The Empire Calls Its Bombs Peace: Xi’s Silence, North Korea’s Deterrent, and the Unfinished War Washington Refuses to End

The Associated Press's portrayal of Xi Jinping's silence on North Korea's nuclear status obscures the underlying realities of imperial power dynamics. Instead of examining the broader context of the ongoing Korean War, the article sensationalizes rhetoric to favor U.S. perspectives, framing Xi as tacitly supporting Kim Jong Un. This selective narrative overlooks the long-standing military presence of the U.S., the unresolved conflict, and the historical injustices faced by North Korea. By fostering a culture of fear, the media perpetuates a skewed understanding of sovereignty and security, leaving out the pivotal truth: peace cannot stem from disarmament when historical grievances and military pressure remain intact.

The Origins of the Korean War: From Colonial Rupture to Contained Revolution

This review reconstructs the Korean War not as a sudden conflict in 1950, but as the culmination of colonial transformation, revolutionary struggle, and imperial intervention between 1945 and 1947. Drawing on Bruce Cumings, it reveals how liberation opened a radical possibility that was contained, divided, and ultimately reshaped into two opposing systems—making war not accidental,... Continue Reading →

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