Bill Clinton's visit to North Korea: a tactical shift in US foreign policy
John Chan | Aug 6 2009

In a move that surprised the world, former US President Bill Clinton arrived
in North Korea Tuesday to broker the release of two American journalists
detained since March. Described by the Obama administration as a private
mission, the visit actually signalled Washington's desire to put aside North
Korea's nuclear crisis in order to prepare for a confrontation with Iran.

In response to the US-Japan backed United Nations condemnation of its April
5 test launch of a long-range missile, North Korea declared its intention to
pull out of the six-party talks involving the US, China, Japan, Russia and
the two Koreas. Pyongyang carried out a second nuclear test on May 25,
resulting in a tougher UN resolution. As recently as the ASEAN summit in
Thailand last month, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the wife of Bill
Clinton, harshly attacked North Korea for allegedly supplying nuclear and
missile materials to the Burmese junta.

Within hours of Clinton's meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-il,
Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported that Kim had
issued an order "granting a special pardon" to the two US journalists, Euna
Lee and Laura Ling. They have been sentenced to 12 years in a labour camp
after being captured in March on the Chinese-North Korean border, where they
had been trying to report on North Korean refugees. The two journalists were
released and departed from Pyongyang on Clinton's plane Wednesday.

The KCNA reported that Clinton carried a message from President Obama, but
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs denied the claim. He insisted it was "a
private mission" for humanitarian purposes only. In order to separate
Clinton's trip from the Obama administration's official policy on North
Korea, no current government officials travelled with the ex-president. And
Clinton was travelling in a privately chartered jet, not a government plane.

In reality, Clinton's visit was the result of secretive negotiations between
Washington and Pyongyang. With no advance notice to the world, the Obama
administration agreed to send Clinton to North Korea a month ago, at the
special request of Pyongyang, according to the Wall Street Journal. "Current
and former US officials said Tuesday they believed Kim Jong Il was seeking
to turn back the clock and resurrect a relationship with Mr. Clinton that
came close to formally ending the Korean War in late 2000," the Journal
reported.

Among those accompanying Clinton was his former White House chief of staff
John Podesta, who also served as Obama's transition chief. Among the top
North Korean officials receiving Clinton at the airport was Kim Kye-kwan,
the country's chief nuclear negotiator in the six-party talks.

The political objective of Clinton's trip was to prepare the conditions for
North Korea to return to some kind of negotiation with the US, thereby
putting aside Pyongyang's "nuclear crisis", at least for now.

The Obama administration's priority in terms of US foreign policy is to
exploit the divisions within the Iranian regime. The past week has seen US
threats to cut exports of refined petroleum to Iran, in order to pressure
Tehran to stop its nuclear program and to increase political instability
within the country in the hope of bringing to power a section of the Iranian
elite prepared to offer closer cooperation with the US occupations of
Afghanistan and Iraq.

In sending Clinton to Pyongyang for the release of two US journalists,
Washington was also sending a message to Tehran-which also detained three
Americans on the Iran-Iraq borders last week-that the US is open to talks.
Another possible consideration is that of weakening Chinese and Russian
opposition to tough sanctions against Iran's nuclear program on the UN
Security Council. By signalling a more moderate approach, Washington may
hope to win a more favourable response from Beijing and Moscow at the UN.

While the Obama administration has continued the Bush presidency's policy of
engaging North Korea only through the six-party talks, Washington has
clearly been offering limited concessions to Pyongyang. Kurt Campbell, the
US assistant secretary of state for East Asia and Pacific Affairs, was in
Seoul in July to discuss the so-called "two-track" approach to Pyongyang.
While he insisted on "putting in place a series of actions ... that are
designed to put more pressure on North Korea," he said the US was also
offering a "comprehensive package" if North Korea would give up its nuclear
program.

