Monthly Archive: September, 2005

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Iraq Update: Here’s a link to a superb flash presentation outlining the recent operations in western Iraq. Why don’t the New York Times or the Washington Post cover matters like these in the degree of detail they devote to the political and emotional antics of Americans who have never been to Iraq? Again, I challenge my liberal friends (said in complete sincerity): How long can liberal values survive if we won’t defend them from “Al-Qaeda in Iraq?”

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More Fun With the KFA: Thanks to a reader who mailed in these precious video links. Really, I think “netizens” have beaten the Korean Friendship Association to a humiliating death that ranks right up there with auto-erotic asphyxiation. After someone actually outed him on Wikipedia, I almost felt a little sorry for him. But then I watched the second clip and remembered that he’s still a petty fascist despot who runs around in a Mao suit, and he was outed...

Poll: South Koreans Want USFK Out

Update: A source in Congress forwards this, perhaps not having had time to see this post. He’s actually talking–like he absolutely means it–about Congress holding hearings about the whole alliance. I worry that because the media in this country do not care, the only people who would know what happen in those hearings will be people who read the Korean papers. ____________ Defenders of the frayed pro-American credentials of South Korea tend to fall back on anecdotal and statistical evidence...

The Circus Is Coming!

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. If North Korea will just stop talking for a while, I’ll get through several unfinished posts about South Korean political figures. I’m not going to graf it; it’s not long and well worth reading. I’m actually hoping for splits and...

“Peace In Our Time!” Update

We have two more additions to the postmature enthusiasm over the North Korea deal. Some seem slow to realize this thing is already dead on arrival (my latest on NKZone distills the latest news into some of the same analysis you’ve already read here). Incidentally, examine all of this truthless triumphalism and new-found skepticism–the latter being at least grounded in fact–through the lens of conservatives proclaiming their faith in diplomacy and liberals emphasizing “verify” over “trust.” It’s depressing entertainment for...

KCNA Opens Mouth; Removes All Doubt

With even U.S. negotiator Chris Hill joining in the impulse to pretend that North Korea didn’t say what I could swear they said yesterday, it’s an ironic place that I turn today for a dose of reality: Pyongyang’s own Korea Central News Agency. Wouldn’t you know it? KCNA is a hard-liner’s best friend when I need just the right ammo to win an argument: As clarified in the joint statement, we will return to the NPT and sign the Safeguards...

The Last Resort of a Scoundrel, Part II

Remember Reigncom, the Korean manufacturer of MP3 players that ran TV commercials invoking the nationalism card against its American and Japanese competitors a few months back? Evidently, the cultivation of hatred is no substitute for making the best product at the lowest price, and competition is coming from an unexpected quarter–its own technology, in the hands of the Chinese: Korean companies that took their business and know-how to China in search of a cheaper workforce are seeing their decision come...

The New USFK Commander: General Burwell B. Bell

The Chosun Ilbo names him as General Burwell B. Bell. What about him? He’s an Oak Ridge, Tennessee native, seems the scholarly type, is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and formerly commanded (gargantuan) Fort Hood and U.S. Army, Europe. Back in 1979, he held a company-grade staff job in Korea. From the looks of this letter, purportedly written by Mrs. Burwell B. Bell, the couple will not be pleased with the way some of the soldiers are...

James Na on the 9/11/05 Riot

James Na, author of The Asianist and Buns and Gutter Guns and Butter (oops, mistake fixed!! Heh.) and OFK reader, has I site I probably “refreshed” every six to eight seconds last October. Some grafs: The leftist ruling Uri Party has been divided by the new “Battle of Inchon.” Some counseled moderation while others within the party lauded the protesters as showing a “deep ethnic purity” and denounced the opponents of the protest as “ultra-rightists.” President Roh Moo-Hyun of South...

Studio Six, and Bring the Flexcuffs and the Stomach Pump!

I started compiling a list of all the pundits, who, unlike me, are paid to write for expensive newspapers, and who, unlike me, had actually drawn lessons from the North Korean nuclear “breakthrough” that proved erroneous somewhere between the time of writing and time of publication. Inexplicably, none of the examples listed here had the decency to simply acknowledge that the foundation facts were so obliterated as to require pulling the flawed analyses out of simple decency to the readers....

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James Robbins of NRO Calls for Regime Change in North Korea. I’ve long held the view that regime change is the only way to solve our various problems with the North Korean regime, but it seems to me that the best criticisms of such calls aren’t really about how we can justify it, but about how we can execute it, much less without starting Korean War II. For many advocates of further diplomacy, rewarding bad behavior, tolerating unchecked proliferation, and...

Why Diplomacy With North Korea Is Mere Theater: Reason Number 1,267

The Flying Yangban, blogging for The Marmot, expresses disinterest in the latest North Korean nuclear machinations. Well, given the number of electrons I’ve spent on this, I don’t have that option. When it comes to diplomacy with North Korea, I consider myself a highly interested agnostic. Oranckay challenges anyone to show that the North Koreans’ statements really are inconsistent, and foolishly, I take him up on it: __________________________ Oranckay has thrown down the gauntlet: If anyone out there wants to...

A Setback for the Right to Commit Genocide?

Reading this piece in The Guardian will require you to suspend your disbelief that the author is crediting Kofi Annan, who was occupied with his banker in Geneva during the slaughters in Rwanda, Srebrenica, and the engineered famine in North Korea: In the final declaration last week 191 countries, including Sudan and North Korea, went along with a restatement of international law: that the world community has the right to take military action in the case of “national authorities manifestly...

Simon Wiesenthal, 1908-2005

Simon Wiesenthal, who built a political empire dedicated to fighting anti-Semitism and injustice worldwide, has passed away at the age of 96. In recent years, the Simon Wiesenthal Center had become a leading force in the movement for human rights in North Korea, persistently and publicly demanding that the U.N. investigate charges that the North murders political prisoners and their families in gas chambers. You can read the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s statement here. Photo credit: New York Times.

A Congressional View on the Deal that Wasn’t

By now, you may or may not have heard that North Korea has already reneged on the deal it signed just yesterday (scroll down; next post). But in Pyongyang, agreement and disagreement are both wispy things, and you never know if we’ll have a deal again in six or eight minutes. I keep a stock ticker next to my coffee pot for just that purpose. Deal or not, it’s an interesting parlor game (albeit, one with deadly serious consequences for...

Wake Up! It Was All a Dream!

I have occasionally been accused of being somewhat, oh, bearish and skeptical about diplomacy with North Korea, if not the cynical pretense that we’re making a go of it. Yet even I expect the North Koreans to take weeks–or at the very least, days–to justify my skepticism. Today it only took hours: SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea said Tuesday it would not dismantle its nuclear weapons program until the United States first provides an atomic energy reactor, casting doubt...