Category: Uncategorized

Activists Release Names of S Korea Abductees

From the Joongang Ilbo: The head of a group that advocates rights for North Korean abductees said yesterday that the identity of 12 South Koreans being held captive in the North has been ascertained. . . . The list includes former special agents trained to infiltrate the North, former South Korean soldiers and kidnapped South Korean fishermen. Also included was a South Korean spy who had been sent North to bomb a radio station in Kaesong. How times have changed....

NK Sends Thousands of City Dwellers to Work the Fields

Another sign that famine may be returning to North Korea, from today’s New York Times: To combat growing food shortages, the North Korean government is sending millions of city dwellers to work on farms each weekend, largely to transplant rice, according to foreign aid workers. “The staff that work for us, the staff that work in the ministries, are going out to help farmers,” said Richard Ragan, director of World Food Program operations in Pyongyang, referring to North Koreans who...

The Times and Terror

I admit it’s newsworthy, but how newsworthy does it have to be when there’s a very real risk that printing a news story can get people killed and advance the plans of murderers? That’s my question on the NY Times publication of fine-point details of how the CIA moves high-value terrorist captures from place to place. I was just starting to think, “it’s as if the Times felt this was a distant and irrelevant brushfire war.” Naturally then, James Lileks...

111765949954518928

The E.U. Constitution has taken a severe beating at the Dutch polls. This follows the defeat of a similar referendum in the French polls. This probably means the end of Franco-German plans to gain control over a united Europe’s foreign and defense policies for the foreseeable future. Given France’s diplomatic and military support for China of late, this is probably good news for the people of North Korea and China. It may also spell an end to a suspicious EU...

NK Sends Thousands of City Dwellers to Work the Fields

Another sign that famine may be returning to North Korea, from today’s New York Times: To combat growing food shortages, the North Korean government is sending millions of city dwellers to work on farms each weekend, largely to transplant rice, according to foreign aid workers. “The staff that work for us, the staff that work in the ministries, are going out to help farmers,” said Richard Ragan, director of World Food Program operations in Pyongyang, referring to North Koreans who...

The Times and Terror

I admit it’s newsworthy, but how newsworthy does it have to be when there’s a very real risk that printing a news story can get people killed and advance the plans of murderers? That’s my question on the NY Times publication of fine-point details of how the CIA moves high-value terrorist captures from place to place. I was just starting to think, “it’s as if the Times felt this was a distant and irrelevant brushfire war.” Naturally then, James Lileks...

111765949954518928

The E.U. Constitution has taken a severe beating at the Dutch polls. This follows the defeat of a similar referendum in the French polls. This probably means the end of Franco-German plans to gain control over a united Europe’s foreign and defense policies for the foreseeable future. Given France’s diplomatic and military support for China of late, this is probably good news for the people of North Korea and China. It may also spell an end to a suspicious EU...

A North Korean Arms Embargo

In one of its many ill-considered decisions of the last decade, the United Nations responded to the attempted extermination of Bosnia’s Muslims by imposing an arms embargo on all parties to the conflict. It was a classic of moral, economic, and military equivalence leading to horrific results. On side was a large, mechanized army that controlled a massive industry for manufacturing and exporting arms, and which it was using in an unequal battle to slaughter hundreds of thousands of innocents....

A North Korean Arms Embargo

In one of its many ill-considered decisions of the last decade, the United Nations responded to the attempted extermination of Bosnia’s Muslims by imposing an arms embargo on all parties to the conflict. It was a classic of moral, economic, and military equivalence leading to horrific results. On side was a large, mechanized army that controlled a massive industry for manufacturing and exporting arms, and which it was using in an unequal battle to slaughter hundreds of thousands of innocents....

Bush’s Anaconda Plan

During our own Civil War, General Winfield Scott and Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, the Rumsfeld of his time devised an economic blockade that may have been more decisive to the Confederacy’s defeat than Gettysburg. They called it the Anaconda Plan for its stated goal of constricting the South until it could no longer breathe. The L.A. Times (free subscription required), via Barbara Demick, now reports that the Bush Administration is laying the groundwork for “other options” if the talks...