Trump¡¯s War vs. American and Korean People¡¯s Solidarity for Peace in Korea!
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"Who can possibly welcome a foreign leader who talks about the possibility of a war on their land?"
Dear Friend—an update on peace movement for Korea!
Trump¡¯s War vs. American and Korean People¡¯s Solidarity for Peace in Korea
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¡¤ More than 70 percent of Koreans disapprove Mr. Trump (latest poll).
¡¤ South Korean President Moon Jae-in repeatedly has stated that he will not allow another war in the Korean Peninsula. President Moon Jae-in has currently 70% approval rating from Korean people.
¡¤ More than 80 percent of Koreans support diplomacy and dialogue with North Korea.
¡¤ Close to 80% of Americans oppose military action against North Korea.
1. Senators Ed Markey, Chris Murphy, Jeff Merkley and others introduced legislation authored by Rep. John Conyers (the last Korean War veteran in the US Congress): a ray of hope! ¹Ì±¹ ÀÇȸ Æ®·³ÇÁ ºÏÇÑ ¼±Á¦ °ø°Ý ¹Ý´ë ¹ý¾È ¹ßÀÇ
ED Markey, United States Senator for Massachusetts
https://www.markey.senate.gov/
Chris Murphy, United States Senator for Connecticut
https://www.murphy.senate.gov/
Jeff Merkley, United States Senator for Oregon
https://www.merkley.senate.gov/
Congressman John Conyers, JR.
https://conyers.house.gov/
US Senators Ed Markey, Chris Murphy reassert Congress¡¯ power to approve military strikes ahead of President Donald Trump¡¯s Asia Trip
"There is no military solution to the North Korean nuclear threat," he said. "The only way to address the danger posed by North Korea's advancing nuclear program is through vigorous and sustained diplomacy. I hope President Trump heeds these words as he embarks on his first trip to Asia this weekend. Talking is not weakness." The Massachusetts Democrat added that Capitol Hill's constitutional power "is not just about requiring the president to come to Congress before choosing to go down the path of catastrophic war, it puts Congress on record" about it.
http://www.masslive.com/politics/index.ssf/2017/11/us_sens_ed_markey_chris_murphy.html
2. More than 100 peace rallies have applied for peaceful and legal protest to the Korean government. 220 civic organizations oppose war in the Korean Peninsula and appeal for global solidarity with peace in Northeast Asia
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7 am, 11/7: Peace rally near the Blue House
1 pm, 11.7: Peace rally, Gwanghwamoon Plaza
3 pm, 11/7: Peace rally and march to the Blue House
7pm, 11/7: Korean National Candlelight Vigil for Peace. Mr. Trump! Please come and see our peace candlelight!
8 pm, 11/7: Peace candlelight march to the Blue House where Mr. Moon Jae-in hosts state dinner for Mr. Trump
10 am, 11/7: Three Steps, One Bow (Sambo Ilbae »ïº¸ÀϺ£): No! War
(Korean police stopped Three Steps, One Bow protest on 11/6 in front of the Blue House)
10 am, 11/8: Korean People¡¯s Conference for Peace in front of the National Assembly where Mr. Trump is scheduled to deliver speech
3. Common Dreams. South Koreans Plan to Welcome War Lunatic Trump With Mass Protest, Demands for Peace. ¡°Who can possibly welcome a foreign leader who talks about the possibility of a war on their land?¡± ¹Ì±¹ Áøº¸ ºí·Î±× ³íÆò. ÀüÀï À§ÇùÇÏ´Â ¿Ü±¹ ÁöµµÀÚµéÀ» °¨È÷ ¾î¶»°Ô ȯ¿µÇÒ ¼ö Àִ°¡?
"Who can possibly welcome a foreign leader who talks about the possibility of a war on their land?" the civic groups said during a press briefing, according to the Seoul-based Korea Herald. "We should take the path of peace, not war. We cannot help but protect peace on our land and our livelihood for ourselves."
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2017/11/01/south-koreans-plan-welcome-war-lunatic-trump-mass-protest-demands-peace
5. The New York Times. South Korean Leader Boxed In as Trump Threatens North Korea
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¡°South Koreans are frustrated that the United States has not allowed their country any wriggling room,¡± said Cho Han-bum, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification. ¡°Trump is helping spawn anti-American sentiment here.¡±¡¦¡°South Koreans are frustrated that the United States has not allowed their country any wriggling room,¡± said Cho Han-bum, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification. ¡°Trump is helping spawn anti-American sentiment here.¡±¡¦ ¡°South Koreans hope that Mr. Trump¡¯s visit will be an occasion to reconfirm the alliance and agree to a peaceful solution to the North Korean crisis,¡± said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul. ¡°The last thing they want is for him to come here and add instability.¡±
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/03/world/asia/south-korea-trump-nuclear.html?smid=tw-nytimesworld&smtyp=cur
6. Joint Statement. U.S., South Korean, and Japanese Civil Society Organizations Call for a Bold Shift in Policy for Peace in Korea and Northeast Asia –update from Korea Collaboration
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11¿ù 3ÀÏ ´º¿å ¸ÇÇØÆ°¿¡¼ ¿¸° 'No Trump Day' Áýȸ
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, November 6, 2017
Contact: Christine Ahn (310) 482-9333
Jackie Cabasso (510) 306-0119
HONOLULU -- Today, hundreds of national civil society organizations from Japan, South Korea and the United States issued a joint statement calling for a diplomatic resolution of the crisis of belligerent rhetoric between the United States and the Democratic People¡¯s Republic of Korea (North Korea). Based in countries whose populations could greatly suffer in the event of war, they call on their respective governments to take bold action now to safeguard peace and build long-lasting trust in the region.
