Sample Letter to Chinese Government Officials

My apologies for the small type, to conserve space. Snail mail addresses, names, and phone numbers here. to: chinamission_un@fmprc.cn, webmaster@FMPRC.gov.cn, chinaembassy_us@fmprc.gov.cn cc: BeijingWebcomments@state.gov Your Excellency, I am writing to you to express my concern about the Chinese government’s arrest of 65 North Korean refugees and two South Koreans near Beijing on October 26th. Among those arrested were 11 teenagers and one person over 70 years of age. I respectfully ask that your government abide by the terms of the 1951...

The New China: Today, Power Comes from the Tip of a Cattle Prod

The BBC covered the story of China’s arrest of 65 North Koreans, which appears to be the start of a crackdown. Let’s hope it’s even less successful than the South Korean crackdown on prostitution appears to be. Please help these refugees by copying the sample letter here, pasting it into the congressional Web forms here and here, and hitting “send.” Then reach around and pat yourself on the back. Here is today’s illustration of why the leaders of China are...

Will Colin Powell Defy the North Korean Human Rights Act?

After sounding steadfast after his talks with China and South Korea, Colin Powell sounded decidedly wobbly on human rights in North Korea today, specifically regarding how aggressively he will comply with the North Korean Human Rights Act: Addressing a separate matter, Mr. Powell said that in response to a recently enacted Congressional resolution on North Korea, the Bush administration would press for human rights concerns there to be discussed “by the international community” but that no plans had been set...

Helsinki to Pyongyang

I missed this Op-Ed in the Wall Street Journal when it was new, but it’s still worth discussion. It argues persuasively that some form of engagement with North Korea modeled on the Helsinki framework could be effective at improving conditions there. The fact that the signatories include people like Michael Horowitz (major force behind the NKHRA) and Max Kampelman (veteran of negotiating with Gorbachev and Schevardnadze) makes me pause to consider it. Many of the ideas are well-reasoned and show...

The New China: Today, Power Comes from the Tip of a Cattle Prod

The BBC covered the story of China’s arrest of 65 North Koreans, which appears to be the start of a crackdown. Let’s hope it’s even less successful than the South Korean crackdown on prostitution appears to be. Please help these refugees by copying the sample letter here, pasting it into the congressional Web forms here and here, and hitting “send.” Then reach around and pat yourself on the back. Here is today’s illustration of why the leaders of China are...

Will Colin Powell Defy the North Korean Human Rights Act?

After sounding steadfast after his talks with China and South Korea, Colin Powell sounded decidedly wobbly on human rights in North Korea today, specifically regarding how aggressively he will comply with the North Korean Human Rights Act: Addressing a separate matter, Mr. Powell said that in response to a recently enacted Congressional resolution on North Korea, the Bush administration would press for human rights concerns there to be discussed “by the international community” but that no plans had been set...

Helsinki to Pyongyang

I missed this Op-Ed in the Wall Street Journal when it was new, but it’s still worth discussion. It argues persuasively that some form of engagement with North Korea modeled on the Helsinki framework could be effective at improving conditions there. The fact that the signatories include people like Michael Horowitz (major force behind the NKHRA) and Max Kampelman (veteran of negotiating with Gorbachev and Schevardnadze) makes me pause to consider it. Many of the ideas are well-reasoned and show...

China Arrests 65 NK Refugees–Can We Help Them?

Suzanne Scholte of the U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea forwarded me this message today, via NK Gulag in Seoul. According to the report, on October 26th, Chinese police raided two locations on the outskirts of Beijing, arresting 65 North Korean refugees and South Korean activist workers working for NKGulag. Among the refugees arrested were 11 teenagers and one person who is over 70 years old. Defections to foreign embassies in Beijing appear to have spiked in the...

China Arrests 65 NK Refugees–Can We Help Them?

Suzanne Scholte of the U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea forwarded me this message today, via NK Gulag in Seoul. According to the report, on October 26th, Chinese police raided two locations on the outskirts of Beijing, arresting 65 North Korean refugees and South Korean activist workers working for NKGulag. Among the refugees arrested were 11 teenagers and one person who is over 70 years old. Defections to foreign embassies in Beijing appear to have spiked in the...

China Arrests 65 NK Refugees–Can We Help Them?

Suzanne Scholte of the U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea forwarded me this message today, via NK Gulag in Seoul. According to the report, on October 26th, Chinese police raided two locations on the outskirts of Beijing, arresting 65 North Korean refugees and South Korean activist workers working for NKGulag. Among the refugees arrested were 11 teenagers and one person who is over 70 years old. Defections to foreign embassies in Beijing appear to have spiked in the...

PSI Exercises in the Sea of Japan, er, East Sea

Whatever you call that particular body of water, interesting things are afloat on its troubled surface. James Brooke has this fascinating piece in the NYT, and it’s jam-packed with interesting tidbits about things that really matter: “We are sending a signal to everybody who wants to traffic weapons of mass destruction that we have zero tolerance for that, ” John R. Bolton, United States Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, told a group of 50 reporters standing...

PSI Exercises in the Sea of Japan, er, East Sea

Whatever you call that particular body of water, interesting things are afloat on its troubled surface. James Brooke has this fascinating piece in the NYT, and it’s jam-packed with interesting tidbits about things that really matter: “We are sending a signal to everybody who wants to traffic weapons of mass destruction that we have zero tolerance for that, ” John R. Bolton, United States Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, told a group of 50 reporters standing...

“Support Our Troops” Is More Than a Slogan

It has been almost a year since Chief Warrant Officer Sharon Swartworth was killed in Iraq. Chief, as we called her, was a person of high rank, and I was one of thousands of lowly JAG captains, but her warmth, compassion, and easygoing humanity belied her importance as the Army’s top JAG warrant officer. I will never forget the reception where she told myself and one other JAG lawyer the story of how she sneaked out of tiny Camp Colburn,...