Current US-China
Relations
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part VII: Clinton Policy
on North Korea - A Belated Path to Peace
Part VI: Korea under Park Chung Hee
Part V: Kim Il Sung and China
Part IV:
More Geopolitical Dynamics
of the Korea Proliferation Crisis
Part III: Geopolitical Dynamics
of the Korea
Proliferation Crisis
Part II: US Unilateralism
Part I: A Lame Duck-Greenhorn Dance
Part VIII: GW Bush
Policy
on North Korea – a Path to War
VIII (a): A
New
Regime in Washington
This article appeared in AToL on
January 5, 2007
A few days before Bush took office on
January 20, 2001, Samuel R. “Sandy” Berger,
Clinton
administration’s out-going national security advisor, and his team
crossed the
Potomac River to the northern Virginia home of retired 4-star General
and
former Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell, the popular
military
leader who framed the Powell Doctrine of going to war only with
overwhelming
force in the successful 1990-91 first Iraq War under the first Bush
administration. Ten years after the first Iraq War, President-elect
George W.
Bush now named Powell secretary of state in his incoming
administration, a choice
widely viewed and praised as a signal that the new president would be
following
a moderate, multilateral foreign policy backed by a prudent military
strategy. The Clinton
team briefed Powell for two hours on the status of the North Korean
talks in
the midst of which Condoleezza Rice, the new national security adviser,
arrived
from meetings with the president-elect in Texas.
Several participants later reported that Powell at first listened to
the Clinton
approach of rapprochement to North Korea
with open enthusiasm and thought it a good bipartisan basis for further
progress, an attitude firmly disabused by Rice as soon as she joined
the
briefing, on the authority of the president-elect.
On March 7, barely a month into Bush’s new term, South Korean
president Kim Dae Jung made a working visit to Washington
in hope of keeping the Clinton
policy on North Korea
on track under the new Bush administration. On the eve of the Kim
visit, Powell
told reporters that the Bush administration would build on the Clinton
momentum on North Korea.
The White House instantly rebuked Powell, with Bush making it clear
that his
administration would do no such thing. Powell had to retreat and
publicly admit
that he had leaned “too forward in my skis.” This would be the first of
many other
instances when Powell would find himself out of step with the rest of
the Bush
team as the lone multilateral moderate in a solid neo-con gang of
unilateral hardliners.
The Nuclear Crisis in
North
Korea
The new crisis over the October 9, 2006 North Korean nuclear
test began unfolding six years back, as soon as Bush entered the White
House
and flared into public view a year later right after Bush’s first State
of the
Union speech on January 29, 2002, four months after the 9:11 terrorist
attacks
and three months after the commencement of the US-led invasion of
Afghanistan
to oust the Taliban as the opening salvo of the expectedly long war on
terrorism through selcetive regime changes around the world. In his
speech Bush
labeled North Korea,
Iran
and Iraq
an “axis of evil” and declared that “by seeking weapons of mass
destruction,
these regimes pose a grave and growing danger.” It was an unmistakable
invocation of the image of a righteous struggle against the evil Axis
Powers of
World War II, with an implication that the “War on Terrorism” would
involve
moves to change these evil regimes by force and to punish all those who
support
them. By declaring the doctrine of “those who are not with us and
against us”,
Bush served notice that the war on terrorism could well evolve into
World War
III and possibly lasting longer.
US State Department Annual
Report on Terrorism released on May 21, 2002 again listed North
Korea
along with six other nations as “terrorism sponsoring nations”,
claiming that “North Korea
did not take substantial steps to
cooperate in efforts to combat terrorism.” Three days later, on May 24,
2002 a Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) Foreign Ministry spokesman denounced
the US
State Department Annual Report on
Terrorism: “It is a trite method employed by the US for the
pursuance of
its ‘big stick policy’ to label those countries disobedient to it as
‘terrorists’ … The report is deliberately choreographed by the US
[itself]
censured and ridiculed by the public for being a kingpin of
international
terrorism.”
