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Hysteria Over Kim’s Nukes
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: From
Sarajevo to the Senkakus
Are we about
to be vaporized by North Koreas nuclear weapons? Given all
the hysteria this week over its third underground nuclear test,
one would certainly think so.
In reality,
we are not about to be nuked by the Norths new boyish leader,
Kim Jong-un. But, like many heads of small nations, he really does
get a big kick out of making the big boys go crazy.
The late Muammar
Qadaffi and Saddam Hussein also used to enjoy this dangerous sport.
But unlike young Kim, they didnt have 4-6 operational nuclear
weapons a lesson not lost on North Korea.
While everyone
was fulminating against the wicked North Koreans, there was barely
any mention of US-South Korean-Australian war games near North Korea
that Pyongyang claimed were training for a US-led invasion. Semi-annual
US-led war games almost always cause North Korea to fire missiles
and beat the war drums.
Whats
clear is that North Korea is making steady progress in developing
a smaller nuclear warhead capable of fitting into a nose cone, and
developing a new long-ranged missile that may one day be able to
strike North America.
However, North
Koreas third nuclear test was less than half the explosive
power of the bombs dropped in 1945 on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by
the United States.
But Pyongyangs
description of a smaller and lighter device set off
alarm bells in the Pentagon. Shortly before, in response to new
US-led sanctions against North Korea after it launched a satellite
into orbit, Pyongyang threatened to target the United States with
its missiles.
That, so far,
is empty talk. North Korea does not yet have a reliable, accurate
ICBM that can threaten the US. It lacks assurance the miniaturized
nuclear warheads it is believed developing can withstand the high
g-forces and heat of missile flight and re-entry or that
they will detonate.
North Koreas
relatively crude medium and long-ranged missiles are inaccurate
and unreliable. Most require hours of liquid fuelling, making them
sitting ducks for US pre-emptive attack. The North is also fast
using up its supply of bomb-grade nuclear material.
North Korea
lacks the ability to inflict a crippling blow on the US mainland.
By contrast, the US Pacific 7th Fleet carries enough nuclear weapons
to vaporize North Korea in a few minutes.
This latest
uproar over Pyongyangs nuclear weapons must be seen in context
of the bitter rivalry between North and South Korea. Typical example:
in the Demilitarized Zone dividing them, South Korea put its flag
on a high tower. The North immediately built a flag tower 50% higher.
North Korea
says it is the only authentic Korea; the South, claims Pyongyang,
is a US colony garrisoned by 28,000 US troops. In fact, the North
greatly fears that the economically powerful South will swallow
it up. Neither Japan nor China want to see a united Korea, so they
give covert or overt aid to Pyongyang while officially scolding
it for nuclear tests.
Meanwhile,
the same nuclear powers that denounce North Korea for building a
nuclear arsenal are themselves in direct violation of the 1970 Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. Under the treaty, the US, Britain, France,
the Soviet Union and China all pledged to quickly eliminate all
of their nuclear weapons.
They never
have.
India, Pakistan
and Israel all have built nuclear arsenals. South Korea was on the
way to producing nuclear weapons until forced to abandon the secret
project by the United States. Japan is estimated to be able to assemble
a nuclear device in only 90 days.
In
1994, the Clinton administration and North Korea signed a deal to
end the Norths nuclear production in exchange for food and
oil. But the deal was derailed in 2002 by neocons in the Bush administration
who feared North Koreas nuclear know-how and missiles might
be sold to Israels foes in the Mideast. So back the US and
North Korea went to their little Cold War.
Washington
and Pyongyang can still make a deal. But it will require an explicit
pledge by Washington not to invade North Korea and huge amounts
of aid. Republicans and neocons will bitterly oppose such a deal.
American conservatives need foreign enemies. Right now, Kim Jong-un
is the best theyve got.
February
20, 2013
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2013 Eric Margolis
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