The Guardian: NK ‘Resistance Cell’ Took Execution Video

The Guardian, via SMH, reports that the North Korean excecution video, which you can now see with English narration, courtesy of The Korean Mediator, was the product of an organized North Korean resistance movement: The footage, secretly filmed in March, is evidence of a resistance network. “If he [the cameraman] had been caught, the punishment would almost certainly have been death,” said Jung-Eun Kim, an American-Korean journalist who has spent seven years monitoring the growth of the resistance movement. The...

Thank You Again, Mongolia

The New York Times describes how the Mongolians put Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld into something of a fix by presenting him with a horse that didn’t exactly fit onto his airborne command center. Rumsfeld, echoing my own observation about the similarity of Mongolia’s countryside to God’s Country, called the young buckskin “Montana” (on the grand scale of the American West, my home town is right next door). “Buckskin,” by the way, is a term used by us simple country folk,...

Hariri Murder Will Be a Test for the United Nations

Until now, I’ve usually been in the “overhaul dramatically” camp, as opposed to the “scrap now” camp, when it comes to the United Nations. But if Syria gets away with the murder of the former Prime Minister of Lebanon with facing serious international sanctions, I’ll be ready to declare the whole institution to be completely incompetent (as opposed to almost completely incompetent) as the arbiter of world affairs it seeks to become. As usual, John Bolton adds needed clarity (via...

Hyde Expresses Disappointment Over Yasukuni Visit

The U.S. government has not taken a public position on Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s most recent visit to the Yasukuni Shrine, but the Chairman of the House International Relations Committee has: WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 (Yonhap) — A senior U.S. congressman formally expressed his regret to Japan over Tokyo officials’ controversial visits to a shrine honoring war criminals. In a letter to Japanese Ambassador to Washington Ryozo Kato, a copy of which was obtained by Yonhap News Agency on Saturday,...

Bandow: Korea a ‘Foreign Policy Welfare Queen’

The Cato Institute’s Doug Bandow was calling for U.S. forces to leave Korea before that became the majority view among Washington think tanks. This time, the reaction in the Korean papers promises to be a real hoot. What we’re less likely to get is the State Department’s candid reaction. The U.S. State Department has never met an alliance, treaty, or aid program that it doesn’t like. As a result, the list of Washington’s foreign policy welfare queens is long. The...

A Citizen’s Hell, but a Fool’s Paradise

Bill Richardson is the Governor of New Mexico, a former Secretary of Energy, a suspected presidential aspirant, and the latest of a series of highly intelligent men to make jaw-droppingly stupid pronouncements of diplomatic–and even humanitarian–optimism about North Korea. Richardson may well be a perfectly fine governor, but reasonable success at governance and bureaucracy in a society of laws and compromises does not necessarily qualify one to go eyeball-to-eyeball with bloody-minded sociopaths with nukes. Only in the foreign policy vacuum...

Rumsfeld Lands in Korea

The New York Times: During his news conference, Mr. Rumsfeld was pressed for a response to recent public opinion polls that indicate a sense among some South Koreans that the United States is a greater threat to peace on the peninsula than North Korea. Mr. Rumsfeld took an uncharacteristically long pause, and then reminded his audience of the vibrancy of South Korea’s democracy, economy and lifestyle — and said they had been purchased, to a great extent, by American sacrifice...

The First New Political Party of South Korea’s Election Season Is Announced

On September 21st, I said this: The jockeying for the South Korean presidential race has started. Like mercurial gobs, parties split into factions and clump together again. The Joongang Ilbo has an interesting article that suggests potential splits in both the Grand National and Uri parties. . . . I’m actually hoping for splits and ferocious ideological power struggles in both parties, particularly the GNP. The Uri’s fresh ideas are all wrung out, and the GNP’s fresh ideas are all...

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Kenneth Clarke, the BAT official and U.K. Tory leader who knew about the company’s factory in North Korea, came in a miserable fourth in the race to lead his party, which lost its political relevance when Margaret Thatcher stood down. I can’t say to what extent the N. Korea relevations played a part, but it’s interesting how much traction the story got in the British press, which has done a much better job covering North Korean human rights than the...

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Iron Ajumma Update: Kim Jong Il, flushed with his successes in agriculture, industry, economics, film-making, corrections, printing, pharmaceuticals, basketball, and golf, takes on corporate personnel management. SEOUL, Oct. 20 (Yonhap) — North Korea warned Thursday that it may have to cancel its exclusive business deals with the Hyundai Group unless the South Korean conglomerate restores the honor of an executive who was ousted this month on allegations of corruption.” (The expulsion) threw cold water on Hyundai’s relations with us, and...

SGT Joshua Ray: Eyewitness to History

The newest addition to my blogroll is Korean Mediator, written by milblogger Sergeant Joshua C. Ray. Sgt. Ray and I struck up an e-mail friendship just a few days ago, at which time he mentioned that he recently returned from a tour in Iraq, is studying Korean at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California, and that he was an eyewitness to the horrific accident in 2002 that cost two girls their lives, and which was subsequently so shamelessly exploited...

Kang Chol Hwan Reception with Republicans & Democrats Abroad

I’ve been anticipating the Flying Yangban’s full report on this event, only to have Andy e-mail me and show that I’ve been looking in the wrong place. I’ll borrow just one quote before encouraging you to go off and read the whole thing yourself. “[The South Korean Government] should have asked for transparency in return for the food aid,” Kang said in a speech to a crowd comprised largely of foreigners living in Seoul. “That kind of attitude is extending...

A Stalinist View of History Enters the Mainstream of Public Debate

Here’s a very balanced, well-written response to some of Stalinist revisionism on the Korean War. Even this dignifies what would best be described as “a hallucination,” but the real blame for that is with those who decided to set a few prosecutors (and a hoarde of reporters) upon Kang Jeong-Koo. Men like Kang and Jang Shi-Ki fear a rational debate based on objective truths more than they fear any prison cell. Indeed, to men like these, a prison cell may...