Bush’s nuclear weapons hypocrisy

US PRESIDENT George Bush used last week’s APEC summit in Chile to demand
that ‘rogue state’ North Korea abandon its nuclear weapons programme.
Hypocritically, he failed to call on other bellicose states such as Israel,
India and Pakistan to dismantle their weapons of mass destruction. Neither did
he mention his own country’s accelerated nuclear weapons programme.

US secretary of state Colin Powell, playing the ‘bad cop’ to the European
Union’s ‘good cop’, has also weighed in against another country with nuclear
weapons capability, Iran.

Powell insists that the Tehran leadership is still developing its uranium
enrichment programme and its ballistic technology. Washington has been at the
forefront of moves to persuade the International Atomic Energy Authority (IAEA)
nuclear watchdog to refer the country to the United Nations Security Council,
which has the power to impose sanctions. However, EU ministers have taken a
more conciliatory line. Iran has now said that it has frozen its enrichment
programme and has angrily rebutted Powell’s claims.

Meanwhile, the US administration continues to talk tough about North
Korea’s nuclear weapons, ruling out bilateral talks. However, with the
increasing Iraqi resistance to the US occupation of Iraq, the US military is
facing serious overstretch. Moreover, a war against North Korea would trigger
a nuclear conflagration, devastating the whole of the Korean peninsula with
massive casualties and causing economic collapse.

The floundering Stalinist regime of North Korea led by the dictator Kim
Jong-il is using its nuclear arsenal as a bargaining counter to win
concessions from the US. Above all, the North Korean regime wants to end its
diplomatic and economic isolation.

In 1994 the US had agreed to provide economic aid in return for North Korea
suspending its nuclear weapons programme. But serious talks aimed at
normalising relations weren’t pursued under president Clinton despite the
agreement, and in 1998 North Korea restarted its bomb making.

When Bush came to power with a hawkish foreign policy he declared North
Korea, along with Iraq and Iran, to be part of an "axis of evil". He persuaded
Japan and South Korea to stop sending oil supplies to North Korea and
authorised a policy of pre-emptive military strikes against any state
acquiring WMDs, thereby ratcheting up the conflict.

Embarrassingly for Bush, it has emerged that ballistic and nuclear
technology was supplied by the Pakistan regime to both North Korea and Iran.
However, instead of being hit by sanctions general Musharraf’s regime has
received economic assistance now that it has joined Bush’s coalition against
‘terrorism’.