by Jacob G. HornbergerApril 24, 2017
The best thing that South
Koreans could ever do, both for themselves and for the American people, as well
as the Japanese citizenry, is boot all U.S. troops out of their country.
Isn’t the reason obvious?
If President Trump, the
Pentagon, and the CIA succeed in instigating a war with North Korea, guess who
is going to pay the biggest price for such a war.
No, not the United States.
At the end of such a war, the continental United States will remain untouched,
just like it was after World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam
War, and all the other foreign wars in which the U.S. government has become
embroiled.
The same cannot be said
about South Korea and Japan. While North Korea would undoubtedly end up losing
a war against the United States (assuming that China doesn’t enter the fray),
South Korea will end up as a devastated wasteland. That’s because as it is
going down to defeat, North Korea can be expected to cause as much death and
destruction as it can.
That means that South Korea
will be buried under a barrage of missiles and artillery shells, not to mention
invading North Korean troops. This is especially true for the capital, Seoul,
which is located just a few miles south of the border that separates North and
South. As Ted Galen Carpenter, senior fellow in defense and foreign policy
studies at the Cato Institute, put it in a recent article,
Yet if North Korea
retaliates for a U.S. attack, South Korea would be the primary victim.
Pyongyang has no capability to strike the American homeland, but Seoul, South
Korea’s largest city and its economic heart, is located barely 30 miles south
of the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Koreas, and it is highly
vulnerable to a North Korean artillery barrage. Civilian fatalities would
number in the thousands or tens of thousands.
The likelihood is that
North Korea would also do whatever it could to hit Japanese cities with
missiles, given that Japan is a treaty ally of the United States.
There is also the distinct
probability that North Korea will explode a few nuclear bombs in South Korea.
Of course, only one would do the trick, by bringing deadly radiation to most of
the country for a long time to come. The same holds true for Japan. If North
Korea can do it, it will almost certainly lash out with nuclear missiles fired
at Japan.
There are those who
maintain that North Korea would never resort to nuclear weapons because it
knows that the United States would respond with a carpet nuclear-bombing of the
entire country. But the problem is that one never knows what a ruler is going
to do when faced with total defeat, death, capture, trial, or incarceration. During
the Cuban Missile Crisis, Cuba’s communist ruler Fidel Castro was willing to
fire nuclear missiles at invading U.S. troops, knowing full well that it would
destroy Cuba forever and most likely result in an all-out nuclear war between
the United States and the Soviet Union.
Sure, the United States
will win such a war. But can the same be said for Koreans and Japanese?
The fact is that North
Korea absolutely hates the United States and, more specifically, the U.S.
government. It is impossible to overstate the depth of the enmity that the
North Korean regime and the North Korean people have for the Pentagon and the
CIA.
For one thing, North
Koreans understand that it was none of the U.S. government’s business to
embroil itself in Korea’s civil war in the first place. The war was between two
halves of one country, no different in principle from the civil war that took
place in Vietnam several years later — another civil war that was none of the
U.S. government’s business.
Moreover, the North Koreans
have never forgotten the manner in which the U.S. government waged the Korean
War — by massive bombing of Korean towns and cities and also by germ warfare
against the North Korean populace. The anti-Asian mindset within the U.S.
national-security establishment was the same mindset that guided the waging of
the U.S. war in Vietnam, a mindset that held that the North Korean populace
consisted of nothing but communist “gooks” who were hell-bent on conquering the
world and taking over the United States, a mindset that held that the only good
communist is a dead communist.
Additionally, the North
Korean regime fully understands that for the U.S. national-security
establishment, the Cold War never really ended. That’s why the embargo against
Cuba continues. That’s why NATO still exists. That’s why the hostility toward
Russia has never ended. And it’s why U.S. troops have never come home from
Korea.
What that means is regime
change — one of the core missions of the U.S. national-security establishment
ever since it came into existence after World War II. The Pentagon and the CIA
still want what they have always wanted for North Korea—regime change. That’s
why they intervened in the Korean War, not to save America from the communist
hordes they said were coming to get us but rather to bring North Korea under
U.S. rule, thereby enabling the Pentagon and the CIA to station U.S. troops on
China’s border, the same thing they are determined to do in Ukraine on Russia’s
border.
The North Koreans (and the
Chinese) are fully aware of all this. That’s why they have developed a nuclear
program — to deter a U.S. regime-change operation. They know that nuclear
weapons are the only thing that will deter the Pentagon and the CIA from
instigating one. Don’t forget, after all, that Iraq fell to a U.S.
regime-change operation because Saddam Hussein did not have nuclear weapons.
Cuba, by comparison, was able to resist a U.S. regime-change operation in 1962
with the help of nuclear missiles from the Soviet Union.
Booting U.S. troops out of
Korea would be the best thing that could have happen to the South Korean people
and the Japanese people. For one thing, it is highly unlikely that North Korea
would resume the civil war, given that South Korea has a much more powerful
military and a prosperous society to fund such a war. But if such a war were to
break out, it would likely remain conventional, rather than go nuclear, given
that Koreans would be fighting Koreans rather than North Koreans fighting
Americans.
Finally, with the U.S.
government out of the picture, the chances of a diplomatic resolution between
the two halves of Korea would be much higher, if for no other reason than that
both societies would undoubtedly prefer to avoid the death and destruction the
resumption of their civil war would produce.
South Koreans should do
themselves, Japan, and the United States a tremendous favor by kicking U.S.
troops out of their country. It would also be a favor to those U.S. troops,
given that they are nothing but a sacrificial tripwire to guarantee U.S. involvement
in another Korean war.