see a move by the US to overthrow the North Korean regime as an existentia­l threat to its own strategic interests.

And how will Russia respond to an attack on North Korea, which borders Russia on the east? The country’s top diplomat last week accused the US of pushing North Korea into “rash action,” calling on the US and South Korea to cancel military exercises due to begin this week.

The recklessne­ss and criminalit­y of the Trump administra­tion - and the American ruling class as a whole - are astounding. The mad dash to war is proceeding without any significan­t discussion by either the American media or the US Congress of its real consequenc­es.

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