Again on May 27 the official North Korean
Central News
Agency dismissed the US
charge as “a foolish ruse to tarnish the international prestige of the
DPRK,
isolate and stifle it at any cost.” Pointing to the efforts Pyongyang
has made
to combat terrorism, the KCNA said: “Proceeding from the principled
stand on
combating terrorism after the September 11, 2001 incident alone, the
DPRK
signed and acceded to the ‘International Convention for the Suppression
of the
Financing of Terrorism’ and the ‘International Convention Against the
Taking of
Hostages’ and it is taking active part in the efforts of the
international
community to eradicate international terrorism as evidenced by its
close
cooperation with the United Nations Security Council regarding legal
and
administrative steps it deemed necessary for combating terrorism … …
Lurking
behind the US fallacy is a foolish attempt to justify Bush’s remarks
about the
‘axis of evil’ censured worldwide … … Rumsfeld, US Defense Secretary,
recently
told [a] sheer lie that ‘North Korea is offering weapons of mass
destruction to
terrorists’ … … It is nonsensical that the US is imprudently talking
about ‘cooperation
with the DPRK in anti-terrorism’ after ditching the DPRK-US Joint
Statement
(released on October 6, 2000 [jointly with the Clinton Administration]
in New
York) that clarifies the political willingness to remove the DPRK from
a US
list of ‘sponsors of terrorism’.”
On October 4, 2002,
Bush state department officials flew to Pyongyang,
and confronted DPRK foreign ministry officials with evidence that North
Korea had acquired centrifuges that
could be
used for processing highly-enriched uranium necessary for building
nuclear
weapons. North Korean officials surprised their US
counterparts by conceding, citing US
failure to honor its commitment made by Clinton
as justification. The unsettling revelation came just as the Bush
administration was gearing up for an invasion of Iraq.
This hypothetical North Korean threat was
technically not an
imminent danger. Processing uranium is a tedious task and experts were
in
general agreement that North Korea
was years away from producing bomb material from these centrifuges. Beside, there was no evidence that the
centrifuges were actually being used for that purpose and no tell-tale
emissions had been detected.
But the North Koreans had a shorter route
to nuclear weapon
material: a stockpile of radioactive fuel rods, taken a decade earlier
from its
nuclear power plant in Yongbyon, which the Clinton
administration had managed to keep under International Atomic Energy
Agency
(IAEA) control with the 1994 Agreed Framework. These rods could be
processed
into plutonium for use in nuclear weapons in a matter of months. Common
sense
would dictate that the Bush administration, notwithstanding moralistic
hubris,
needed to do everything possible to keep the fuel rods stay locked up;
but
common sense was not part of the neo-con mentality which insisted on
“moral
clarity” by refusing to “reward bad behavior” with bilateral
negotiation with
the evil regime of North Korea, notwithstanding that the “bad behavior”
had
been triggered by US default on its earlier agreement.
In response, North Korea
expelled IAEA inspectors on December
31, 2002, broke the locks on the fuel rods, trucked them to
a
nearby reprocessing facility and converted them into bomb-grade
plutonium while
the Bush team was preoccupied with preparing to invade Iraq
scheduled to begin on March
20, 2003.
Bush had made the case to Congress, the US
public and skeptical allies for war against Iraq
on the premise that Saddam Hussein might soon have nuclear weapons
which was
exposed as untrue while North Korea
was unnecessarily goaded by Bush “moral clarity” from a
non-proliferation mode
into actually developing nuclear bombs. The Bush “moral clarity”
approach to
“evil” North Korea
did produced a regime change: it reduced the nonproliferation regime to
the
equivalent of a futile campaign to promote virginity to a pregnant
woman.
US
“moral clarity” intransigence eventually led to the North
Korea nuclear test on October 9, 2006.
Thereafter, North
Korea
must then be dealt with as a de facto
nuclear weapon state, evil or not. There is no historical precedent of
any
nuclear weapon state ever giving up its nuclear status once it has
acquired it.
History has yet to find a way to put the nuclear genie back into the
bottle
once it has been released.
While China
maintains a steadfast policy of not interfering on the domestic affairs
of
other nations, it commands considerable diplomatic leverage in
influencing the
policies and behavior of North Korea,
its closest ally, to maintain a nuclear-free Korean peninsula, which is
desired
by both North and South Koreas
and all neighboring nations. But the limits of such leverage have been
greatly
curtailed by counterproductive and provocative US
unilateral policy on North Korea.
The Bush unilateral and provocative approach was typical of
naive neo-con geopolitical fantasy, moralistic self-righteousness,
dismissal of
legitimate mindsets of decision-makers of other cultures, disrespect
for
national sovereignty, blind hubris based on anti-equalitarian US
triumphalism,
contempt for multilateral diplomacy, and above all, a knee-jerk
partisan
penchant to reverse Clinton policies.
More than a year after the issuance of the DPRK-US Joint
Communiqué of 2000 by US
president Bill Clinton and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, no progress
on its
implementation was undertaken by the new Bush administration. Washington
and Pyongyang drifted
further apart
over the unresolved substantive and sequencing of the Clinton
deal and no follow-up talks were planned. Bush administration officials
refused
to engage in direct bilateral talks with their North Korean
counterparts. The impasse eventually led
to the North
Korean ballistic missile tests on July 4, 2006.
