Category: Anju Links

25 June 2010

AFP is reporting that two Chinese traders, suspected of espionage, were beaten to death in North Korea. According to South Korea’s Yonhap new agency, which quoted unnamed sources in Beijing, the two traders from the northeastern province of Jilin were allegedly killed during a trip to the North’s border city of Manpo. “We have noted the report. We are seeking to confirm it,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters without further comment. The report said North Korea was...

22 June 2010

The Chinese are blocking U.N. action against their North Korean clients for sinking the Cheonan, and the Russians are playing dumb and stalling, but I’m sure that President Lee takes comfort that he has the full moral backing of the European Parliament and Central America. The Europarl resolution also “expressed disappointment with China and Russia for failing to take a clear position on the issue.” ___________________ South Korea will expand its role in the Proliferation Security Initiative: “We have decided...

18 June 2010

You know, it’s as if Michael Gerson reads this blog or something: There are limits to the policy of isolation. Given that North Koreans did not revolt when millions were dying of starvation in the mid-1990s, it is difficult to imagine that economic pressure alone will bring down a committed, completely ruthless regime that cares nothing for the opinion of the world or the lives of its own people. The most fragile thing about the North Korean regime is the...

15 June 2010

Here’s more on that report of a ration cut in North Korea, which is sourced to Good Friends: The chairman of the Good Friends organization, based in South Korea, Pomnyun Sunim, says this is taking place because the North Korean government can no longer keep its citizens from starving. The Buddhist monk says the ruling communist party issued a directive May 26th that work units and individuals should fend for themselves. He says this can be understood as either a...

11 June 2010

So, did you hear about Lee Myung Bak’s plot to kill Kim Jong Il? ___________________________ Sure, the idea that we can punish North Korea for sinking the Cheonan by staging some event at the World Cup is absurd in itself, but hey, it’s still not as dumb as blaring K-pop over loudspeakers at the DMZ. It might have some merit in the context of a broader campaign of subversion, which doesn’t appear to be taking shape. ___________________________ There aren’t many...

2 June 2010

Japan’s unendurable Prime Minister, Yukio Hatoyama, has resigned over his unfulfillable promise to close the Futenma U.S. Marine Corps Base on Okinawa. Good riddance. Although the Futenma issue was the direct cause of Hatoyama’s fall, North Korea’s sinking of the Cheonan forced Hatoyama to climb down on Futenma, which means that Hatoyama’s political career was the one casualty of the Cheonan Incident I won’t mourn. _______________ Jay Solomon of the Wall Street Journal writes that big changes may be coming...

1 June 2010

How many years have I been saying this? CHINA HAS BEEN treating its neighbors, and the world, to a demonstration of why its rising power is not necessarily to be welcomed. Though it has become undeniable that its neighbor and client, North Korea, committed an act of war by sinking a South Korean warship in March, Beijing continues to shield the loathsome regime of Kim Jong Il. [Washington Post Editorial] ______________________ I wonder how many regimes’ archives will have to...

28 May 2010

Axis, Schmaxis: “The seven-member panel monitoring sanctions against North Korea said in a report obtained by The Associated Press late Thursday that its research indicates that Pyongyang is involved in banned nuclear and ballistic activities in Iran, Syria and Myanmar.“ ______________________ Japan is moving to tighten restrictions on cash remittances to North Korea, and may authorize its coast guard to inspect North Korean ships in international waters. That would be a bold move, because North Korean vessels have previously refused...

26 May 2010

Belle, grosse linques for Curtis and me from Le Monde today. Bienvenue! ______________________ Or, maybe they’re just assholes: The Washington Post asks the timeless question of why the North Koreans behave like North Koreans. ______________________ A former North Korean army officer, now living in London, plots to overthrow the regime. ______________________ Bruce Bechtol thinks the North Koreans’ objective is to move the sea boundary south. Although the theories aren’t mutually exclusive, I continue to favor the B.R. Myers theory that...

