Confronting China

China is stepping up its opposition to giving Japan a seat on the U.N. Security Council. Rest assured that their concerns are more strategic and long-term than a fit of pique over two uninhabited, guano-encrusted rocks. Meanwhile, another one for the “you heard it here first” file. Last fall, I attended a meeting at the Senate office buildings where Rep. Ed Royce was one of the luminaries present. Royce, a Republican from California, first hinted that this spring, we were...

Confronting China

China is stepping up its opposition to giving Japan a seat on the U.N. Security Council. Rest assured that their concerns are more strategic and long-term than a fit of pique over two uninhabited, guano-encrusted rocks. Meanwhile, another one for the “you heard it here first” file. Last fall, I attended a meeting at the Senate office buildings where Rep. Ed Royce was one of the luminaries present. Royce, a Republican from California, first hinted that this spring, we were...

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Human Rights Updates: A British Junior Foreign Minister who recently visited North Korea has told the BBC that conditions there appear to be getting worse. The report, which quotes Yodok survivors on the conditions they survived there, is somewhat at odds with the new report of the U.N. Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in North Korea. The U.N. report goes out of its way to note recent improvements, despite the fact that North Korea barred the Rapporteur from entering the...

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Talks to Restart? Take this announcement with a grain of salt, and when it comes to the hope of any real progress there, unscrew the lid from the shaker: “Even if we get past the worst and the six-party talks restart, ultimately we cannot be optimistic” since North Korea is now saying the six-party talks should be mutual nuclear disarmament negotiations. What’s this? My exclusive OFK satellite eaves-ear-dropper has produced a transcript of the meeting: China: The Americans will refer...

111264713933089831

Human Rights Updates: A British Junior Foreign Minister who recently visited North Korea has told the BBC that conditions there appear to be getting worse. The report, which quotes Yodok survivors on the conditions they survived there, is somewhat at odds with the new report of the U.N. Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in North Korea. The U.N. report goes out of its way to note recent improvements, despite the fact that North Korea barred the Rapporteur from entering the...

The Death of an Alliance, Part IX

I guess the next step is for South Korea to start calling itself the Outer Koguryo Semi-Autonomous Zone. This story from the Chosun Ilbo is almost too amazing to believe: Military exchanges between Korea and China will intensify to a level similar to those between Korea and Japan, the defense ministry said Monday. “China, more than any nation, wishes for peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula, so we plan to strengthen our military exchanges with China, including making defense...

Operation Tokdo Freedom© Update

It takes one to know one: Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara on Sunday fired a broadside at Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, saying his criticism of Japan was a “a third-rate political technique” to recover popularity at home. Appearing on a Fuji TV interview program, Ishihara said Roh’s repeated criticism of Japan over its colonial abuses and the Dokdo Islets was “a stopgap measure for President Roh to recover some of his popularity.” He added, “For a politician it’s a third-rate technique.”...

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The Family Business: The Chosun Ilbo has an interesting story about the “family business” of black marketing. What my wife and I never understood is why, given the dizzying variety of good-quality and inexpensive food in the Korean markets, anyone would pay extra for black-market American food. We always scratched our heads when we saw the ajummas with their shopping carts loaded with 16 packages of bacon, 30 packs of hot dogs, 25 cans of infant formula, and five 20-pound...

The Death of an Alliance, Part VIII 1/2

Scroll down for updates. The Korean government is ruling out “renegotiation” of its “tenative” cost-sharing agreement with the USFK, which is no surprise given the likely consequence of losing face to the Yankees just four weeks before the next bi-election. I’m suspicous about the use of the term “tentatively agreed” in the Herald story. Either there’s a binding agreement that was authorized for public release or there wasn’t; if the latter is true, it’s a negotiation, not a renegotiation. Perhaps...

111263171825376662

Talks to Restart? Take this announcement with a grain of salt, and when it comes to the hope of any real progress there, unscrew the lid from the shaker: “Even if we get past the worst and the six-party talks restart, ultimately we cannot be optimistic” since North Korea is now saying the six-party talks should be mutual nuclear disarmament negotiations. What’s this? My exclusive OFK satellite eaves-ear-dropper has produced a transcript of the meeting: China: The Americans will refer...