As U.S. President Trump travels to Asia, we civil society groups from the United States, South Korea, and Japan call for a diplomatic solution to the dangerous conflict between the United States and the Democratic People¡¯s Republic of Korea (North Korea). As those who would be directly impacted by the outbreak of such a conflict, we call on our leaders to take bold steps to ensure lasting peace.
Recent events have set the stage for a possible catastrophe on the Korean Peninsula and even throughout the greater Northeast Asian region. Any further escalation of tensions could rapidly degenerate into violence. In its 27 October 2017 report, the U.S. Congressional Research Service estimates that over 300,000 people would die in the opening days of a military conflict on the Korean Peninsula, even without nuclear weapons, and would ultimately claim 25 million lives.
Even as President Trump calls his predecessor¡¯s policy of ¡°strategic patience¡± on North Korea a failure, he continues the same policy, i.e., intensifying U.N. and unilateral sanctions and military threats. Meanwhile, North Korea continues to escalate the pace and scale of its nuclear and missile tests. The Abe government, seizing on the crisis in Korea, has quickened the pace of remilitarization and revision of Article 9 of its constitution. South Korean President Moon Jae-in meanwhile, despite an unambiguous mandate from the South Korean people, who ousted his hawkish predecessor in hopes of a radical transition to harmonious North-South relations, instead continues to do the bidding of the United States as he assumes a hostile posture vis-à-vis North Korea. We therefore demand that:
1. The Trump administration boldly shift to a policy of peace by:
¡¤ Ending its policy of sanctions and military threats against North Korea;
¡¤ Ceasing the deployment of more weapons of mass destruction on the Korean peninsula and in the region, and withdrawing the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense system from South Korea as it only exacerbates tensions in the region; and
¡¤ Halting large-scale military exercises that impede dialogue with North Korea
2. The administration of President Moon Jae-in of South Korea honor the spirit of past North-South joint declarations for peace and reconciliation by:
¡¤ Assertively pursuing inter-Korean dialogue and cooperation;
¡¤ Halting future large-scale U.S.-South Korea combined military exercises to minimize the risk of confrontation ahead of the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyongchang, South Korea; and
¡¤ No longer cooperating with investments in costly weapon systems with the United States and Japan, including spending on missile defense, which only exacerbates tensions in the region and diverts precious resources away from human needs.
3. The government of Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe immediately cease all further moves toward military buildup and instead contribute to regional peace by:
¡¤ Abolishing the controversial "Conspiracy Law" and "State Secrecy Law," as well as the 2015 "Peace and Security Legislation" or war bills which permit the use of the so-called right to collective self-defense;
¡¤ Pursuing the normalization of relations between Japan and North Korea based upon the principles of the Pyongyang Declaration and the Stockholm Agreement; and
¡¤ Ceasing moves to change Article 9, the peace clause in its constitution.
These are among the hundreds of civil society organizations who have signed on:
Japan
¡¤ Citizens Association against Constitutional Revision (úɪ¹ªÊ£¡úÊÛöËÇ悪・ã¼ÚÅÖ§Õ©会)
¡¤ Femin Women's Democratic Club (ªÕª§ªßªóÜþìÑÚÅñ««¯«é«Ö)
¡¤ Japan-Korea People¡¯s Solidarity Network (ìíùÛÚÅñëÖ§帯îï国«Í«Ã«È«ïー«¯)
¡¤ Kyoto/Kinki Association against the U.S. X-band Radar Base (Ú·ÏÚX«Ð«ó«É«ìー«ÀーÐñò¢Úã対・ÌÈÔ´/ÐÎѲ֧թ)
¡¤ Network of Religious Persons Making Peace (øÁûúªòíªëðó教íº«Í«Ã«È)
¡¤ Nipponzan-Myōhōji (ìíÜâߣÙØÛöÞÑ)
¡¤ Peace Boat («Ôー«¹«Üー«È)
¡¤ Veterans for Peace Japan («Ù«Æ«é«ó«º・«Õ«©ー・«Ôー«¹・«¸«ã«Ñ«ó)
South Korea
• Federation of Korean Trade Unions (Çѱ¹³ëµ¿Á¶ÇÕÃÑ¿¬¸Í)
• Korean Alliance of Progressive Movements (Çѱ¹Áøº¸¿¬´ë)
• Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (Àü±¹¹ÎÁֳ뵿Á¶ÇÕÃÑ¿¬¸Í)
• Korean Peasants League (Àü±¹³ó¹ÎȸÃÑ¿¬¸Í)
• Korean Street Vendors Confederation (Àü±¹³ëÁ¡»ó¿¬ÇÕ)
• Korean Women¡¯s Alliance (Àü±¹¿©¼º¿¬´ë)
• Korean Women Peasants Alliance (Àü±¹¿©¼º³ó¹ÎȸÃÑ¿¬ÇÕ)
• Korean Youth Solidarity (Çѱ¹Ã»³â¿¬´ë)
• National Alliance of Squatters and Evictees (Àü±¹Ã¶°Å¹Î¿¬ÇÕ)
United States
• Campaign for Peace, Disarmament and Common Security
• International Forum on Globalization
• Peace Action
• Task Force to Stop THAAD in Korea and Militarism in Asia and the Pacific
• United for Peace and Justice
• Veterans for Peace National
• Western States Legal Foundation
• Women Cross DMZ
http://www.zoominkorea.org/as-trump-visits-asia-civil-society-in-the-u-s-s-korea-and-japan-oppose-war-in-korea/
Koreans Appeal for Peace: Three Steps, One Bow (Sambo Ilbae »ïº¸ÀϹè): No! War
"Simple, but powerful: Walk three steps, prostrate, rise, repeat¡¦. for several (or several hundred) kilometers."
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