For those who are interested in the current peace talks between North and South Korea, it would be helpful if they read about them with some perspective about the U.S. role.
For more than six years the Bush administration has been attacking the North Korean government, listing them among the axis of evil, and saber rattling while the North Koreans have postured their nuclear power plants and sent missles out over the Sea of Japan (East Sea).
Now, with seeming surprise, there is talk that America will promise not to undertake an aggressive war against North Korea in return for the North’s promise to stop its nuclear endeavor. Shades of remarkability, is this not the same proposal that President Clinton made nearly a decade ago. And was it not seen then as a “win” for North Korea.
Well, that is because it is. I don’t usually buy all that Bruce Cumings says about the Korean War, but he is sure on the mark in his recent comments when he explains just how much of a win it is for the North.
North Korean Economy: http://nkeconwatch.com
Roundup: Historian. http://hnn.us/roundup/1.html#44102
Senior Fellow, Paul M. Edwards
Monday, October 29, 2007
A Win For North Korea
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Gregg Edwards
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10:22 AM
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Labels: Bush, Clinton, Cumings, foreign policy, North Korea, nuclear, peace
Monday, October 22, 2007
Best Interests
So what are China, Russia, and the United States doing in the Korean peace talks?
Is it that everyone who had an interest in the war nearly sixty years ago still retains the same interest? Or, perhaps, these are the nations that see some significance in Korea remaining divided.
Is it South Korea that is refusing to send the promised rice until the nuclear plants are destroyed? Don't think so. Is it China that is interested in opening the border so that Koreans can move back and forth with their families? Don't think so.
Perhaps the move, recently taken by the South to just go ahead and talk with the North, is a good move.
www.kimsoft.com/korea/4-talks.htm
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/IF02Dg01.html
Senior Fellow, Paul M. Edwards
Posted by
Gregg Edwards
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2:34 PM
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Labels: China, foreign policy, Korean War, North Korea, nuclear, peace treaty, South Korea, United Nations
Monday, October 1, 2007
An Obvious Question?
Surely it is time someone in the Bush administration asked themselves the obvious question: What does North Korea want?
In between the sword rattling and the rhetoric about peace treaties, the message does not seem to have changed a great deal in the past thirty years.
More than anything North Korea wants to be left alone. By left alone, I mean treated like any other sovereign country, free of international harassment, free of a foreign power poising troops on its border, free to trade for the food and energy it needs.
And is this too much to ask? Somehow I don't think so.
http://www.etherzone.com/2006/raim070706.shtml
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/IF02Dg01.html
Senior Fellow, Paul M. Edwards
Posted by
Gregg Edwards
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1:59 PM
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Gregg Edwards