Bush capitulates on North Korea
By Mike Whitney
Online
Journal Contributing Writer
Feb 9, 2007, 14:59
“The US has talked tough without achieving anything.”
--Han Seung-Joo, South Korea’s former foreign minister (UK Guardian)
There’s been plenty of saber rattling and bold talk about
forcing North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program, but after a
six-year standoff, Bush has decided to give in to Kim Jung Il’s demands.
The western media is characterizing the new developments as
a “breakthrough,” but, in fact, Bush has retreated on every issue of
consequence. It is as close to a total foreign policy failure as one can
possibly imagine. Nothing has been achieved. The bottom line is this; Kim
refused to budge from his original position, while Bush completely capitulated
on his.
This suggests that there may have to be a serious reworking
of Dick Cheney’s famous maxim: “We don’t negotiate with evil; we defeat it.”
Wrong again, Dick.
The so-called “breakthrough” took place last month in a
face-to-face meeting between Washington and Pyongyang in Berlin. The meeting
was kept secret to conceal the administration’s willingness to meet one-on-one
with their North Korean counterparts. Up until then, the chest-thumping Bushies
had refused to negotiate in person, choosing instead to hide behind the
six-party talks.
Kim’s detonation of a nuclear bomb last
summer triggered a sudden reversal in the administration’s approach.
(Iran has probably noticed Bush’s eagerness to negotiate with nuclear-armed
states.)
“According to Japan’s Asashi newspaper, the two sides signed
a memorandum of understanding under which North Korea would make steps towards
denuclearization at the same time as the US resumed annual shipments of 500,000
tonnes of oil, which were halted in 2002.” (UK Guardian)
If this all sounds familiar, it is because the deal is
identical to the “Agreed Framework” that was worked out by the Clinton
administration in 1994 (and which the Bush administration stubbornly refused to
honor for six years). The only difference now is that North Korea has nuclear
weapons.
The new agreement will drop US sanctions against the North
and stop “freezing” their foreign bank accounts, a violation of international
law. Kim will be expected to cease his nuclear activities at the Yongbyon
reactor and allow inspectors from the IAEA, the UN nuclear watchdog agency, to
resume their work.
Kim agreed to all of these conditions 10 years ago; his
position has never changed. Only Bush backed down.
US envoy, Christopher Hill, has tried to put a brave face on
Washington’s capitulation saying, “I sense a real desire to have progress.”
“Progress?”
Those who have followed the issue won’t be so easily fooled.
The administration is sending up the white flag and calling it victory. They’ve
back-pedaled on every point of dispute and now they’re back to “square one.”
Other parts of Clinton’s “Agreed Framework” are still being
hammered out, but it is nearly certain that Bush will be required to
meet the terms of the original deal and provide food and two light water
reactors for electrical power. More importantly, Kim is bound to push for
“security guarantees” which are now de rigueur for any nation negotiating with
the war-mongering US. The North will demand a written assurance (treaty) that
the administration will not preemptively attack it. (The US National Security
Statement claims the right to preemptively attack whomever it chooses depending
on US national interests)
A signed treaty with North Korea would be a giant
leap forward for nuclear nonproliferation, as well as world peace.
Six years of failed policy, as well as wars that stretch
across Central Asia and the Middle East, have finally pushed the blundering
Bush administration to the bargaining table. The lesson is unavoidable: Bush
CAN be forced to act rationally when all other options have been thoroughly
exhausted. Perhaps, we can glean some small amount of hope from that.
South Korea’s former foreign minister, Han Seung-Joo,
summarized the latest diplomatic developments saying, “The US and South Korea
will play this up as a big success. But they are going back to where they were
before. The US has talked tough without achieving anything. They have reached a
new status quo in which North Korea is a nuclear weapons state.”
Like I said, we’re back to square one, except now Kim has
nukes.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at: fergiewhitney@msn.com.
Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor