Not another war! Pentagon out of Korea
By Deirdre Griswold
April 2, 201
For a second month, tens of thousands of U.S. and south Korean troops are
carrying out simulated assaults on the Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea — north Korea.
For the first time during these annual “exercises,” designated
as Key Resolve and Foal Eagle, nuclear-capable B-2 bombers flew from Missouri
to south Korea and back in a simulated bombing of the north.
In February, other war “games” called Iron Fist teamed up U.S.
and Japanese troops in a simulated attack on islands claimed by both Japan and
China.
The Pentagon has announced it will spend a billion dollars on a
“missile defense” system on the West Coast of the United
States.
The Pentagon has also moved a Navy missile-defense ship from its home port
in Japan to waters off the Korean peninsula.
At the same time, the U.S. propaganda machine declares all this is necessary
to counter the “belligerence” of the DPRK.
As more and more U.S. ships, planes and military personnel are deployed to
the area around the Korean peninsula, the possibility of yet another war is
being floated.
War is something that is very real to the Korean people. They know from
bitter experience that war “games” are not something that are just
played on a computer — they are the prelude to mayhem and unspeakable
destruction and human suffering.
Why DPRK says ‘armistice is dead’
For 60 years, the DPRK attempted to get the U.S. to sign a peace treaty that
would end the state of war existing between the two countries since 1950. It
also called for the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.
Neither ever happened. Washington refused to even discuss the matter. The
DPRK has now declared that the armistice agreement ending the 1950-53 shooting
war is dead and that it will respond with strength if attacked.
While all this military activity is going on, massive government cutbacks in
the United States speak to the back-breaking cost of this country’s
military spending for previous interventions around the world. The trillions of
dollars spent on building the world’s most destructive military machine
have imposed a colossal debt burden on the people at home.
The only ones to benefit from this unending warfare are the
military-industrial complex and the banks. The capitalist ruling class as a
whole, which more and more seeks super-profits from abroad, bears the
responsibility for turning the U.S. into a garrison state at odds with most of
the world.
From ‘Teddy’ Roosevelt to Obama
“Speak softly and carry a big stick,” said Theodore Roosevelt in
1901. He had led the charge in grabbing Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Philippines and
Guam away from Spain, first as Assistant Secretary of the Navy and later as a
grandstanding lieutenant colonel commanding U.S. troops in Cuba during the War
of 1898.
Roosevelt’s role in gaining new territory for U.S. profiteers to
exploit won him the presidency (1901-09).
Roosevelt’s prescription for how to camouflage imperialist aggression
is still being followed by the public relations departments of the Pentagon,
the White House and the State Department.
While pronouncing “caution” and “restraint” and
their commitment to building a “peaceful and stable” world, they
quietly go about the job of building up the world’s most fearsome arsenal
of offensive weapons.
As the Pentagon winds down its military presence in Iraq and Afghanistan,
after reducing those countries to chaos and ashes, it is increasingly
redeploying its troops and arsenal to the Pacific. Its target right now is
north Korea, even as the U.S. also attempts to encircle China.
The leaders of the DPRK, however, have prepared for this moment and
strengthened their defenses. They have successfully tested nuclear bombs and
long-range missiles.
The north Koreans are sending a ringing message to the world that they will
not bow down to the pressure of tens of thousands of U.S. troops carrying out a
simulated war on their borders. For that, they are being branded in the
capitalist media as war mongers.
The imperialist U.S., carrying on in Roosevelt’s footsteps, talks
peace while waging war. The socialist DPRK tells the truth — to its own
people and to the world.