On July 24, North Korea's ambassador to the UN, Sin Sun-ho, held a rare
press conference to announce that Pyongyang was interested in direct talks
with the Obama administration on "common concerns". According to South 
Korea's
JoongAng Daily, a South Korean official last week declared that the US and
North Korea had struck a deal to grant amnesty to release the two American
reporters. "It was just a matter of who will visit North Korea and when,"
the source reportedly said.

The Washington Post Tuesday cited a source involved in planning Clinton's
trip to North Korea who said that the Obama administration had initially
chosen former Vice President Al Gore, who co-founded the San Francisco-based
Current TV channel that employed the two American journalists.

Pyongyang, however, wanted a more prestigious figure, in order to use his
presence to express its desire for normalising relations with the US and to
shore up the fragile regime of Kim Jong-il before the North Korean masses.
With Kim having reportedly suffered a stroke last year, the question of
succession looms large in Pyongyang. Amid a deepening economic crisis, this
can lead to political instability.

Clinton is the highest level US political figure to visit North Korea since
former US President Jimmy Carter went there in 1994 after the Clinton
administration pushed the Korean Peninsula to the brink of full-scale war
over Pyongyang's nuclear program. Clinton backed off, only after he was
informed by US intelligence of the huge physical destruction and casualities
that would result from a new Korean war.

Carter's "unofficial" trip laid the basis for the Agreed Framework between
Pyongyang and the Clinton administration. Pyongyang agreed to dismantle its
plutonium-based reactor at Yongbyon in exchange for two light-water
reactors, security guarantees and normalisation of diplomatic relations with
Washington.

US-North Korean relations reached a high point in the following years,
culminating in former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright's historic visit
to Pyongyang in 2000. Then North Korea's second highest military commander,
Jo Myong-rok, visited Washington and signed a memorandum of understanding
calling for an official end of hostilities on the Korean Peninsula, where
the US still maintains a large number of troops in South Korea. Former South
Korean President Kim Dae-jung also unveiled his famous "Sunshine policy" to
economically engage North Korea, winning him a Nobel Peace Prize.

In fact, the tactical shift on North Korea under Clinton was bound up with
the growing emphasis within American ruling circles on the need to establish
strategic dominance of Central Asia, the Caspian Basin and other areas in
the heartland of the Eurasian continent. Having taken steps toward a
so-called peace on the Korean Peninsula, Clinton waged a neo-colonial war
against Serbia in 1999.

However, the Agreed Framework never delivered the two promised light-water
reactors to North Korea, a concession that was opposed by right-wing
Republicans. The deal was virtually frozen as soon as Bush came into office
in 2001. In 2002, Bush scrapped the deal, under the pretext that North Korea
was secretly developing a separate uranium enrichment program. That move
came after Bush's naming of North Korea as part of the "axis of
 evil"-together with Iran and Iraq-and led to escalating tensions on the
Korean Peninsula. North Korea pulled out of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) in 2003 and restarted the process of extracting plutonium from
spent fuel rods.

At the same time, the Bush administration turned to the China-hosted
six-party talks to keep the pressure on North Korea, as Washington prepared
the US invasion of Iraq in 2003. The pretext to invade Iraq was Saddam
Hussein's supposed "weapons of mass destruction", which never existed, even
as North Korea openly declared it was intending to produce nuclear weapons.
This anomaly is explained by the fact that North Korea is strategically far
less important in terms of US imperialism's struggle for global dominance
than the oil-rich Middle East. Moreover, Washington has become economically
dependent on North Korea's key ally, China.

The six-party negotiations were long and difficult, primarily because the
Bush administration insisted on various additional demands such as
verification of North Korea's de-nuclearisation procedures. In September
2005, just when a deal similar to the Agreed Framework was reached, the
six-party talks broke down as the US Treasury Department effectively froze
some $US25 million in North Korean assets held in the Macau-based Banco
Delta Asia. Ultimately, North Korea was forced to carry out its first
nuclear test in October 2006, in order to pressure Washington to make
concessions.

