Monthly Archive: September, 2009

A Nominee for the Unfortunate Photo Op Hall of Fame

Good for Stephen Bosworth, trying to stay relevant while Philip Goldberg shows us the kind of diplomacy North Korea really understands … but is this really the way he wanted to say, “Hey, remember me?” The good news is that the Obama people still appear to be sticking to their guns — demanding complete and verifiable denuclearization as a precondition to all of the goodies. Not that that will ever happen, but I’m happy to see the sanctions tightened until...

Revealed: The First Published Images of Camp 12, Chongo-Ri, North Korea

Recently, Chosun Ilbo reporter and North Korean gulag survivor Kang Chol Hwan published this story about a remote labor camp in North Korea, its recent expansion to support a crackdown on defectors, and the horrific conditions there: The Chongori reeducation center in North Hamgyong Province that went through the greatest change. The center has been reorganized as a concentration camp exclusively for arrested defectors. It has reportedly turned into a living hell, where labor is much heavier than at ordinary...

Americans Do Not Admire China, and This Is Why

I was immediately suspicious yesterday when I heard that some ChiCom mouthpiece rag had claimed that the Chinese flag would fly on the South Lawn of the White House later this month. Here is China Daily’s report: The national flag of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) will be hoisted at the South Lawn of the White House in Washington on September 20, media reported Sunday. Chinese associations in the United States [read: Commie puppet fifth column] had applied to...

Photos of North Korean Soldiers Smuggling Across the Yalu River

The Daily NK caught them in flagrante delicto in the broad daylight, acting very much like they have nothing to fear: See the rest of the photos here. If Kim Jong Il is as rational as I suspect he is, he knows that the danger of an invasion from his southern border is remote, while the danger of a more subversive kind of invasion across his northern border is both mortal and immediate. Wouldn’t that suggest that if Kim Jong...

Kim Jong Il Death Watch

The Daily Mail has republished photos, released yesterday by KCNA, showing Kim Jong Il visiting what’s described elsewhere as the Kim Jong Suk Sanitarium. The report doesn’t specify what city it’s in, but Kim Jong Suk is Kim Jong Il’s mother and a native of Hoeryong in North Hamgyeong Province. Many of the sites in Hoeryong are named after her. You’d think that a country that’s trying to show the vigor of its geriatric oligarch wouldn’t dress him in funereal...

The Database Center for North Korean Human Rights Holds a Discussion of its Archives

On August 26, the Database Center for North Korean Human Rights (NKDB) held a discussion about its Archives of North Korean human rights violations. The three-hour event took place at the Korean Bar Association, located near the Seocho subway station in southern Seoul. NKDB has catalogued thousands of incidents from thousands of individuals, and is constantly interviewing recent defectors. In addition, they have a consultation and support program for North Koreans and also for South Koreans who spent time against...

China: Ling and Lee Weren’t Seized on Our Territory

But they don’t say how the know, what they’re basing that conclusion on, or offer any further details to support that conclusion. The journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee said in an article in the Los Angeles Times (http:/link.reuters.com/cug44d) that they strayed into North Korean territory in March when visiting a frozen river that marked the border with China. They said they rushed back to the Chinese side but North Korean guards chased them and dragged them into North Korea....

North Korea’s Uranium Enrichment: Raising the Stakes

Umm, about that North Korean uranium enrichment program the Bush Administration made up …. North Korea said Friday that it is in the final stages of enriching uranium, a process that could give the nation a second way to make nuclear bombs in addition to its known plutonium-based program. North Korea informed the U.N. Security Council it is forging ahead with its nuclear programs in spite of international calls to abandon its atomic ambitions, the official Korean Central News Agency...

Hatoyama Denies Anti-Americanism; No Response on Whether He Eats the Sun for Breakfast

Just as I’d predicted, the new Japanese Prime Minister’s New York Times op-ed did not win him friends in the United States, although it may indeed have influenced people, and quite possibly drawn some concern from President Obama. Only not as Hatoyama might have hoped, since he’s now forced to backpedal and deny that he’s anti-American. At moments like this, you learn to appreciate Lee Myung Bak, with all his faults. Speaking as one whose emotions are easily whipsawed by...

Hope, Change, and Bigger Bombs

You can choose to dwell on the contradictions, or you can thank Zeus that we haven’t abandoned the whole notion of deterrence. Me being the glass-half-full sort, I choose the latter option and tip my hat to our president for understanding that it’s prudent to have a few “Massive Ordnance Penetrators” on the shelf as a backup to Hillary Clinton’s smooth, glib charm: The U.S. military wants to speed production of 10 to 12 huge “bunker buster” bombs, the Air...

The North Korean Army: Like an American Prison, Without the Conjugal Visits

Open Radio has a piece posted about North Korea’s prohibition of marriages by its soldiers. I wrote about this topic several years ago, at this post. Why? I can only speculate that the regime doesn’t want soldiers to think of their families, or any other ties that might conflict with the imperative to sacrifice for the state. Interesting as the story is, there must be more to it. The combination of horny soldiers with paychecks and women without the means...

Just What North Korea Needed: Another Death Camp

Just when I thought that North Korea couldn’t possibly find worse ways to spend its drug-and-gun money than nuclear weapons or the Ryugyong Hotel: Amid signs of mass defections as the international community began putting pressure on North Korea in the wake of its latest nuclear test, the regime in early May gave orders that no resident was to be allowed to flee the country, followed by a massive crackdown. The National Defense Commission gave village-to-village indoctrination lectures on a...

Laura Ling and Euna Lee Speak

Here are the paragraphs that answer the biggest question — where were they captured? Jodi had heard they were in North Korea. I had heard that they were in China. I’d assumed that we couldn’t both be right, but as it turns out, we both were: When we set out, we had no intention of leaving China, but when our guide beckoned for us to follow him beyond the middle of the river, we did, eventually arriving at the riverbank...

Commentary on the UAE Weapons Seizure

The shipment of RPG’s and detonators to Iran being akin to shipping snow to South Dakota in February, I continue to be curious about the ultimate destination for those weapons. Like GI Korea, I think it makes sense that Iran might have been using North Korea as a plausibly deniable source for weapons it planned to give to Shiite militias in Iraq, or to al Qaeda. Iran, after all, is a major manufacturer of antitank missiles, including RPG’s, in its...

In the New Ledger Today: Japan’s Unendurable New Prime Minister

I’ve expanded some on why I believe Japan’s new Prime Minister is a noob. To be fair, I wasn’t fond of his predecessor, either. Has anyone else noticed that the “allied” leaders who are the first to decry “unilateralism” and demand that we act more cooperatively are also the first to kick Americans in the teeth gratuitously? For the life of me, I can’t see how a suckle-and-bite approach to America is either diplomatic or multilateral, and I suspect that...