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US Protection Racket Root of Korea Conflict
#1
US Protection Racket Root of Korea Conflict
By Finian Cunningham

The conflict emanates from Washington and is perpetuated by Washington. Why? To
justify what would otherwise be seen as simply outrageous US militarism in the
Asia Pacific.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info...e34497.htm [http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?e=001oHKRK1sM0...rYd89BTAU]


US Protection Racket Root of Korea Conflict
By Finian Cunningham

April 03, 2013 "Information Clearing House" -"PTV" - The best way to understand the seemingly reckless, recurring threat of nuclear war on the Korean Peninsula is this: the East Asian region is being run like a Mafia protection racket. And the criminal Mafia is the US.

The conflict emanates from Washington and is perpetuated by Washington. Why? To justify what would otherwise be seen as simply outrageous US militarism in the Asia Pacific hemisphere, and in particular a criminally aggressive agenda towards the main geopolitical targets of Washington - China and Russia.

Korea's conflict is not primarily about North and South "enemy states". It is, as it has been for the past 68 years since the end of World War II, about Washington using military force to criminally assert its hegemony on the global stage.

But you wouldn't know this from a casual reading of the Western news media. No, we are told over and over again that the US is "protecting" South Korea and its other Asian allies. The military presence of the US is "serving" as a "deterrent" to aggression from a "sinister" North Korea. In this depiction, the US is the good guy, while North Korea is the menacing reprobate that is a scourge on everybody's well-being and security. Kim Jong-un is the embodiment of the Axis of Evil.

That so-called "quality" news media such as the BBC, New York Times and Guardian can get away with seriously presenting this situation in terms portraying the US as a benevolent force is an astounding feat of reality inversion and brainwashed mind control. The irony is that such media implicitly mock North Korea as a Stalinist "Big Brother" state, where critical thought and expression are forbidden. Yet, these media display the very same habit of mental conformity that they disparage North Korea for.

As noted above, the only way of properly interpreting the recent weeks of threat and counter-threat of all-out war in Korea is to recall scenes from the classic Mafia movie, The Godfather. You know the drill. The mobster goes around the neighborhood demanding loyalty, respect and tributes "for protection". If the residents don't conform to the racket, then the boss arranges self-fulfilling violence to rain down on those who dare to reject his magnanimous "protection".

The exact same arrangement applies in Korea under the tutelage of the US. The Peninsula was unilaterally partitioned in 1945 by Washington into North and South statelets because the US could not abide the fact that the Korean population at that time was strongly anti-imperialist and yearning for socialist democracy. That egalitarian sentiment helped the Koreans resist the occupying Japanese imperialists prior to and during World War II.

Tellingly, in order to assert its hegemony over Korea and the Asia Pacific, the US worked the neighborhood over assiduously in order to defeat the popular movement for independence and democracy that the Korean people exhibited so boldly. Washington achieved this by installing pro-Japanese collaborators as the rulers of newly formed South Korea. Think about that one. The US fought a war allegedly to defeat fascism and imperialism, only to immediately collude with the same political forces to defeat Korean democracy.

The dropping of the atomic bombs by Washington on Hiroshima and Nagasaki was part and parcel of American efforts to demarcate a postwar hegemony in the Asia Pacific to the Soviet Union and China - and this is why Korea was also fractured into two alien states that were then precipitated into war between 1950-53.

That war - in which a third of the northern Korean population were exterminated by American indiscriminate carpetbombing and napalm incineration - has never officially ended. The armistice signed in 1953 under Washington's dictate is technically only a ceasefire. For decades, North Korea's demand for a full peace treaty has been repeatedly rejected by Washington and its South Korean client state. In other words, Washington has retained the implicit prerogative to resume its aerial bombardment of the North Korean population at any time it chooses. That constitutes a constant threat, or a policy of state terrorism by Washington.

The threat from the US towards the Korean population has and continues to include nuclear annihilation. During the Korean War, the US air force would regularly fly nuclear-capable B-52 bombers over the Peninsula. People on the ground would recognize the aircraft, but they did not know what the operational intent was. Can you imagine the terrorism that this conveyed? - barely five years after the US vaporized the civilian populations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and at the same time that US military were compelling Koreans to live in caves as the only way of escaping mass destruction from conventional bombing.

This same thuggish behaviour by the US government is consistent with its authorization during this past week for the flying of nuclear-capable B-2 and B-52 bombers over the Korean Peninsula. The dropping of "inert bombs" by these aerial monsters has to be seen as a heinous calculation in Washington aimed at heightening the terrorism.

Yet, absurdly, the Western propaganda organs, otherwise called news, portray this American state terrorism a "protection".

The New York Times, for example, quoted one so-called "expert" as explaining North Korea's response to the latest American provocation by saying: "The North Korean populace has to be regularly reminded that their country is surrounded by scheming enemies. Otherwise, they might start asking politically dangerous questions."

The laugh about this brain-washed expert thinking, and the New York Times promoting it, is that the people of Korea are indeed surrounded by a scheming enemy - the US - and if the wider international public and media were to start thinking about that fact then there would be "politically dangerous questions" such as: what gives the US the right to conduct annual military "war games" off and on the Korean Peninsula for the past six decades, including the deployment of nuclear annihilation?

The people of Korea, North and South, deserve and desire peace. Despite the antagonism and belligerence highlighted in the Western propaganda media, the majority of people of North and South Korea have in fact no wish for war. The consensus among ordinary Koreans is for peace and a democratic resolution to decades of conflict imposed on their homeland from outside. But they won't obtain that reasonable condition as long as Washington continues to run its "protection racket".

And, unfortunately, the American government will not, cannot stop its criminal behaviour - because domination, aggression and terrorism are the hallmarks of Washington's Mafia regime.

