Saturday, November 27, 2010

Action Alert – ONLINE DEMONSTRATION for Peace in Korea - Sun 11/28 and Wed 12/1

Action Alert – ONLINE DEMONSTRATION for Peace in Korea - Sun 11/28 and Wed 12/1


President Obama is sending the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS
George Washington (carrying 75 warplanes and a crew of over 6000) and
other warships for additional war-games with the South Korean military
beginning this Sunday, November 28.

This only escalates the already tense situation on the Korean
peninsula and brings us dangerously closer to an all-out war.

And the blogosphere is already full of hate-mongering rhetoric calling
for “retaliation” after the tragic incident on Yeonpyong Island earlier this week.

Two civilians and two South Korean soldiers have died. We say NO MORE LOST LIVES.

We need all those who stand for peace to call for de-escalation on the
Korean peninsula and an immediate end to the U.S.-South Korean war
games.

On Sunday, November 28, from 12 noon to 3 pm EST (9 am to 12 noon PST)
and Wednesday, December 1 from 7 pm to 10 pm EST (4pm to 7 pm PST)

Join the National Campaign to End the Korean War (www.endthekoreanwar.org) in a coordinated "online demonstration" -

1. Barrage the White House and State Department with emails and urge
President Obama and State Secretary Clinton to immediately stop the
joint U.S.-South Korean war maneuvers, and sign a Peace Treaty to end
the state of war that has existed for sixty years on the Korean
peninsula-
http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact
http://contact-us.state.gov

2. Post replies on online media sites and blogs where they are
discussing the issue and beat back the war-mongering rhetoric with
calls for de-escalation and a peaceful resolution. Refer to the
attached factsheet for talking points. Some suggested sites are-

www.cnn.com
www.nytimes.com
www.washingtonpost.com
www.huffingtonpost.com
www.npr.org
www.bbc.co.uk
www.news.yahoo.com
www.voanews.com
www.abcnews.go.com
www.foreignpolicy.com

3. Post links to articles calling for diplomacy on listserves, blogs, facebook-

• "North Korea's Consistent Message to the U.S."
By former President Jimmy Carter in the Washington Post, November 24, 2010
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/23/AR2010112305808.html

• “Retaliation, Retaliation"
by Paul Liem of the Korea Policy Institute, Nov 25, 2010
http://www.kpolicy.org

• "Crisis in Korea?"
by John Feffer, Co-director of Foreign Policy in Focus in the
Huffington Post, Nov 23,2010
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-feffer/crisis-in-korea_b_787639.html

• Tim Shorrock
Posted on the Daily Beast.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-11-24/korea-standoff-barack-obama-only-has-one-choice/?cid=hp:mainpromo1

• Tim Shorrock
on Democracy Now
http://www.democracynow.org/2010/11/24/tim_shorrock_direct_talks_with_north

• “A Return Trip to North Korea’s Yongbyon Nuclear Complex”
By Siegfried S. Hecker
http://www.nautilus.org/publications/essays/napsnet/reports/a-return-trip-to-north-korea2019s-yongbyon-nuclear-complex

• “Review U.S. Policy toward North Korea”
Bob Carlin and John Lewis
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/21/AR2010112102276.html

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KOREA CRISIS:

Basic Facts and Historical Context

Facts on the Recent Artillery Duel:

On Tuesday, November 23rd, 70,000 South Korean and American military troops engaged in an annual military drill,

called “Hoguk [Defend the State],” involving 50 warships, 90 helicopters, 500 warplanes, and 600 tanks mobilized for

war simulation exercises scheduled for a period of 9 days, until Nov. 30th.

The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) criticized the mobilization, stating that they were provocative,

and demanded that South Korea halt the drill.

South Korean artillery units fired toward DPRK from a battery close to the DPRK coast, within a disputed maritime

region called the Northern Limit Line (NLL). The disputed border on the west coast between North and South Korea

was drawn unilaterally by the U.S. Navy in 1953; it was never recognized by the North.

After four hours, the DPRK replied with 100 artillery shells from a position north of Yeonpyeong Island; South Korea

then fired back 80 artillery shells.

Two South Korean marines and two civilians were killed and at least 16 others injured on Yeonpyeong Island, a site

with military bases as well as a fishing community of 1,300 residents. DPRK casualty and damages are unknown.

U.S. Involvement and Escalation of Tensions

Obama has responded by sending the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington (carrying 75

warplanes and a crew of over 6000) and other warships to conduct additional joint war-games with the South Korean

military in the vicinity of the NLL, to begin Sunday, November 28.

Ongoing State of War

There has not been a formal end to the Korean War. In 1953, only an armistice was put into place.

Since 1953, there have been military clashes between South Korea and the DPRK in the disputed area of the NLL.

In 1999, a DPRK ship sank in a clash with the South Korean Navy, killing 3 sailors and wounding roughly 70.

In 2009, the South Korean Navy fired at a DPRK vessel that crossed the demarcation line and killed several sailors.

In March 2010, the Cheonan, a South Korean navy corvette, sank, killing 49 sailors.

10 million Korean families are separated due to the continued state of war and division in Korea.

These tragic incidents are a result of continued division and the unending state of war on the Korean

peninsula, and underscore the frailty of the Armistice Agreement – the cease-fire signed by the United States

(representing the United Nations Command, which included the Republic of Korea), China, and the DPRK

in 1953.

Without formalized relations and engagement, the potential for increased tension and conflict will always

remain very high. The U.S. should take active steps to finally end the Korean War with a peace agreement.

and use its influence in South Korea to bring both sides to the table.

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North Korea’s Nukes – Historical Chronology

Tensions were already running high on the peninsula prior to the recent tragic events, as the DPRK recently revealed a

new uranium enrichment facility and a light-water reactor to a U.S. delegation.

