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Why Bush is scarier than Kim Jong-il
Asia Times ^ | 2/8/02 | Aidan Foster-Carter

Posted on 02/08/2002 6:32:22 PM PST by Enemy Of The State

Why Bush is scarier than Kim Jong-il
By Aidan Foster-Carter

Axis of evil. Three little words; just 10 letters. But they certainly pack a punch. At the very least, George Bush's State of the Union speech on January 29 has heaved a mighty rock into what were already hardly calm waters. Ever since, agitated ripples have spread back and forth. Perhaps, in time, they'll die down. Then again, maybe they won't. Words are just words - but they hint at actions to come. Or are meant to.

Axis of evil. Why did he say this, now? What can it mean? Is it true? And is it helpful? Obviously, my main concern is with North Korea. But like many, I'm puzzled that Iran was named - after its reformers' efforts since September 11 to reach out to the US. Such naming and shaming can hardly help the moderates in Tehran in their ongoing power struggle with the reactionary and viscerally anti-American mullahs. By the same token, naming North Korea is a setback for the sensible party in Pyongyang (whose heads are rarely above the parapet anyhow) - and one up for hawks in the Korean People's Army, who can simply say "Told you so."

Axis. What axis? Axis means alliance. But Iraq, Iran, and North Korea are no such thing. Iraq and Iran are enemies who fought a devastating war. North Korea sided with Iran, to which it sells missiles - and as a result fell out badly with Saddam Hussein. (Let's not forget also that the US and most of the West made the opposite choice; they - we - then backed and armed Saddam.) In a further anti-Iraqi gesture, last year Pyongyang opened ties with Kuwait. Do they not notice these things in Washington, or do they just not care? Not all rogue states are alike, and they're not all on the same side. That's elementary, and important.

Evil. As regular readers of this column know, I have no quarrel with that word as a description of Kim Jong-il's regime. The sky is blue, North Korea is evil; so what else is new? But even in my position as a humble hack, I have choices to make: what to write about, what to say, when to say it, how to put it, and so on. So if I bang on about the DPRK's iniquities, it's usually been to counter the three monkeys effect - see, hear, speak no evil - which has been a regrettable by-product of Kim Dae-jung's "Sunshine" policy.

But I'm not president of the world's sole superpower. George W Bush's choices - or those who think for him - on what and when and how to speak out matter infinitely more. With al-Qaeda still enemy number one and far from finished, and after months of carefully building a coalition against it, why rock the boat and lose that focus by suddenly growling at three quite different states? In real life, unlike Bruce Lee movies, you don't tackle all comers simultaneously. And even Bruce doesn't yell out to an offstage trio to watch out, 'cuz he'll be comin' after them too. Sensible strategists pick off their foes carefully, one at a time.

Speaking of timing, another baffling thing is that Bush loosed off this volley just three weeks before he's due to visit China, Japan and South Korea. That's one ruined trip. China is fed up with North Korea too - aren't we all? - but rightly fears this diatribe will merely reinforce Pyongyang's paranoia and paint it even more into a corner. In Seoul, the worry is the same. Kim Dae-jung blames Bush (though not publicly) for torpedoing "Sunshine". Even Southern conservatives, who a year from now may well be the government, though they demand more reciprocity from the North, fear the US ratcheting up tension on the peninsula. All this will stoke anti-Americanism in the ROK, and may push it closer to China. Is that in US interests?

And if Bush hopes at least Japan is onside, he's in for a shock. As our last column recounted, Tokyo is acting tougher: sinking a DPRK spyboat and stanching yen flows to Pyongyang. Yet Prime Minister Junichio Koizumi's latest big speech to the Diet pledged to work hard to re-open dialogue. The US too, in theory, is still open to talks with North Korea - but branding them an evil axis will hardly bring them scurrying to the table.

As Churchill said, jaw-jaw is better than war-war. If Bush is bothered by (inter alia) missile sales to the Middle East - which are quite legal, as the DPRK is not a signatory to the Missile Technology Control Regime - then why didn't he continue his predecessor's negotiations to curb these? On February 3, talking at the World Economic Forum, Bill Clinton confirmed how close he'd come to a missile deal in his last weeks in office. He would have gone to Pyongyang to sign it, but stayed home to work on the umpteenth Israel-Palestine peace initiative - which fell apart. "I figure I left the next administration with a big foreign policy win" on North Korea, he concluded. He forbore to add: "And then Bush blew it."