While Secretary Powell’s effectiveness in diplomacy suffered
from Bush’s unilateralism, South Korean president Kim Dae Jung was
publicly humiliated
by Bush’s insulting treatment of him during his March 7, 2001 state visit to Washington.
Kim was a new kind of South Korean leader, a democratic activist who
had spent
years in prison for his political beliefs, a defiant characteristic
that made
US conservatives uneasy, despite its claim on enhancing democracy
around the
world, since US
appreciation for political dissidents had been exclusively limited to
those
inside communist countries. Kim had run
on a democracy platform for president several times unsuccessfully
until he ran
and narrowly won on a promise to follow a “sunshine policy” of opening
up
relations with the North after the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis. Kim, a
politician who took democracy seriously, was definitely not the US
neo-cons’ favorite puppet to head a client state.
Again on February 20, 2002,
while on a return state visit to South
Korea, Bush repeated his moralistic
denunciation of North Korea
in a news conference in Seoul.
Selig Harrison, journalist and author of Korean
Endgame: A Strategy for Reunification
and U.S. Disengagement, commented
the same day on PBS News Hour: “What he [Bush] should be doing
is trying
to open up dialogue with North Korea.
And although he says he is, if you look at what he is saying and what
other
people in the administration are saying, they’re really not talking
about a
negotiation; they’re talking about a court proceeding, a trial in which
North
Korea is the defendant at the bar and, you know, the United States is
the
judge, the jury and the executioner all wrapped up into one and the
verdict is
already in: They're bad guys.”
In Iraq, this was exactly what happened to
Saddam Hussein, a
former head of a sovereign state who had been captured as a prisoner of
war by
US invasion forces, then tried for crimes against humanity not by an
international tribunal according to Geneva Convention rules, but by a
biased
tribunal, a special court
operating outside
the normal judiciary of the US-installed puppet regime that
enjoys no
unified national recognition. Saddam was handed over by US occupation
authorities from his cell in a US
military detention facility on the morning of his execution to a
sectarian
Iraqi authority and promptly hanged within hours despite wide
condemnation
worldwide, even by US allies, of the procedure as a travesty of
justice. The
first chief judge who had been dismissed for trying to conduct a fair
trial, declared
the execution by the Iraqi government illegal. The video of the savage
hanging,
widely posted on the internet, confirmed the execution as a vile act of
sectarian vengeance, carried out under official US sanction.
Caught up in the intense emotions of the September 11
terrorist attacks, the US Congress on October 2, 2002 passed the Joint Resolution to Authorize the Use of
United States Armed Forces Against Iraq to grant President Bush
authority
to “use any means necessary” against Iraq (which theoretically included
the
nuclear option), based on Bush Administration classified testimony to
Congress
and open statements to the public that Iraq possessed weapons of mass
destruction, which turned out to be incorrect if not outright
disinformation.
Only 23 Democrat senators, led by Senator Robert Byrd of West
Virginia and joined by Senator Ted Kennedy, out
of 44
in the 100-member Senate, voted against the resolution. Hillary
Clinton, junior
Democrat senator from New York,
was not among them.
Three years later, Senator Clinton, now a soon-to-declare
presidential candidate, wrote in a November 29, 2005 “Letter to Constituents on
Iraq Policy” posted on her
website: “In October 2002, I voted for the resolution to authorize the
Administration to use force in Iraq.
I voted for it on the basis of the evidence presented by the
Administration,
assurances they gave that they would first seek to resolve the issue of
weapons
of mass destruction peacefully through United Nations sponsored
inspections,
and the argument that the resolution was needed because Saddam Hussein
never
did anything to comply with his obligations that he was not forced to
do. Their
assurances turned out to be empty ones, as the Administration refused
repeated
requests from the U.N. inspectors to finish their work. And the
"evidence" of weapons of mass destruction and links to al Qaeda
turned out to be false … … The Bush Administration short-circuited the
U.N.
inspectors - the last line of defense against the possibility that our
intelligence was false. The Administration also abandoned securing a
larger
international coalition, alienating many of those who had joined us in Afghanistan
… … I take responsibility for my vote, and I, along with a majority of
Americans, expect the President and his Administration to take
responsibility
for the false assurances, faulty evidence and mismanagement of the
war.” Yet,
twenty-three of her colleagues in the Senate and millions around the
country
and still more around the world were not taken in by such “false
assurances.” She could have asked her
own husband, the former president who was in an authoritative position
to know
the facts.
Next: The North
Korean Perspective
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