The Litmus Test of a True Progressive

Don’t miss this must-read commentary by Lee Seon-Min, posted on the Marmot’s site: The North Korean human rights issue has become the �litmus test� for differentiating real and fake progressive in our society. We can guess as to why some �progressive� forces that are servile to the North Korean regime would work so hard to avoid this issue. Excluding them, if other �progressive� forces cannot sincerely respond to the North Korean human rights issue, they could no longer be called...

Say What?

The NYT thinks North Korea rejected Bush’s offer to reward bad behavior, er, offer inducements in exchange for ending their missile program, but isn’t sure. Normally, I’d say the “sham offer” sounds like a definitive rejection, but I’m willing to play along because David Sanger understands Korea reasonably well. His colleague, meanwhile, is suggesting that the Pentagon isn’t really pulling out 12,500 troops after all, which would be bad news for our Korea policy, if it’s true.

Your Avid Military Enthusiast Calls It

The Korea Herald is now reporting that ROK government auditors don’t see how the Korean Multipurpose Helicopter will leave the ground, financially speaking. [The auditors] also expressed concern that the project may have been preceding without an exact figure for the price of production. According to the BAI, the ministry said it would cost 15 trillion won, but Korea Development Institute expected it to be 30 trillion won. Also, the BAI and the ministry believe that future procurement of other...

The Litmus Test of a True Progressive

Don’t miss this must-read commentary by Lee Seon-Min, posted on the Marmot’s site: The North Korean human rights issue has become the �litmus test� for differentiating real and fake progressive in our society. We can guess as to why some �progressive� forces that are servile to the North Korean regime would work so hard to avoid this issue. Excluding them, if other �progressive� forces cannot sincerely respond to the North Korean human rights issue, they could no longer be called...

Say What?

The NYT thinks North Korea rejected Bush’s offer to reward bad behavior, er, offer inducements in exchange for ending their missile program, but isn’t sure. Normally, I’d say the “sham offer” sounds like a definitive rejection, but I’m willing to play along because David Sanger understands Korea reasonably well. His colleague, meanwhile, is suggesting that the Pentagon isn’t really pulling out 12,500 troops after all, which would be bad news for our Korea policy, if it’s true.

Your Avid Military Enthusiast Calls It

The Korea Herald is now reporting that ROK government auditors don’t see how the Korean Multipurpose Helicopter will leave the ground, financially speaking. [The auditors] also expressed concern that the project may have been preceding without an exact figure for the price of production. According to the BAI, the ministry said it would cost 15 trillion won, but Korea Development Institute expected it to be 30 trillion won. Also, the BAI and the ministry believe that future procurement of other...

Hijacking in China

It was resolved peacefully, but the bidding has probably begun for the hijacker’s organs (and you thought that was just an urban legend?). Behind the usual ChiCom statement that he had a history of mental illness, one can’t help wonder who but a North Korean would want to hijack a flight to South Korea. Stay tuned. UPDATE: The Chosun quotes Chinese officials who identify the hijacker; his name sounds Chinese. While it’s always possible the China forces ethnic Koreans to...

Hijacking in China

It was resolved peacefully, but the bidding has probably begun for the hijacker’s organs (and you thought that was just an urban legend?). Behind the usual ChiCom statement that he had a history of mental illness, one can’t help wonder who but a North Korean would want to hijack a flight to South Korea. Stay tuned. UPDATE: The Chosun quotes Chinese officials who identify the hijacker; his name sounds Chinese. While it’s always possible the China forces ethnic Koreans to...

“Tortured” Logic

A poster at OhMyNews actually offered this excuse for opposing the North Korean Human Rights Act: Considering the negligent reaction of the US Congress on the crushed “human rights” of the abused prisoners in Abu Graib, however, it is very difficult to trust the humanitarian motives of the US Congress. If the US Congress succeeds in letting the US Administration repent its evil war crimes and if the United States shows sincere efforts to help the abused prisoners restore their...

“Tortured” Logic

A poster at OhMyNews actually offered this excuse for opposing the North Korean Human Rights Act: Considering the negligent reaction of the US Congress on the crushed “human rights” of the abused prisoners in Abu Graib, however, it is very difficult to trust the humanitarian motives of the US Congress. If the US Congress succeeds in letting the US Administration repent its evil war crimes and if the United States shows sincere efforts to help the abused prisoners restore their...

“Tortured” Logic

A poster at OhMyNews actually offered this excuse for opposing the North Korean Human Rights Act: Considering the negligent reaction of the US Congress on the crushed “human rights” of the abused prisoners in Abu Graib, however, it is very difficult to trust the humanitarian motives of the US Congress. If the US Congress succeeds in letting the US Administration repent its evil war crimes and if the United States shows sincere efforts to help the abused prisoners restore their...

The Start of a Mass Exodus?

It’s probably too early to compare this to the mass exodus that brought down East Germany in 1989, but it has to make the power structures in both Koreas pretty nervous.   Four hundred North Korean defectors are coming to Seoul from an undisclosed country in Southeast Asia.  South Korea apparently decided it was worth going to some effort to strike this deal. This is good news in itself. While I give the South Koreans credit for making the right decision–regardless of their motivation–the...

S Korean Press Reacts to the NKHRA

It varies from positive to despondent, to seeming ignorance at the Korea Herald, which has had next to nothing to say on the subject.  The cumulative effect is moral and political paralysis. OhMyNews is especially entertaining as it tries to make the case that doing nothing for the North Koreans is–in spite of all appearances to the contrary–somehow the compassionate thing to do.  You could get a migraine trying to follow some of the “logic.”  In one breath, they suggest that American soldiers and...