Chinese Dithering Seals Kim Jong Il’s Fate

With the Bush administration on the verge of giving up on diplomacy with North Korea and pursuing economic strangulation instead, one would suspect that China might finally engage in some serious diplomacy of its own to force North Korea back to the talks. Not so. Once again, the Chinese have sent emissaries to Pyongyang, and still North Korea refuses to engage in serious diplomacy. And how has China responded? Several officials and diplomats noted that, while Mr. Pak was in...

The Pope Who Defeated Brezhnev’s Divisions

From the New York Times: His name, he told Edith, was Karol Wojtyla. Although she took him for a priest, he was still a seminarian who would not be ordained until the next year. Thirty-three more years would pass before he became Pope John Paul II and embarked on a papacy that would help break the Communist hold on Central Europe and so transform the world. What moved this young seminarian to save the life of a lost Jewish girl...

Chinese Dithering Seals Kim Jong Il’s Fate

With the Bush administration on the verge of giving up on diplomacy with North Korea and pursuing economic strangulation instead, one would suspect that China might finally engage in some serious diplomacy of its own to force North Korea back to the talks. Not so. Once again, the Chinese have sent emissaries to Pyongyang, and still North Korea refuses to engage in serious diplomacy. And how has China responded? Several officials and diplomats noted that, while Mr. Pak was in...

Chinese Dithering Seals Kim Jong Il’s Fate

With the Bush administration on the verge of giving up on diplomacy with North Korea and pursuing economic strangulation instead, one would suspect that China might finally engage in some serious diplomacy of its own to force North Korea back to the talks. Not so. Once again, the Chinese have sent emissaries to Pyongyang, and still North Korea refuses to engage in serious diplomacy. And how has China responded? Several officials and diplomats noted that, while Mr. Pak was in...

The Pope Who Defeated Brezhnev’s Divisions

From the New York Times: His name, he told Edith, was Karol Wojtyla. Although she took him for a priest, he was still a seminarian who would not be ordained until the next year. Thirty-three more years would pass before he became Pope John Paul II and embarked on a papacy that would help break the Communist hold on Central Europe and so transform the world. What moved this young seminarian to save the life of a lost Jewish girl...

The Pope Who Defeated Brezhnev’s Divisions

From the New York Times: His name, he told Edith, was Karol Wojtyla. Although she took him for a priest, he was still a seminarian who would not be ordained until the next year. Thirty-three more years would pass before he became Pope John Paul II and embarked on a papacy that would help break the Communist hold on Central Europe and so transform the world. What moved this young seminarian to save the life of a lost Jewish girl...

Amateur Hour

Someone tell me he’s kidding: Mr. Roh also said that in regard to a future unification of the Koreas, Germany’s model is inappropriate because the economic gap between the North and South is too great. “In order to resolve the conflict and social division from such a disparity, great ability would be needed,” said the president, who suggested that a confederation-type of government similar to the European Union would be a more feasible first step for the two Koreas prior...

111298405015920196

Congratulations to my fellow NKZone bloggers on our nomination for Reporters San Frontieres’s Freedom Blog Award. NKZone and The Command Post have become the depositories for more refined compilations of my posts at this blog (this one swelled my head, too, considering the competition). Vote here, if you’re so inclined, and thank you in advance. My congratulations to Chris Beaumont at FreeNorthKorea, as well. I’m certainly glad he took my advice and didn’t quit blogging. Chris, if you’re reading this,...

Amateur Hour

Someone tell me he’s kidding: Mr. Roh also said that in regard to a future unification of the Koreas, Germany’s model is inappropriate because the economic gap between the North and South is too great. “In order to resolve the conflict and social division from such a disparity, great ability would be needed,” said the president, who suggested that a confederation-type of government similar to the European Union would be a more feasible first step for the two Koreas prior...

111298405015920196

Congratulations to my fellow NKZone bloggers on our nomination for Reporters San Frontieres’s Freedom Blog Award. NKZone and The Command Post have become the depositories for more refined compilations of my posts at this blog (this one swelled my head, too, considering the competition). Vote here, if you’re so inclined, and thank you in advance. My congratulations to Chris Beaumont at FreeNorthKorea, as well. I’m certainly glad he took my advice and didn’t quit blogging. Chris, if you’re reading this,...

They Will Say They Did Not Know

Germany, 1945. Again, the Korean government will abstain from a U.N. Resolution “expressing concern about “human rights abuses in the Stalinist country [of North Korea] such as concentration camps for political prisoners. It calls on Pyongyang to ratify the Convention Against Torture and guarantee that the UN special rapporteur on human rights in North Korea is allowed to operate freely. The special rapporteur was created by last year’s resolution.” Just consider the sheer dumfounding illogic of it. Half of this...

They Will Say They Did Not Know

Germany, 1945. Again, the Korean government will abstain from a U.N. Resolution “expressing concern about “human rights abuses in the Stalinist country [of North Korea] such as concentration camps for political prisoners. It calls on Pyongyang to ratify the Convention Against Torture and guarantee that the UN special rapporteur on human rights in North Korea is allowed to operate freely. The special rapporteur was created by last year’s resolution.” Just consider the sheer dumfounding illogic of it. Half of this...

The Death of an Alliance, Part X

The first item in today’s installment has to do with an alleged “stealth” reduction in the Korean military presence in Iraq from 3,700 to 3,200. I’m not sure how strong my reaction is here– first, because I was under the impression that there were only 3,000 Korean troops there, so 3,200 represents a net gain of one company over my own expectations. Second and more importantly, the military value of the Korean contingent was already negligible, at least according to...