Arirang, Kim Jong Il, and the Wisdom of Muhammad Ali

The proper rejoinder to the plaintive whine, “Why do they hate us?” is “Are they nuts?” The Chosun Ilbo is the latest publication to beg the question after attending the international propaganda fiasco known as “Arirang.” In this case, the answer probably has a lot to do with the participants’ sheer terror of making the slightest mistake. The show aims to convince the audience that ruler Kim Jong Il and his late father, Kim Il Sung, have brought peace and...

Another Abstention

Shame on Roh Moo Hyun for yet another act of historic moral cowardice. Can I say this really surprises me? I mean, are you surprised? The bright side to this, if there is one, is that there’s a rapidly growing audience watching it all. Someone in South Korea must make a national issue of the human cost of appeasement. Someone must do what is right today, rather than rue this day before the next “Truth Commission” fifty years hence. Meanwhile,...

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N. Korean Man in Mexico to Seek Asylum in the United States The Hankuk Ilbo report said the 46-year-old man, who escaped from North Korea into China and then to Mexico, said he planned either to apply for refugee status at an American consulate there or cross the border illegally. If the man decides to apply for asylum, his would be the first such application since the passage of U.S. legislation intended to ease the way for North Koreans seeking...

Reliable Source: Widespread Crop Failures in NE North Korea

When I say reliable, you’re just going to have to trust me on this, because this person, M, has received the full Judith Miller no-rat guarantee. This person is telling the truth, and has a sufficient basis of knowledge to know what the truth is. M is a member of a Christian charity who recently returned from North Korea. The charity has multiple facilities that produce and/or distribute food. Recently, the charity was informed by the NK authorities that most...

Two More Cheers for the United Nations!

They’ll get three when this translates to action, but a new draft U.N. resolution, to be introduced to the General Assembly by the EU at the end of this month, is an outstanding new beginning after years of failure: The draft resolution, exclusively obtained by the Chosun Ilbo, expressed serious concern about North Korea’s rejection of UN humanitarian deliveries from the end of the year and urges the North to give humanitarian groups full access to the country so they...

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Latest Bi-Election Results–Another Uri Beating: Uri has lost all 4 seats that were up for grabs, 2 of which changed hands from Uri to GNP. In a likely upset, the far-left Democratic Labor Party appears to have lost a seat in a working-class area of Ulsan to the GNP. The results almost certainly marked the second successive lockout for President Roh Moo-hyun’s Uri Party in by-elections. In April, six vacant seats were contested; the Grand National Party won five, stripping...

Hillary Clinton Accuses S. Korea of ‘Historical Amnesia’

Korea-bashing is officially a bi-partisan sport: A newly hawkish U.S. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday chastised South Korea for what she claimed was a fog of “historical amnesia” clouding its relationship with Washington. She said the alliance was at a “critical juncture. Clinton’s comments came during the confirmation hearing for Gen. Burwell Bell, President Bush’s nominee to command USFK. Clinton said the U.S. role in bringing about South Korea’s remarkable economic success since the Korean War was significant, but...

Nope, No Axis Here

The New York Times, quoting high-level administration sources, is making the connection between U.S. law enforcement measures, the PSI, and diplomacy you’ve only seen here up to now: MOSCOW, Oct. 23 – The Bush administration is expanding what it calls “defensive measures” against North Korea, urging nations from China to the former Soviet states to deny overflight rights to aircraft that the United States says are carrying weapons technology, according to two senior administration officials. At the same time, the...

Nope, No Axis Here

The New York Times, quoting high-level administration sources, is making the connection between U.S. law enforcement measures, the PSI, and diplomacy you’ve only seen here up to now: MOSCOW, Oct. 23 – The Bush administration is expanding what it calls “defensive measures” against North Korea, urging nations from China to the former Soviet states to deny overflight rights to aircraft that the United States says are carrying weapons technology, according to two senior administration officials. At the same time, the...

The Mad Kingdom, Part I: Bleak Prognosis

This weekend, I was reading one of the old National Geographics that litter my house, and started reading “Albanians: A People Undone,” in the February 2000 issue. At the time, NATO had just moved into Kosovo, and Albania proper was emerging from the legacy of 40 nightmarishly oppressive years under dictator Enver Hoxha. In the late 1980’s, Hoxha and Kim Il Sung were two of the last leaders on earth commonly termed “Stalinist,” although regimes’ secular state religions drew heavily...

The Mad Kingdom, Part II: A Perfect Union of Imprisoned Minds

I am ready to pronounce a partial reversal of my view on North Korea’s Arirang Festival. For the little trifle that the North Korean regime hoped to earn from curious westerners or sympathetic South Koreans, they certainly did not expect to turn a profit. The real motives were domestic consumption and foreign propaganda–to show the world that North Korea is unified, stable, happy, and dangerous to any foe. If that was the motive, the resulting coverage fell dramatically short of...

The Mad Kingdom, Part I: Bleak Prognosis

This weekend, I was reading one of the old National Geographics that litter my house, and started reading “Albanians: A People Undone,” in the February 2000 issue. At the time, NATO had just moved into Kosovo, and Albania proper was emerging from the legacy of 40 nightmarishly oppressive years under dictator Enver Hoxha. In the late 1980’s, Hoxha and Kim Il Sung were two of the last leaders on earth commonly termed “Stalinist,” although regimes’ secular state religions drew heavily...

The Mad Kingdom, Part II: A Perfect Union of Imprisoned Minds

I am ready to pronounce a partial reversal of my view on North Korea’s Arirang Festival. For the little trifle that the North Korean regime hoped to earn from curious westerners or sympathetic South Koreans, they certainly did not expect to turn a profit. The real motives were domestic consumption and foreign propaganda–to show the world that North Korea is unified, stable, happy, and dangerous to any foe. If that was the motive, the resulting coverage fell dramatically short of...

The Guardian: NK ‘Resistance Cell’ Took Execution Video

The Guardian, via SMH, reports that the North Korean excecution video, which you can now see with English narration, courtesy of The Korean Mediator, was the product of an organized North Korean resistance movement: The footage, secretly filmed in March, is evidence of a resistance network. “If he [the cameraman] had been caught, the punishment would almost certainly have been death,” said Jung-Eun Kim, an American-Korean journalist who has spent seven years monitoring the growth of the resistance movement. The...

Thank You Again, Mongolia

The New York Times describes how the Mongolians put Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld into something of a fix by presenting him with a horse that didn’t exactly fit onto his airborne command center. Rumsfeld, echoing my own observation about the similarity of Mongolia’s countryside to God’s Country, called the young buckskin “Montana” (on the grand scale of the American West, my home town is right next door). “Buckskin,” by the way, is a term used by us simple country folk,...

Hariri Murder Will Be a Test for the United Nations

Until now, I’ve usually been in the “overhaul dramatically” camp, as opposed to the “scrap now” camp, when it comes to the United Nations. But if Syria gets away with the murder of the former Prime Minister of Lebanon with facing serious international sanctions, I’ll be ready to declare the whole institution to be completely incompetent (as opposed to almost completely incompetent) as the arbiter of world affairs it seeks to become. As usual, John Bolton adds needed clarity (via...