Category: Uncategorized

The Lee Myung Bak Dossier

Asked about their preferences for the next president, 30 percent said they support former Prime Minister Goh Kun, while 16 percent backed Grand National Party chairwoman Park Geun-hye. Seoul Mayor Lee Myung-Bak and Unification Minister Chung Dong-young were third and fourth on the list with 15 percent and 10 percent, respectively. (emphasis mine) —The Joongang Ilbo, August 24, 2005 The Grand National Party’s top two contenders for the presidency both owe much to the legacy of Park Chung-Hee. If Ms....

Food As a Weapon?

Deceptive Headline of the Month goes to Channel News Asia for this beaut: ” New US human rights envoy suggests food aid weapon against North Korea.” Weapon against whom? The United States has sent food to the North for years, but we’ve never had much confidence that it’s been feeding the intended recipients. Which is why it’s nice that the article finally got around to saying this: Non-governmental groups have accused North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il’s regime of widespread...

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Talks Update: Chris Hill is not sounding like the caving-in type today: The United States adopted a tough stand Friday ahead of talks aimed at ending North Korea’s nuclear weapons programmes, saying it would not compromise on the hardline communist state’s request to maintain peaceful atomic activities. “Our opposition has been very clear on this. What North Korea has to do is get out of the nuclear business,” said Christopher Hill, the chief US negotiator to the six-party talks due...

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More on Food Aid: Another interesting article on NK’s rejection of food aid, which goes into somewhat greater detail than those I’ve linked below. I have a quibble with the reporter, a very nice man who claims to be an OFK regular, who says of Jay Lefkowitz, “His remarks sparked attention because what he said isn’t in line with the state department’s existing policy not to link humanitarian aid with human rights.” Food–specifically, the government’s denial of it to millions...

Home, After Thirty Years

After thirty years of forced labor in a chicken farm with no chickens, Ko Myung-Sup is home at last. “Happiness was short-lived. Thinking about my beloved wife and kids I left behind in the North, I am only sad with more despair,” said the 62-year-old Ko, speaking in a heavy North Korean accent at a seminar Friday hosted by the main opposition Grand National Party. A key party goal is to push this year for bills aimed at accounting for...

The Land of Absolutely No Smiles

North Korea is reportedly taking out its irritation on South Korean visitors in the Kumgang Mountains. “Tourists who were a little noisy as they were touring the mountains were forced by the guides to write a confession,” says one who recently returned. “Isn’t that too much?” As a public service to anyone stupid enough to ever pay good money for this, I present a photo gallery of Thailand . . . the Land of Smiles!

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Antti has a very interesting post up about a North Korean refugee who had the brass balls to go to the NK consulate in Beijing and apply for permission to visit his family. Guess who tried to intervene with the paper to stop the story from being told. You’ll never guess. While you’re at his blog, don’t miss these great old photos of Seoul in the 70’s. If you were stationed at Yongsan, there’s plenty to recognize in there. Plenty...

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Random Predictions: Commie rat bastards will fail to knock down MacArthur on 9/11, but because it’s 9/11, just showing up will be enough to piss of the entire United States and insure that no U.S. president will ever get congressional backing to send the military to defend Korea. Soon afterward, Hwang Woo-Suk will be nudged aside by American rookie Apolo Ohno in a highly controversial Nobel Prize upset. South Korea will print a commemorative stamp of Tung-Do, known as “Alcatraz”...

Signs of an Emerging Policy, Part I: A Plot Thicker Than the Great Wall

Remember a couple of weeks back, when I blogged about the big Chinese mafia bust–the one where the FBI agents posed as a couple and arrested scores of gangsters on their “wedding” day? The one that ended up with the feds taking possession of a large quantity of North Korean supernotes? At the time, I had a number of questions to which I wished I knew the answers, and here are two of them: 7. Were any of those caught...

Reader’s Letter to the Editor

Reader Brendan Brown, who teaches North Korean refugees to speak English with Australian accents, has a letter in this morning’s Joongang Ilbo, opposing the National Security Law: “My rationale can best be summed up by Volitaire who famously said, ‘I may disagree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.’” I agree with Brendan. Oppressing people for nonviolent expression or mere belief–even repugnant belief–only clothes them in the aura of dissidents, an...

Signs of an Emerging Policy, Part II: Food for Rights

The question I’ve been asking this week is why the world should bother giving North Korea food aid when the North insists that the donors have no right to monitor it, meaning that it all ends up in the bellies of the elite. In North Korea, even the enlisted soldiers are starving, and Marcus Noland has reminded us that North Korea has taken advantage of food aid to cut back on food imports and buy more arms. Seventeen percent of...