Republicans criticize Clinton's outline missile deal as inadequate - failing to defang North Korea, and at a steep price in moral hazard - just as its precedent, the 1994 Agreed Framework, defused but did not fully eliminate the DPRK nuclear threat. But in an imperfect world there are no ideal solutions, only better and worse. Before Bill Clinton opted for engagement, he tried confrontation - which in June 1994 came close to war, until Jimmy Carter went to Pyongyang and saved the day. General Gary Luck, US commander in Korea, later told a Senate committee that a new Korean war would kill a million people, including 80-100,000 Americans, and cause economic losses of a trillion dollars - including over US$100 billion to the US. Is that really a better idea? If he thinks so, then frankly Bush scares me more than Kim Jong-il. The rhetoric may play well in Texas, but in Korea it raises real risk. Let's pray it's just loose talk, and Dubya wises up.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: michaeldobbs; nwo
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1 posted on 02/08/2002 6:32:22 PM PST by Enemy Of The State
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To: Enemy Of The State
Who is Aidan Foster-Carter, and why is he saying these silly things?
2 posted on 02/08/2002 6:37:42 PM PST by Cicero
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To: Enemy Of The State
Gag alert recommended for this one. So Bill Clinton would have contained the Korean threat with a TREATY? And Bush has blown this happy and secure state of affairs with his intemperate rhetoric? Dream on!
3 posted on 02/08/2002 6:38:01 PM PST by Pearls Before Swine
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To: Enemy Of The State
Iran and Iraque just signed trade agreement. Sounds like axis to me.
4 posted on 02/08/2002 6:43:09 PM PST by dalebert
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To: Enemy Of The State
This is exactly the same kind of tripe that was written after Reagan's "evil empire" speech. I'm sure its just as accurate as that tripe was, too.
5 posted on 02/08/2002 6:48:58 PM PST by safeasthebanks
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To: Cicero
Must be a relative of Jimmy Carter...
6 posted on 02/08/2002 6:50:20 PM PST by Russ
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To: Enemy Of The State
But like many, I'm puzzled that Iran was named - after its reformers' efforts since September 11 to reach out to the US. Such naming and shaming can hardly help the moderates in Tehran in their ongoing power struggle with the reactionary and viscerally anti-American mullahs.

This same mentality said Reagan was an idiot for calling the Soviets the Evil Empire. The Soviet media played Reagan's speech relentlessy thinking it would stir up anti-American ferver and show Reagan as a dangerous cowboy. But disidents said that his comments encouraged them by showing they were not alone. Besides they already knew they were living in an Evil Empire.

Bush was absolutely clear that he was aiming his attack at a small group of unelected leaders who are thwarting their people's desire for freedom. Like in Russia in the 1980s there is a whole generation that has grown up hating their ruling elite for stealing their future, and they know what Bush says is true.

7 posted on 02/08/2002 6:52:37 PM PST by Hugin
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To: Enemy Of The State
Is this guy even in Korea?

After 9-11, all the Korean programmers at work were saying: 'The US ought to use nukes. Do you think President Bush will use nukes? I sure hope they use nukes.'

8 posted on 02/08/2002 6:53:52 PM PST by The KG9 Kid
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To: aculeus; Cicero
Condescending academic tripe of the day.
9 posted on 02/08/2002 6:54:08 PM PST by dighton
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To: Cicero
Bush is only scary to those nations that have sponsored terrorism. They should be afraid of him. He has the might and will of the American People behind him. That should terrify some nations.
10 posted on 02/08/2002 6:55:24 PM PST by mrfixit514
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To: Enemy Of The State
Of course he's scarier....that's the point. He's the POTUS. It's high time people were scared of us. Being nice has only gotten us planes flown into buildings. We are the most benevolent world power in history....but that has to have limits. F%@# with us and we'll blow up your damn country .
11 posted on 02/08/2002 6:56:53 PM PST by arkfreepdom
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To: Enemy Of The State
Has anyone from the Bush Adm. flown 747s into any buildings in ANY of these countries? Or military targets filled with civilians?

A-HOLES!!!!!!!!!

12 posted on 02/08/2002 7:02:10 PM PST by Benrand
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To: dighton
Figures, I wouldn't expect coherent political analysis from a sociologist.
13 posted on 02/08/2002 7:05:45 PM PST by SoDak
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To: Cicero
Apparently this jerk is another simpering British or Aussie liberal punk with his panties in a bunch. We should have replaced the North Korean regime a long time ago- 1954 would have been a good year- but it's never too late to do the right thing.

The claim that Clinton left the U.S. with a "big foreign policy win" on North Korean missile sales is too preposterous to argue over. What a load of pigcrap!

14 posted on 02/08/2002 7:09:22 PM PST by RANGERAIRBORNE
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To: all
His 2.12 trillion dollar budget scares me more than this does.
15 posted on 02/08/2002 7:14:02 PM PST by Dawgsquat
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To: mrfixit514
Bush is also scary to those European and American "intellectuals" who hope for the destruction of USA. Clinton, given a couple of more years might just have done the job.
16 posted on 02/08/2002 7:14:29 PM PST by JimSEA
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To: Dawgsquat
BUMP!
17 posted on 02/08/2002 7:20:18 PM PST by Buckeroo
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To: arkfreepdom
F%@# with us and we'll blow up your damn country.

More accurately; 'F*** with us and we'll humiliate you, destroy your dictatorship, neutralize your military and run your ragged arse out of the country and make you a pariah among the nations.

I believe that fear can be an effective path for peace when dealing with dictators and I'm all for generating a lot more of it, especially from hard-line communists.

18 posted on 02/08/2002 7:21:39 PM PST by Jim Scott
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To: RANGERAIRBORNE
Aussie pigcrap is bad... Brit pigcrap smells worse.

North Korea is a time bomb waiting to go off.

We will have to defend South Korea, Japan and Taiwan.

Hope your ready pop, big time $hit-storm coming soon.

19 posted on 02/08/2002 7:26:48 PM PST by johnny7
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To: RANGERAIRBORNE
Clinton bought off the North Koreans by giving them a nuclear plant so they could make MORE bombs. Somehow I don't think that was very helpful to U.S. security, or for that matter for Asian security.
20 posted on 02/08/2002 7:28:14 PM PST by Cicero
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