[2005/5/19] U.S. policy in Korea : the view of the South
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U.S. policy in Korea: the view of the South
Archive Recent Editions 2005 Editions May 21, 2005
Author: Dan Margolis
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 05/19/05 11:40
UNITED NATIONS : The Bush administration has provoked the nuclear crisis on the Korean peninsula and caused untold suffering for Koreans on both sides of the 38th parallel, representatives of Solidarity for Peace and Reunification in Korea (SPARK) said at a forum held here May 6.
During the Clinton administration, “Washington and Pyongyang were just about to normalize their relations,” Yoo Hong, head of SPARK’s disarmament division, said. “However, things have been getting worse since the 2001 change of leadership in the White House.”
Yoo said that under Clinton, the U.S. had entered into an “agreed framework” with North Korea, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK). Under this agreement the U.S. would provide oil and build light-water nuclear reactors, only capable of producing energy. In return, the DPRK would stop enriching uranium and accept international inspections.
However, claiming that the DPRK was building nuclear weapons, Bush violated the framework by ending the delivery of heavy oil and further delaying the construction of the reactors. In addition, the administration changed U.S. nuclear policy from deterrence to pre-emptive attacks.
In response, the DPRK restarted its nuclear energy program and, in protest against U.S. pressure, withdrew from the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which gives states the right to do so if they see a nuclear weapons state threatening them.
“Even in his second administration, President Bush is continuing his open hostility to Pyongyang, defining the DPRK as an ‘outpost of tyranny’ and calling North Korean leader Kim Jong Il a ‘tyrant,’” Yoo said, noting that “some administration officials openly hinted that a pre-emptive military attack on North Korea would follow the invasion of Iraq.”
SPARK officials said the U.S. has military operation plans, specifically OP 5026 and 5027, which are a blueprint for pre-emptive precision strikes at North Korean military sites and overthrow of the DPRK government, along with American occupation ? all of which would be staged from the south by the U.S. Forces in Korea (USFK).
“We take note of the North Korean statement that ‘its ultimate goal to denuclearize the Korean peninsula remains unchanged,’” said Yoo. He added that for this to be achieved, the U.S. must abandon any plan or threat of pre-emptive attack and sign a formal peace treaty with the DPRK.
“North Korea has stated publicly that it will give up its nuclear weapons if the U.S. abandons its hostile policy and signs an official peace treaty,” he said.
In addition to the threat of nuclear annihilation of the whole Korean population, the people of South Korea are being hurt in less apocalyptic ? but still devastating ? ways, according to Pyon Yeon-Shik, co-executive chair of SPARK and leader of a Christian human rights organization.
For example, the Pyongtaek USFK base in South Korea is being expanded in accordance with U.S. attempts to “modernize” the USFK and make it more ready for pre-emptive strikes.
Pyongtaek has the best farmland on the peninsula, and the U.S. military already controls 3,734 acres of it. Now, they are trying to take another 2,851.
The farmers who were pushed out of their fields and paddies reclaimed new land by draining large areas. Now the U.S. wants to take that.
“We’ll only have a tent to live in. It’s very cold in the winter. We’ll spend all winter without heat,” a Pyongtaek resident said in a video presentation about the situation.
“I would rather die than leave my land,” said another. The military bases over the years have brought numerous problems, including murders and rapes at the hands of U.S. soldiers.
The agreement between the U.S. and South Korean government to expand the U.S. military was met with protests by tens of thousands.
Though the new Uri Party government was elected on the basis of less dependence on the U.S., Park Seok-Boon, SPARK’s director of general affairs, said it has not been able to escape U.S. pressure. She painted a picture of struggle within the government and a rising desire for independence from U.S. domination.
“Seizing the farmers’ land,” said Pyon, “is like depriving them of life itself. We struggle against the expansion of USFK bases at Pyongtaek in order to prevent the implementation of U.S. military strategy, and to protect the people’s lives and achieve peace on the Korean peninsula.”
dmargolis@pww.org