Finian Cunningham, originally from Belfast, Ireland, was born in 1963. He is a prominent expert in international affairs. The author and media commentator was expelled from Bahrain in June 2011 for his critical journalism in which he highlighted human rights violations by the Western-backed regime. He is a Master's graduate in Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a scientific editor for the Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a career in journalism.

Adele
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#2
Adele Edisen Wrote:That so-called "quality" news media such as the BBC, New York Times and Guardian can get away with seriously presenting this situation in terms portraying the US as a benevolent force is an astounding feat of reality inversion and brainwashed mind control. The irony is that such media implicitly mock North Korea as a Stalinist "Big Brother" state, where critical thought and expression are forbidden. Yet, these media display the very same habit of mental conformity that they disparage North Korea for.

It would be good to have any sort of "quality" news media. But they're a busted flush. If I want news - other than of the mundane variety - I usually look elsewhere than the MSM.

Quote:As noted above, the only way of properly interpreting the recent weeks of threat and counter-threat of all-out war in Korea is to recall scenes from the classic Mafia movie, The Godfather. You know the drill. The mobster goes around the neighborhood demanding loyalty, respect and tributes "for protection". If the residents don't conform to the racket, then the boss arranges self-fulfilling violence to rain down on those who dare to reject his magnanimous "protection".

A beautiful image of how the world actually works. Bravo to the writer!
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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#3
David,

This business of North Korea is worrisome, and I have been concerned about how the US might be working the "puppet strings" to get us into a fighting position. I do hope that it doesn't get there, ever. But, as we have come to understand from history, it does not take much to initiate a war, regardless of who fires the first shot.

Adele
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#4
Adele Edisen Wrote:David,

This business of North Korea is worrisome, and I have been concerned about how the US might be working the "puppet strings" to get us into a fighting position. I do hope that it doesn't get there, ever. But, as we have come to understand from history, it does not take much to initiate a war, regardless of who fires the first shot.

Adele

I hear what you say, Adele. I can see how a limited nuclear war a long, long way away, could possibly be seen to be a benefit to the US - assuming that the spirit of Curtis LeMay still lives inside the Pentagon. It would send a very clear message to everyone, including Iran, and Putin, and China. Not least, the continuing meltdown in global finance and economics probably makes the idea almost irresistible.

As we know, Kennedy resisted the Generals and got himself killed for it. Obama doesn't have it in him to do that.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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#5
The pentagon and their MIC partners need to have these sorts of threats in place to justify the huge revenue transfers to the pentagon and the MIC. And nothing works better than a nation which has a nuke or is planning to get one as an insurance policy ... most likely reason... against being over run by the US Empire (USE). USE bilgerance causes weaker nations to arm up and then the USE uses that as pretext for phase II - hot war of aggression in the name of democracy.

How would the US react if PRK conducted huge military exercises off Long Island? or San Diego? Flying Bomber up and down the coast line in international waters?

The provocation is obvious. The USE is looking for the caussus belli for another hot war and more funds transfer and more weapons systems and procurements.

It's the pattern that's been in place for 60 years.
Reply
#6
David Guyatt Wrote:
Adele Edisen Wrote:David,

This business of North Korea is worrisome, and I have been concerned about how the US might be working the "puppet strings" to get us into a fighting position. I do hope that it doesn't get there, ever. But, as we have come to understand from history, it does not take much to initiate a war, regardless of who fires the first shot.

Adele

I hear what you say, Adele. I can see how a limited nuclear war a long, long way away, could possibly be seen to be a benefit to the US - assuming that the spirit of Curtis LeMay still lives inside the Pentagon. It would send a very clear message to everyone, including Iran, and Putin, and China. Not least, the continuing meltdown in global finance and economics probably makes the idea almost irresistible.

As we know, Kennedy resisted the Generals and got himself killed for it. Obama doesn't have it in him to do that.

Is it another attempt to get North Korea (and South Korea which we already "control") into a ring surrounding Russia and China, both countries rich with natural resources and heavily populated with prospective workers? I began thinking of this as I listened to Sibel Edmonds in the Corbett Report interview on another Forum Topic*, speaking of how the US, UK, and NATO, through Gladio, have been digging away at the governments of small nations at the western and southern borders of these two large nations.

*https://deeppoliticsforum.com/forums/sho...ett+Report

Adele
Reply
#7
Jeffrey Orling Wrote:The pentagon and their MIC partners need to have these sorts of threats in place to justify the huge revenue transfers to the pentagon and the MIC. And nothing works better than a nation which has a nuke or is planning to get one as an insurance policy ... most likely reason... against being over run by the US Empire (USE). USE bilgerance causes weaker nations to arm up and then the USE uses that as pretext for phase II - hot war of aggression in the name of democracy.

How would the US react if PRK conducted huge military exercises off Long Island? or San Diego? Flying Bomber up and down the coast line in international waters?

The provocation is obvious. The USE is looking for the caussus belli for another hot war and more funds transfer and more weapons systems and procurements.

It's the pattern that's been in place for 60 years.

I guess I am thinking very much like you are in terms of using North Korea for aggressive purposes. Maybe the US wants to repeat Hitler's mistake in WWII, as described in the book, Conjuring Hitler by Guido Giacomo Preparata.

Adele
Reply
#8
From Tyler Durden at Zerohedge. If true this is worrying for what it implies...

Two North Korean Submarines "Disappeared"

Chosun TV is reporting that South Korean military have lost contact with two North Korean submarines that left their naval base in Hwanghae Province a few days ago.


There has obviously been a lot of changes between last week and now and South Korean military officials suggested that while maneuvers in February were nothing meaningful, now it is provocation.


The two 'torpedo' subs are small 130-ton, 30-meter, 10-man machines that can stay submerged for three-to-four days.


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The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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