Category: Uncategorized

A Clash of Civilizations

It’s Norbert Vollertsen and his chief U.S. ally, Michael Horowitz of the Hudson Institute (in Seoul until the 11th) against Roh Moo-Hyun this week. That may have been what inspired Roh to lash out at “hard-liners” yesterday. Fresh from staring down the Pusan Migra, he has his eye-poking finger unsheathed, calling his next activities “tourist information.” He even says he’ll bring “tourist” photos of North Korea plus more newsworthy antics that seem to beg the South Koreans to deport him...

The USFK: A Regional Force?

I have been completely underwhelmed with the controversy over the USFK having missions beyond South Korea. The Workers’ Party, Southern Branch Democratic Labor Party recently leaked a classified document as support for his accusation that the USFK might actually be planning for missions outside South Korea. My reaction: So? This really comes down to the question of whether you consider the USFK to be part of the U.S. Army or a bunch of rented security guards. If you say they’re...

Subversive Cells

This week’s must-read is the Chosun‘s story about how cell phones are breaking the information blockade around North Korea. The regime’s crackdown on cell phones hasn’t overcome the strong family ties inherent in Korea’s culture, and it hasn’t stopped North and South Koreans from wanting to talk to their relatives across the DMZ: As Lee talked to his brother for the first time in 50 years over a crackling line, he couldn’t stem the flood of tears. Inter-Korean projects to...

Defector Updates

Much news today on defectors. The Marmot’s (least-) favorite newspaper, the Sankei Shimbun, reports that North Korea is rounding up potential defectors in the future liberated zones border regions near China. Those who managed to get into foreign embassies and consulates last month are still filtering out of China through fourth countries. It turns out the U.N. has a special rapporteur on human rights in North Korea, and if he existed before today, it was because I never heard one...

Subversive Cells

This week’s must-read is the Chosun‘s story about how cell phones are breaking the information blockade around North Korea. The regime’s crackdown on cell phones hasn’t overcome the strong family ties inherent in Korea’s culture, and it hasn’t stopped North and South Koreans from wanting to talk to their relatives across the DMZ: As Lee talked to his brother for the first time in 50 years over a crackling line, he couldn’t stem the flood of tears. Inter-Korean projects to...

Defector Updates

Much news today on defectors. The Marmot’s (least-) favorite newspaper, the Sankei Shimbun, reports that North Korea is rounding up potential defectors in the future liberated zones border regions near China. Those who managed to get into foreign embassies and consulates last month are still filtering out of China through fourth countries. It turns out the U.N. has a special rapporteur on human rights in North Korea, and if he existed before today, it was because I never heard one...

“Economic Reform” Update

David Schofield thinks that in North Korea, economic reform is becoming just another scheme for enriching the elite at the expense of everyone else: While the United Nations urgently appeals for food aid for severely malnourished North Koreans, that nation has reaped a bumper harvest and there’s food aplenty – provided you can pay for it, and most people cannot. In fact, South Korea is planning to import chicken and duck meat from the North – initially just 100 tons,...

You Say You Want a Revolution

It’s curious that the Korean press has paid almost no attention to the government-in-exile story. I haven’t had a chance to listen to the full Radio Free Asia report, and probably won’t until the weekend, so I don’t know much more than that this group is allegedly dominated by old former Workers’ Party officials. I’m initially inclined to agree that the people who ran the old North Korea into the ground should not be in charge of the new North...

Some Cries Are Harder to Hear than Others

It turns out that Jane Goodall does care about chemical testing and infanticide . . . of monkeys. Her concern does not extend to the North Korean people, whose killers she’s helping to portray in a more “compassionate and humanistic“ light. I can already hear you saying it–Jane’s an environmental / animal rights activist. She doesn’t do foreign policy. Oh yeah? If you see no evil in Pyongyang and see it everywhere in Washington, you’re either ignorant of the facts...

So Long, Thanks for All the Toys

North Korea has reportedly opted to nationalize a few million dollars’ worth of KEDO construction equipment. Don’t say I didn’t warn you: [The emotional power of the promise of unification] is certainly sufficient to vacuum up millions more in South Korean cash to keep the Dear Leader in Henessey and razor wire, and the children of his secret police and officer corps eating at least adequately. But for the record, I’ll predict right here that the South Koreans will be...