See the BBC Video:

"Kill EM All" 

American Military Conduct In The Korean War

Friday, April 19th, 7:00 PM 

Dinner Ready at 6:45 PM

At The Harriet Tubman Center For Social Justice 

5278 W. Pico Blvd, Los Angeles

Contact: (323) 306-6240 - [email protected] 

 

This video documents one of countless brutal massacres which U.S. troops
committed in the Korean war. In September 1999 an investigative team from
the Associated Press broke a story that shocked the world. Fifty years
before, they showed, refugees caught up in the Korean War were shot and
strafed by US forces. Between 1950 and 1953, millions of Koreans lost their
lives.

Today the DPRK (North Korea) is responding to provocative U.S. and South
Korean military exercises. These "exercises" have the added element this
year of containing U.S. nuclear attack submarines, U.S. nuclear-armed B-2
Stealth bombers and the U.S. nuclear-capable B-52s.

In spite of protests in South Korea and world-wide against such dangerous
exercises, they are scheduled to continue until the end of this month.

Scott Scheffer, who visited North Korea, will give an update on this
situation & information about U.S. protests against this dangerous
escalation on the Korean Peninsula.

 
Accessible to All 

 image <http://www.organizerweb.org/lists/uploadimages/image/wheelchair.jpg>


Following Are Excerpts from a Workers World Forum on Korea Held in New York
City:


WW Forum Says 'U.S. Hands Off Korea!'


A forum sponsored by Workers World Party in New York on March 29 took up the
serious danger of another war on the Korean peninsula. Guest speaker Juyeon
"JC" Rhee, of the Korean-American group Nodutdol, and Deirdre Griswold,
Secretariat member of Workers World Party and editor of Workers World
newspaper, have both been to north and south Korea. Below are excerpts from
their talks.

Juyeon Rhee: War exercises, sanctions raise war threat:

The situation is very, very urgent. We are very worried that this time a war
may happen. A lot of media are portraying the increased tension as if north
Korea is making belligerent, unprovoked statements. But actually they are in
response to the threat that they are receiving. As of this moment, the Key
Resolve [U.S.-south Korea military exercises] just ended, and the Foal Eagle
joint training begins, which involves 25,000 U.S. soldiers plus 53,000 south
Korean soldiers, right around the [demilitarized zone]. So the entire
country goes on an alert for two months.

On the KCNA website [the news agency of the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea], the banner used to read, "Word for word, action for action." That
they would not back off from the threat that they were feeling or
perceiving. Now the banner reads, "We are ready for a great war of national
reunification." Those kinds of statements have been made before - every time
they did a satellite launch, every time they did a nuclear test. However,
this time we think the situation has changed a lot. The military tension is
higher than in the past.

On March 28, the New York Times reported that two U.S. nuclear-armed Stealth
bombers went over south Korea and did simulated bombing exercises [against
the north]. This is the first time. They never did this in south Korea
before.

Also, the toughest U.N. sanctions have been imposed. They include especially
a financial freeze. No money can be sent into north Korea, and they cannot
send any money out - to their diplomats or students, for instance. Everyone
is in a frozen state at this point. That creates a serious health crisis,
because no medicines are going in. But all [the media] talk about is a
freeze on "luxury goods."

In the media the north Korean leaders are always portrayed as the menace,
the evil, and the people as very helpless - suffering, starving. You see
these images of goose-stepping soldiers only, and not of a people who are
determined - as workers, as mothers, as soldiers - to build this strong
nation. This portrayal of an evil, powerful leadership and a helpless
people, with no self-will, invites what? It invites third-party
intervention. The powerful U.S. then comes in as a rescuer. This kind of
juxtaposition justifies and invites an intervention.

This is really racism, no? The north Korean people for the last 60 years of
sanctions have been standing firm. There is a very strong will on the North
Korean people's side, not only the party, not only the leaders.

Deirdre Griswold: What makes the DPRK Strong:

Korea has never invaded the U.S. But the U.S. sent 5.7 million troops to
Korea during the war, and for three years the U.S. Air Force destroyed
everything it could in the north, dropping more bombs than were dropped in
Europe in all of World War II.

Ever since, the U.S. has occupied the south and kept the north in the
crosshairs of its planes and ships stationed in the Pacific, many of which
are armed with nuclear weapons.

So it is ludicrous to say, as all the corporate media here do, that the DPRK
is irrational when it strengthens its defenses and warns against a U.S.
attack. No country in the world is more justified in having a nuclear
deterrent and a strong defense than the DPRK.

Just think of how many countries have been laid waste by U.S. imperialist
intervention in the last 10 years alone. After seeing what has happened to
Iraq, Syria, Libya, Yugoslavia, Somalia - haven't the Koreans drawn the
lesson from this that you don't give up your weapons?

Ever since the Korean war ended in 1953, the U.S. has tried to strangle the
DPRK economically. Nevertheless, it was able to rebuild very quickly - the
standard of living in the north surpassed that in the south by the 1970s. It
has only been since the destruction of the USSR and the rightward turn in
People's China that U.S. efforts to cripple the economy through sanctions
and military pressures have cut deep.

Washington's strategy is clear: Make life so difficult for the north Korean
people that their will to resist will weaken. But that has not happened. On
the contrary, they have supported strengthening their armed defense at the
same time that they make even greater efforts to modernize their economy.

How are they able to do all this?

It's because of the respect and confidence that the Workers' Party of Korea
has won over decades of struggle.

It is truly a workers' party, based in the masses of people. I saw this on a
trip to the DPRK in 1988, on the 40th anniversary of the founding of the
DPRK. The great leader of the Korean Revolution, Kim Il Sung, spoke at a
national meeting of the party cadre. Thousands of workers and war veterans,
women and men of all ages, packed a large convention hall. They had the
strong hands and weathered faces of people who know what work is. One
million people marched the next day.

No suburbs or dachas ring Pyongyang. It's the only city I know of that has
no slums and no private mansions. The planned streets, beautiful public
buildings and modern apartments are surrounded by fields of collective
farms.

The wealth of the DPRK is in the public sector - libraries, schools,
museums, hospitals. A recent article in the New York Times described how -
miraculously! - a dairy farm in Indiana is able to supply all its energy
needs from methane gas derived from animal droppings. I saw that more than
20 years ago on a collective farm in the DPRK, where trucks, tractors and
cooking stoves were run on methane "cooked" from manure.

The DPRK has one of the best educational systems in the world. Every farm
has a library and classrooms for continued adult education in science,
agronomy, etc.

The Cubans have a saying: "Se puede mucho juntos." We can do a lot -
together. That's the spirit in the DPRK, too, where the solidarity of the
people through their party makes it possible to resist the world's most
aggressive imperialist power.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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