In February 2007, the deal was revived as North Korea agreed to take initial
steps to freeze and disable its nuclear facilities in exchange for energy
assistance and negotiations with the US to normalise relations. Although
both the US and China are concerned about a nuclear arms race in Northeast
Asia, particularly the prospect of Japan developing nuclear weapons, it was
not North Korea's nuclear test that forced the Bush administration to back
down.

The Bush administration was stepping up pressure on Iran, amid intensive
discussions of a possible military strike against the country. The deal with
North Korea was largely aimed at buying time for Washington as it focussed
on Iran. Before the end of the Bush presidency, the six-party talks broke
down again in December 2008, as the US imposed additional demands for
verification, even as North Korea had shut down the Yongbyon reactor and
taken the initial steps to disable it. In order to force the new Obama
administration to make concessions, Pyongyang again turned to its only
bargaining chip-its nuclear and missile programs.

For all the talk of North Korea's failure to fulfil its promises of
abandoning its nuclear program, the record since the 1990s shows that it is
the US government-under both Democrat and Republican-that is responsible for
North Korea's "nuclear crisis". Pyongyang's nuclear program is a convenient
pretext for the US to ratchet up tensions in Northeast Asia, justifying its
ongoing heavy military presence in South Korea and Japan, which can be used
against its great-power rivals, especially China. Clinton's supposed
diplomatic coup in Pyongyang is only a tactical move, which can be reversed
quickly, depending upon Washington's immediate needs in its bid to maintain
its global hegemony.

Already, the most militaristic elements in the US ruling circles are
attacking Clinton's visit. Bush's UN ambassador, John Bolton, declared:
"This is a reward for hostage-taking. Will Bill be off to Tehran next to get
those backpackers out?"

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/aug2009/nkcl-a06.shtml 



====================================



Lawrence S. Wittner | The Ongoing Danger of Nuclear War
http://www.truthout.org/080509R?n
Lawrence S. Wittner, Truthout: "This August, when hundreds of Hiroshima Day 
vigils and related antinuclear activities occur around the United States, 
many Americans will wonder at their relevance. After all, the nuclear danger 
that characterized the Cold War is now far behind us, isn't it? 
Unfortunately, it is not."

=====

Hiroshima Day:

America Has Been Asleep at the Wheel for 64 Years

By Daniel Ellsberg

I sensed almost right away, in August 1945 as Hiroshima and Nagasaki were 
incinerated, that such feelings-about our president, and our Bomb-separated 
me from nearly everyone around me, from my parents and friends and from most 
other Americans. They were not to be mentioned.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article23206.htm

===

The Great Hiroshima Cover-Up

And the Nuclear Fallout for All of Us Today

By Greg Mitchell

I was told by people in the Pentagon that they didn't want those [film] 
images out because they showed effects on man, woman and child....They 
didn't want the general public to know what their weapons had done.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article23208.htm

===

Hiroshima, Nagasaki Atom Bombs Was Right Decision
According To Majority Of Americans: Poll

By John Christoffersen

The poll, released Tuesday, found 61 percent of the more than 2,400 American 
voters questioned believe the U.S. did the right thing. Twenty-two percent 
called it wrong and 16 percent were undecided.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article23209.htm

===

Blackwater: Murder, Inc.

Blackwater accused of murder in 'crusade to eliminate Muslims'

By Keith Olberman and Jeremy Scahill

To that end, Mr. Prince intentionally deployed to Iraq certain men who 
shared his vision of Christian supremacy, knowing and wanting these men to 
take every available opportunity to murder Iraqis. Many of these men used 
call signs based on the Knights of the Templar, the warriors who fought the 
Crusades.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article23205.htm

===

Turning the US Army Against Americans

By Dan Kennedy

An antiwar activist has been accused of spying for the US army, raising 
legal questions the Obama administration must answer.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article23207.htm
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