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Trump seeks to turn North Korea into a vassal state: Analyst

US National Security Adviser John Bolton

The administration of US President Donald Trump plans to turn North Korea into a vassal state and reassert its domination over Pyongyang, just as it did with Vietnam, an attempt that will likely fail, says an American political analyst.

“The US wants to not only denuclearize the Korean Peninsula but disarm the North and make it a vassal state of the [US] empire,” said Dennis Etler, a former professor of Anthropology at Cabrillo College in Aptos, California.

“What they envision is converting the DPRK into a Northeast Asian version of Vietnam. The US wants to use its rapprochement with the DPRK in the same way it is trying to use Vietnam as a surrogate for its anti-China policies in Southeast Asia,” Etler told Press TV on Monday.

“What Trump and his handlers are attempting to do is a long-shot, with very little hope of success,” he added.

“Negotiations will most likely stretch out over an extended period of time placing the whole process in a sort of limbo, basically putting it on the back burner so the US can concentrate on its attempts to push its imperialist agenda against China, Iran and whoever else stands in its way as it attempts to reassert its global hegemony, a task which, however, is doomed to failure.”

The United States has devised a plan to demolish North Korea's nuclear weapons program within a year, White House National Security Adviser John Bolton said Sunday.

In an interview with CBS's "Face the Nation," Bolton claimed that Washington also has a plan to dismantle North Korea's chemical and biological weapons programs as well as ballistic missile programs within a year.

The comments come following Trump’s landmark summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Singapore on June 12.

In the Singapore summit, the US and North Korea committed to working “toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.” Trump later said he would end the “provocative” US-South Korea military exercises, and the two countries proceeded to suspend a range of their “large-scale” military drills.

"There is no reason to doubt Kim’s sincerity in proceeding with denuclearization with the backing of China, Russia and South Korea," Etler said.

"Of course, Kim’s willingness to do so is based on US guarantees of the DPRK’s sovereignty and pledge not to attempt any sort of regime change," he added. 

"The US has made initial efforts in that regard by canceling joint military exercises with Seoul. That is all for the good. But, the US is making new and more onerous demands in return. While the 'deal' made at the Singapore Summit only says that, 'the DPRK commits to work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula,' Bolton is now calling for not only an end to North Korea’s nuclear program but also its nuclear, chemical, biological weapons programs and ballistic missiles," the analyst noted.

“Unlike the Iranian nuclear deal, which took years to negotiate by a multi-national coalition, has well articulated provisions and has been fully implemented by Iran and verified by international inspectors, the North Korea denuclearization deal is a mere scrap of paper with no substance other than the 'word’ of its signatories,” Etler said.


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