1993 – In response to increasingly severe sanctions imposed by the United States and its aggressive military posture,

the DPRK announced its intention to withdraw from the Non-Proliferation treaty (NPT). The following year, it kicked

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) agents out of the country and removed spent fuel rods from its

Yongbyon reactor.

o In response, former U.S. President Clinton threatened a preemptive strike against the Yongbyon facility.

Senator John McCain called for “air or cruise missile strikes” on the reprocessing facility.

o Referring to the possibility of U.S. nuclear strikes against North Korea, scholar Meredith Woo-Cumings

notes, “the Clinton administration came within a hair’s-breadth of a war in Korea without so much as

consulting with its South Korean ally on an action that would have had devastating consequences for the

nearly seventy million people on both sides of the DMZ.”

1994 – Jimmy Carter visited Pyongyang, and transformed a confrontation at the brink of war into a new opportunity

for negotiations. This resulted in the 1994 Agreed Framework, in which the DPRK agreed to stop its nuclear program

in exchange for energy alternatives and a non-aggression pact with the United States. This stopped DPRK’s fuel-cell

reprocessing and restored IAEA inspection for eight years.

2001 – George W. Bush reversed this course and announced that he would not negotiate with any state that he deemed

to be “terrorist.” In 2002, Bush declared the DPRK part of an “axis of evil” and a potential nuclear target, and halted

heavy oil shipments to the DPRK. The U.S. and South Korean militaries conducted the largest joint military exercise

to date.

2003 – The DPRK test-fired a scud missile into the East Sea and withdrew from the NPT. Alarmed by DPRK’s

nuclear program, the United States proposed the Six Party talks, a series of multilateral negotiations involving the

DPRK, United States, China, South Korea, Japan, and Russia.

2005 – After three years of negotiations, the talks produced the 9.19 Joint agreement, in which the DPRK agreed to

stop its nuclear program in exchange for U.S. assurance that it would not attack the DPRK and commit to

normalization of relations.

Unfortunately, no substantive progress has been made in the Six Party talks since 2005; and the DPRK has accused

Washington and Seoul of reneging on earlier agreements, including a promise to supply energy in return for shutting

down its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon.

2010 – In November, DPRK officials permitted access by U.S. nuclear experts to an advanced facility for purifying

uranium. DPRK officials made it clear that the centrifuges would be "on the table" for discussions with the United

States.

In their recent meeting with DPRK officials, Leon Sigal, Director of the Northeast Asia Cooperative Security Project

at the Social Science Research Council in New York, and former U.S. officials Joel Wit and Morton Abramowitz

were told that Pyongyang is prepared to ship out all of its nuclear fuel rods, the key ingredient for producing weapons-

grade plutonium, to a third country in exchange for a U.S. commitment to pledge that it has “no hostile intent” toward

the DPRK. Such a pact could set the stage for reopening the Six Party talks.

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The Way Forward

Direct negotiations, as a first step toward a peace treaty or agreement, are the only way to end Pyongyang’s nuclear

weapons program and eventually move toward a peace agreement to formally end the conflict. Sanctions apparently

have not worked to retard DPRK’s nuclear development. Neither has Obama's policy of "strategic patience."

The DPRK insists on direct talks with the United States. Leaders in Pyongyang consider South Korea's armed forces

to be controlled from Washington and point out that South Korea was not party to the 1953 cease-fire. Since the

Clinton administration, the United States has negotiated through the six-party approach, largely avoiding substantive

bilateral discussions. The Obama administration has maintained that no talks with the DPRK government of Kim

Jong Il are possible until the regime abandons its nuclear weapons program.

Washington’s role on the Korean peninsula is critical because the United States maintains 28,000 ground troops in

South Korea and holds operational command over Korean forces in times of war—distinguishing South Korea as the

only country in the world in such a situation.

Without direct negotiations, North Korea is likely to keep enriching uranium, restart its reactor at Yongbyon,

conduct another nuclear test as it did in 2006, and test more missiles.” – Leon Sigal of the Social Science Research

Council.

“The only hope appears to be engagement. The United States and its partners should respond to the latest nuclear

developments so as to encourage Pyongyang to finally pursue nuclear electricity in lieu of the bomb. That will require

addressing North Korea’s underlying insecurity.” – Siegfried Hecker, former director of the Los Alamos National

Laboratory who recently toured the DPRK and saw its facility for purifying uranium

“Being realistic about the North makes no moral judgment about its system or policies, nor does it cede anything in

terms of our values or goals. U.S. policymakers need to go back to square one. A realistic place to start fresh may be

quite simple: accepting the existence of North Korea as it is, a sovereign state with its own interests.” – Robert Carlin

and John Lewis, Stanford professors who recently toured the DPRK and saw its facility for purifying uranium

Pyongyang has sent a consistent message that during direct talks with the United States, it is ready to conclude an

agreement to end its nuclear programs, put them all under IAEA inspection and conclude a permanent peace treaty to

replace the temporary cease-fire of 1953.” – Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter

"... One item should be at the top of the agenda, however, in order to remove all unnecessary obstacles to progress,

that is the establishment of a peace treaty to replace the truce that has been in place since 1953. One of the things that

have bedeviled all talks until now is the unresolved status of the Korean War. A peace treaty would provide a baseline

for relationships, eliminating the question of the other’s legitimacy and its right to exist.” – James Laney, former U.S.

Ambassador to South Korea

As tensions continue to mount, it is critical that we urge President Obama to stop the joint U.S.-South

Korean war maneuvers and not send additional U.S. warships and planes, including the U.S. aircraft carrier

George Washington.

Instead, the United States should begin negotiations immediately and sign a Peace Agreement to end the

state of war that has existed for sixty years since the Korean War.

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