Hyundai’s Iron Ajumma

Updated 9/14: The Chosun Ilbo reports that anti-Unification Minister Chung Dong-Young intervened with Hyun, possibly in an attempt to have Kim Yoon-Kyu reinstated, but that his differences with Hyun were “wide.” Chun is not denying that he’s trying to cobble the NK-Hyundai partnership back together, according to this Joongang Ilbo piece: “The government has responsibilities,” pool press reports from Pyongyang quoted him as saying. “In principle, this is a business relationship between a private company and North Korea, but the...

Agnostics in Foxholes

The Chosun Ilbo thinks that by failing to speak out decisively against the MacArthur protests, Roh Moo-Hyun’s government is tacitly questioning the legitimacy of the Republic of Korea. I wouldn’t personally go quite that far, but its hesitancy to weigh in strongly on the rightness of the U.N. intervention–especially in the context of all of the interference it has run for Kim Jong Il–strikes me as conspicuously agnostic about how which system of government deserved, and therefore deserves, to prevail.

Musharraf Confirms A.Q. Khan Sold Centrifuges to North Korea

I wonder what Glenn Kessler and Dafna Lizner will say about this: President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan said yesterday that he believed that a Pakistani nuclear expert who ran the world’s largest proliferation ring exported “probably a dozen” centrifuges to North Korea to produce nuclear weapons fuel. But no bomb designs, as far as we know. Yes, fine. So can we now let go of the fiction that NK isn’t enriching uranium, a fiction that’s even impervious to confession? The...

The Yasukuni Shrine, History, and Revisionism

Today’s Chosun Ilbo has an excellent article on the subject. Definitely read the whole piece, which closes with this: Rather than ignore Yasukuni, Americans should participate in the debate about it, doing so from an American perspective. The US government should quietly discourage Prime Minister Koizumi and other officials from visiting Yasukuni. The government should also encourage Japan to reconsider establishing a non-political memorial dedicated solely to commemorating those who gave their lives, which would not include war criminals. Wish...

Conservative Bloggers Get The 9/11/05 Protests Wrong

[Update and Correction: Dammit. On rereading, I now realize that I missed the highly significant fact that these posts refer to this July protest. That was certainly my screw-up. Mea culpa. Nobody misread the relative turnout on that day because the conservatives apparently did outnumber the anti-Americans. But that’s not the end of the story. By all accounts, the highest turnout either day was on 9/11/05, and it belongs to the neo-Stalinists, at 4,000 violent, screaming, clubbing militants. That shifts...

Korean “Progressives” Send Message of Gratitude and Sympathy on 9/11: “Fucking USA!”

UPDATED; scroll down. You haven’t heard the last of this. Call it a prediction. The U.S. media was watching, but (thus far) doesn’t much seem to care. The U.S. government is watching and does. Update on that later. For now, here’s what happened, beginning with pictures from OhMyNews: Much, much more here. Here’s part of : The demonstration started off peacefully with singing, dancing and a speech by Democratic Labor Party central committee member Lee Jeong-mi, but turned violent after...

Linkburst

The International Herald Tribune has published a new piece on the North Korean refugee who applied to go back to visit his family–the same one Antti blogged about earlier. HT: The Nomad. ________________ The Nomad also links to a Yonhap report on another sad end for a group of nine North Korean refugees in China–including a seven-year-old child and a year-old baby. ________________ After nine painful and nauseating anthrax shots, now they tell us: North Korea Monday denied possessing ‘a...

The Lee Myung Bak Dossier

Asked about their preferences for the next president, 30 percent said they support former Prime Minister Goh Kun, while 16 percent backed Grand National Party chairwoman Park Geun-hye. Seoul Mayor Lee Myung-Bak and Unification Minister Chung Dong-young were third and fourth on the list with 15 percent and 10 percent, respectively. (emphasis mine) —The Joongang Ilbo, August 24, 2005 The Grand National Party’s top two contenders for the presidency both owe much to the legacy of Park Chung-Hee. If Ms....