-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Nov. 14, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

NORTH KOREA WANTS PROMISE OF NO ATTACK: 
U.S. REJECTS OFFER TO NEGOTIATE

By Deirdre Griswold

The Bush administration is already positioning itself to 
take its endless war to Asia, once it has established a 
colonial-style administration over Iraq and the Gulf area.

Its immediate target is the Democratic People's Republic of 
Korea, which U.S. imperialist geo-strategists have coveted 
as a launching pad against China ever since revolutionary 
and anti-colonial victories in both these countries after 
World War II dashed U.S. big business's dreams of imperial 
conquest there.

Washington then committed hundreds of thousands of troops to 
a devastating war on the Korean peninsula from 1950 to 1953. 
In the name of defending "democracy," the U.S. rushed its 
armies to South Korea to prop up the brutal and corrupt 
dictatorship of Syngman Rhee and prevent the reunification 
of a country that had been divided after the war.

For almost 50 years, the U.S. government has refused to sign 
a peace treaty with North Korea to end that war, and 
continues to keep 37,000 troops in South Korea despite a 
massive popular movement calling on them to leave.

Despite this intense military pressure, the DPRK was able to 
implement many socialist measures in the north, including 
free education and health care and the building of a modern 
industrial infrastructure. With the fall of the Soviet 
Union, however, and a period of devastating droughts and 
floods, its economy and agriculture were hit hard. This far 
northern land has had a particular problem getting enough 
energy to satisfy both industrial and civil needs.

In 1994, it shelved plans to build a graphite nuclear 
reactor after the U.S. objected that it could produce 
plutonium as a byproduct. Plutonium can be used in nuclear 
weapons production. The Clinton administration agreed it 
would help North Korea build a light-water reactor instead. 
Now, eight years later, the DPRK is still struggling with 
its energy needs and the light-water reactor has not been 
built. Nor has Washington come through with alternate energy 
sources, like fuel oil, in a timely fashion.

The Oct. 21, 1994, Framework Agreement signed by both 
countries was also meant to initiate a process of 
normalization of relations on the Korean peninsula. The DPRK 
and South Korea took many steps in that direction, including 
a summit meeting in Pyongyang, North Korea, in June of 2000 
that resulted in a historic agreement signed by Kim Jong Il 
for the DPRK and Kim Dae Jung for South Korea.

President George W. Bush torpedoed all this when, in his 
State of the Union speech this January, he included the DPRK 
in a mythical "Axis of Evil." The Koreans made it very clear 
to the U.S. that they regarded such language as tantamount 
to a declaration of war. (See Workers World interview of 
March 28, 2002, "Korean ambassador on Bush's speech: 'We 
consider it to be a declaration of war.' ")

Around the same time, the Department of Defense released its 
Nuclear Policy Review, which projected plans to use nuclear 
weapons against seven countries, including the DPRK.

Finally, in October, the government of North Korea announced 
that the Framework Agreement was dead and that it would take 
whatever measures were necessary to resume its nuclear 
program.

Of course, this brought howls of indignation from 
Washington, even though the U.S. had killed the agreement, 
thereby giving the Koreans no other choice.

The DPRK then, through its United Nations mission in New 
York on Nov. 2, offered to open negotiations with the U.S. 
over its nuclear program. But within a day, the Bush 
administration had rejected the offer.

Even members of the U.S. establishment say that what the 
DPRK wants is assurances that it won't be attacked by the 
Pentagon. According to the Seoul-based newspaper Korea 
Herald of Nov. 6: "Former U.S. Ambassador to South Korea 
Donald Gregg said yesterday that North Korea demonstrated 
flexibility in its standoff with the United States over the 
contentious nuclear weapons issue. Gregg, who visited 
Pyongyang, said in a news conference in Seoul that North 
Korean officials emphasized 'simultaneous steps' by 
Pyongyang and Washington to resolve the security concern.

"'I think that they would like the United States to give 
them some assurances that we don't want to blow them out of 
the water,' Gregg said. 'I strongly felt in the last few 
days that the North truly fears a possible attack from the 
United States,' he added. Don Oberdorfer, a fellow at the 
Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies who 
accompanied the former U.S. diplomat, also said the North is 
desperately awaiting a security guarantee from Washington. 
'By suggesting a nonaggression pact, the North wants a 
legally binding commitment from the United States that there 
will be no aggression to the North from Washington,' he 
said."

The prospect that the Bush administration could actually be 
contemplating a new war against Korea has people in the 
north and the south enraged. Solidarity with Korea against 
U.S. aggression will have to be an important component of 
the anti-movement now building around the world.

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to 
copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but 
changing it is not allowed. For more information contact 
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Subscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] Support the voice of 
resistance http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php)




------------------
This message is sent to you by Workers World News Service.
To subscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Send administrative queries to  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Reply via email to