17 May 2010

Did China Refuse Aid for Kim Jong Il? I’ll believe that when North Korea runs out of money for yachts, cars, and glass for the Ryugyong Hotel. At most, they may have delayed it to express their annoyance over the sinking of the Cheonan. This could also be disinformation for the foreign press. ___________________________ China will supply North Korea with cheering fans for the World Cup so that Kim Jong Il can keep his people at home. Remember, it’s all...

14 May 2010

So, I suppose some of you probably have questions for Laura and Lisa Ling: ask them here. My own comment is in moderation as I write this. _______________________ We are all necons: Colin Powell says that Kim Jong Il will face the judgment of history. It would have been better yet had Powell done less, as Secretary of State, to defer that judgment. _______________________ In China, that paradise of socialist equality, the price of female human beings is soaring: Young...

13 May 2010

To most, a joke; to a few, a nightmare: Did you hear the one about North Korea claiming to have achieved nuclear fusion? Something tells me that my banner image will still be good for the time being. _______________________ Like most things about North Korea, its World Cup team looks rather strange to foreign eyes. _______________________ Another North Korean man has defected to the South by sea. _______________________ The Chosun Ilbo talks about North Korea’s special forces, and the damage...

10 May 2010: If They’ve Lost Fred Hiatt ….

If China really is “a moderating, useful influence” over North Korea, why did it roll out the red carpet for Kim Jong Il and reportedly offer him a $100 million bailout while it is the prime suspect in an action as dangerous and provocative as sinking the Cheonan? Suddenly, another bulb goes on at the Post: Despite all the time spent in six-party talks in recent years, and all the discussion of China’s new role as a “responsible stakeholder” and...

6 May 2010

Another reason not to hike the DMZ these days: NORTH Korea has completed deployment of about 50,000 special forces along the border with South Korea, a report said on Wednesday, amid high tensions over the sinking of a Seoul warship. The deployment began two or three years ago and seven 7,000-strong divisions are now in place, an unidentified senior government official told Yonhap news agency. __________________ North Korea’s “unofficial spokesman” Kim Myong Chol has constructed an elaborate theory blaming the...

4 May 2010

The Wall Street Journal rips into W.H.O. Director-General and useful idiot Margaret Chan. The fact of Ms. Chan’s origins in Hong Kong raise the obvious suspicion that she’d never have gotten her current job without the backing of the China’s oligarchy in Beijing. And given the vast gulf between China’s views on health and human rights and ours, this is a good illustration of why the United Nations will never be united by a common purpose or outlook. Instead, some...

1 May 2010

Must Read No. 1: Nicholas Eberstadt on the importance of striving for unification. North Korea’s present leadership will surely wish to ratchet up its threat to America and the Western alliance in the years ahead. It is entirely reasonable to anticipate Pyongyang’s eventual sale of nukes to hostile powers or international terror networks. The regime has already marketed abroad practically everything in its nuclear warehouse short of user-ready bombs. Even worse, there are troubling signs–repeated nuclear tests, continuing missile tests,...

27 April 2010

South Korea is considering cutting aid to, and trade with North Korea in response to the North’s seizure of assets at Kumgang: The government is reportedly considering limiting the volume of agricultural and marine products from North Korea or tightening regulation of imports in other ways. Certain North Korean items, such as sand, hard coal and mushrooms, already require the unification minister’s approval each time someone wants to bring them into the South. Seoul could expand the number of such...

25 April 2010: N. Korea Desperate to Plug News Leaks

The North Korean authorities are hunting for those clandestine correspondents who give us those independent reports about events in North Korea as if the regime’s very existence depends on it: A radio broadcaster run by North Korean defectors here reported this week that security guards in Hoeryeong, North Hamgyeong Province, directed its residents to turn in photos of their family members who have been missing from 2005. If the families say that these photos have been lost, security guards pay...