Category: Uncategorized

Lee Myung Bak: Let’s Talk About Human Rights to North Korea

Seoul Mayor and current presidential front-runner Lee Myung-Bak is dipping his toe into new waters–the hitherto unpopular issue of human rights in North Korea . . . . “We can talk about the importance of human rights as much as we like and it does not mean that we deal with the issue as if we were fighting a battle,” Lee, 65, said. “It is not a matter of whether or not to do it, but a matter of how...

Full Text of Kim Moon Soo’s Speech to FH Conference;

The Flying Yangban is still not finished documenting Freedom House’s Seoul conference on human rights in North Korea (you can read his excellent OFK posts on the subject here, right below my own posts on the FH Washington conference). Andy’s latest is the text of a speech by the Korean politician I most admire, and one of a very few I admire at all: Kim Moon Soo. New readers with a deep interest in Korean politics may want to read...

Feds Indict Wives of Bank of China Execs in $485M Money Laundering, Immigration Fraud Scam

Nothing in the story connects it to North Korea, although the Bank of China has been the subject of published reports in connection with the “supernote” money-laundering investigation. From the Justice Department . . . . WASHINGTON, D.C. ““ A federal grand jury in Las Vegas has indicted two former managers of the Bank of China, their wives, and a relative of one of the couples on charges of racketeering, money laundering and fraud, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher...

North Korea Denies Bird Flu Report

I honestly don’t know how Rescue the North Korean People (RENK) would be able to receive reliable information that a North Korean is infected, but it’s interesting that the North Korean regime is now forced to respond to RENK’s reports. As usual, the UN is reduced to echoing the statements of the North Korean government without so much as telling us what access they were granted or denied to the allegedly infected area. The Food and Agriculture Office head who...

SOTU Commentary ‘06

On North Korea, President Bush said very little: “The demands of justice require their freedom as well [specifically naming the people of North Korea, Syria, Burma, and Zimbabwe, among others].” The rhetoric was no more soaring, and certainly no more specific, than anything I’ve heard him say before. I can live without soaring rhetoric for public diplomacy’s sake, but what I can’t forgive is that this president has frittered away six years without forming a forceful or even a particularly...

The Counterfeiting Issue: Why Now?

If you can’t actually defend Kim Jong Il’s counterfeiting of the dollar, and you can’t deny that the evidence is strong enough to convince even the Chinese, what’s a dedicated appeaser to say? The talking point appears to be “Why now?” Meaning, why did the United States cruelly dash our high hopes of progress in the nuclear talks with North Korea now, as opposed to cruelly dashing similar hopes at any other time during the last decade or so of...

Chris Hill: ‘[T]hose f***ers say they’re going to go right ahead and build nuclear weapons no matter what we do.’

Not a very ambassadorial thing to say, perhaps, but there are plenty of reasons to justify Washington’s harder new line toward North Korea of late. Leave aside the decade-plus of North Korean cheating and defiance of any standards followed by the rest of humanity. Although evidence of a policy shift is still inconclusive, it’s arguable that several developments last fall strengthened the hand of hard-liners (me, for one) seeking the abandonment of negotiation from weakness in favor of the economic...

Interpreting “Axis of Evil;” an unnecessary debate

Probably President Bush has no idea that the “Axis of Evil” phrase in his January 2002 State of the Union Address would stir up so much controversy. For myself and what I must assume most viewers or listeners, the metaphor was so obvious so as not to warrant much comment; it was a catchy phrase conveying that those three nations were the highest priority in the areas of security and proliferation. Not so obvious for others.

Top Aide to Kim Jong Il Arrested in Macau

If true, this could be a tangible sign of sincere Chinese annoyance with its North Korean viceroy. Via Daily NK, then Yonhap: SEOUL, Jan. 28 (Yonhap) — A local Internet news site reported Saturday that a top aide to North Korean leader Kim Jong-il was arrested in Macao earlier this month. Citing Japanese diplomatic sources, DailyNK claimed Kang Sang-choon, a secretary of the Workers’ Party of Korea and chief of staff to Kim, was detained in connection to circulation of...

U.S. Considering Devastating Financial Sanctions Against N. Korea; Kaesong May Be the First Casualty

Long-time readers of this blog know that for nearly two years, I’ve advocated aggressive economic measures against the North Korean regime that would force international finance to choose between doing business in the North and in the United States. Such sanctions would wring the most knowledgeable and best-financed investors out of North Korea until it made signficant and irreversible steps toward comporting itself with the rules by which humanity lives. Until now, the Bush Administration has failed to take strong-yet-practical...