Oliver North: Obama Appeases North Korean Outlaws
[Oliver North is the host of "War Stories" on Fox News Channel, the founder and honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance and the author of "American Heroes."]
Here in Europe, there is little media coverage about North Korea's May 25 nuclear-weapons test or its increasingly frequent ballistic-missile launches. There is even less mention of Pyongyang's decision to sentence two American female journalists to 12 years of "reform through labor" for "committing hostilities" and illegal entry.
North Korea's flagrant violations of international law, repeated breaches of United Nations resolutions, rampant human rights abuses, wholesale currency counterfeiting, transnational kidnappings, threats of aggression and active state sponsorship of terrorism simply do not raise European ire. It wasn't always that way.
Fifty-nine years ago this month, the North Korean People's Army smashed across the 38th Parallel, capturing Seoul, the capital of the Republic of Korea. The battered South Korean army and its U.S. military advisers quickly were pushed into the Pusan Perimeter on the southern tip of the peninsula, and President Truman took the case to the U.N. Security Council.
American leadership and the absence of the Soviet ambassador resulted in swift passage of Security Council Resolution 84. The measure - perhaps the last time in history that the United Nations acted with dispatch - authorized use of force against the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. During the bloody three-year war that followed, troops from seven European countries - and 10 others from around the world - fought beside U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines in Korea, finally securing an armistice July 27, 1953.
In the years since, the increasingly isolated patriarchal Stalinist regime in Pyongyang has raised visceral hatred of the United States to the level of a new art form while systematically violating the terms of the armistice and virtually every other agreement to which it is a party. In short, Pyongyang's past behavior is a prelude to present and future conduct.
On Jan. 18, 1968, North Korean guerrillas attacked Seoul's presidential palace in an attempt to assassinate South Korean President Park Chung-hee. President Johnson dispatched Special Envoy Cyrus Vance to discourage the South Koreans - with troops already committed in Vietnam - from undertaking a military response. Mr. Vance's mission was a "success," and no action - other than a strongly worded diplomatic note - was taken against Pyongyang.
Five days later, the USS Pueblo - a small, unarmed U.S. Navy surveillance vessel - was seized in international waters by North Korean patrol boats. Cmdr. Lloyd "Pete" Bucher and the 81 surviving members of the Pueblo's crew were beaten and tortured by their captors while the Johnson administration, enmeshed in micromanaging the war in Vietnam, dithered. Finally, after a year of brutality - and being threatened that one member of his crew would be shot, starting with the youngest, each day - Cmdr. Bucher signed a concocted "confession." The North Koreans promptly repatriated the crew and kept the Pueblo, which to this day they use as propaganda.
The unwillingness to deal forcefully with the North Korean regime in 1968 set a precedent from which neither the West in general nor the United States in particular has recovered...
Read entire article at Washington Times
Here in Europe, there is little media coverage about North Korea's May 25 nuclear-weapons test or its increasingly frequent ballistic-missile launches. There is even less mention of Pyongyang's decision to sentence two American female journalists to 12 years of "reform through labor" for "committing hostilities" and illegal entry.
North Korea's flagrant violations of international law, repeated breaches of United Nations resolutions, rampant human rights abuses, wholesale currency counterfeiting, transnational kidnappings, threats of aggression and active state sponsorship of terrorism simply do not raise European ire. It wasn't always that way.
Fifty-nine years ago this month, the North Korean People's Army smashed across the 38th Parallel, capturing Seoul, the capital of the Republic of Korea. The battered South Korean army and its U.S. military advisers quickly were pushed into the Pusan Perimeter on the southern tip of the peninsula, and President Truman took the case to the U.N. Security Council.
American leadership and the absence of the Soviet ambassador resulted in swift passage of Security Council Resolution 84. The measure - perhaps the last time in history that the United Nations acted with dispatch - authorized use of force against the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. During the bloody three-year war that followed, troops from seven European countries - and 10 others from around the world - fought beside U.S. soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines in Korea, finally securing an armistice July 27, 1953.
In the years since, the increasingly isolated patriarchal Stalinist regime in Pyongyang has raised visceral hatred of the United States to the level of a new art form while systematically violating the terms of the armistice and virtually every other agreement to which it is a party. In short, Pyongyang's past behavior is a prelude to present and future conduct.
On Jan. 18, 1968, North Korean guerrillas attacked Seoul's presidential palace in an attempt to assassinate South Korean President Park Chung-hee. President Johnson dispatched Special Envoy Cyrus Vance to discourage the South Koreans - with troops already committed in Vietnam - from undertaking a military response. Mr. Vance's mission was a "success," and no action - other than a strongly worded diplomatic note - was taken against Pyongyang.
Five days later, the USS Pueblo - a small, unarmed U.S. Navy surveillance vessel - was seized in international waters by North Korean patrol boats. Cmdr. Lloyd "Pete" Bucher and the 81 surviving members of the Pueblo's crew were beaten and tortured by their captors while the Johnson administration, enmeshed in micromanaging the war in Vietnam, dithered. Finally, after a year of brutality - and being threatened that one member of his crew would be shot, starting with the youngest, each day - Cmdr. Bucher signed a concocted "confession." The North Koreans promptly repatriated the crew and kept the Pueblo, which to this day they use as propaganda.
The unwillingness to deal forcefully with the North Korean regime in 1968 set a precedent from which neither the West in general nor the United States in particular has recovered...