A Self-Fulfilling Prophecy?

Original Post (0935): When I first reported that The American Enterprise had published an issue focusing on North Korea, I predicted “a panicked reaction in the Korean papers” unless they decided to ingore it. Thus far, that has not happened. Things might be about to change. Examining my visitors’ log today, I saw that KBS, the Korean Embassy, the Chosun Ilbo, and the Joongang Ilbo had been examining the post in great detail. Stay tuned. Update (2240): Well, that didn’t...

Axis

First Pakistan, then Libya, and now Iran. Who do we think we’re kidding about red lines? VIENNA (Reuters) – Recent intelligence reports accuse North Korea of secretly helping Iran develop its nuclear program, raising fresh concerns about Pyongyang’s nuclear proliferation and Tehran’s atomic intentions. . . . . “In the late 1990s, cooperation began between the two countries, which focused on nuclear (research and development),” said an intelligence report obtained from a non-U.S. diplomat. “There has been a significant improvement...

Whose Blockade?

A debate I’ve had too many times is the question of whether sanctions against North Korea are counterproductive to the goal of liberalizing North Korea. The “Trojan Horse” theory holds that if only the United States would drop its sanctions against North Korea and trade with the regime, consumer goods, DVDs, and Western culture would flood into the country and gradually reform it. It’s a great idea, actually. I happen to agree that contact with the outside world would have...

Roh Appoints Self President of the United States!

In his inaugural address, rules out U.S. military options against N. Korea: President Roh Moo Hyun declared Thursday that under no circumstances would South Korea allow the United States to resort to a military attack against North Korea. Roh made the comment while blaming the nuclear deadlock on the uncompromising attitudes of both North Korea, which he called “the most stubborn country in the world,” and the United States, which he described as the “most opinionated country in the world.”...

North Korea Publicly Shoots Christians

From the Joongang Ilbo: Citing interviews with North Korean defectors, a Seoul-based research institute said yesterday that the regime in Pyongyang is continuing an aggressive campaign to suppress underground churches in the country. The 2005 North Korea Human Rights White Paper published by the Korea Institute of National Unification reported a number of executions of religious figures operating underground Protestant churches in the North. In 2001, five people found guilty of conducting missionary work were executed by firing squad in...

Defectors as Reporters

Probably the most exciting new source of information about North Korea today is DailyNK, for which I’m honored to be a Correspondent in Washington (I take no credit for making up that title, and of course, it’s unpaid, like all of my activities on North Korea). Information from defectors, of course, comes with special cautions about biases as well as special insight. For all of its occasionally clumsy English (including my own), Daily NK is breaking new ground–by putting North...

Inflation Creates a North Korean “Dollar Economy”

Daily NK had one last fascinating report today, about North Korea’s worsening inflation and the burgeoning black market in dollars that has resulted. The dealers are increasingly sophisticated and brazen, plying their trade in front of major hotels and getting exchange rate updates by cell phone: High inflation is continuing in North Korea. Price of dollar in the blackmarkets in Pyongyang was â–² 950 Won/1$ in Nov. 2003 â–² 1,245 Won in May 2004, â–² 2,200Won in Feb 2005 and...

More Defections?

From the Joongang Ilbo: Citing an unidentified source with a group that supports North Korean defectors, Yonhap News Agency reported yesterday that 10 North Koreans entered a Korean international school in Qingdao, China, and requested asylum in South Korea. The source was quoted as saying that two men and eight women, all from Hamgyong province, entered the school through the front gate while students were leaving. This is a risky move. It’s doubtful that a school will have protected diplomatic...

Roh Wanes

Count Roh Moo-Hyun among those being swept back out to sea in the post-9/11 wave of anti-American passive-aggressiveness. Chirac is battered, Schroeder is finished, and now Roh may be forced into a potentially fractious coalition with the far-far-left Democratic Labor Party or the center-left Millenium Democratic Party, from which he broke in 2002 shortly after his election. In Korean politics, such coalitions have a history of extreme instability. It remains to be seen whether these parties can unite sufficiently to...

Historical Myopia

Senators Hillary Clinton and Carl Levin have an op-ed about North Korea’s nuclear program in today’s Washington Post. It is an unremarkable document in its failure to offer any new or novel suggestions for solving the seemingly insoluble problems that confront us now. As an attack on the Bush administration’s (lack of a) North Korean policy, it sets itself up for easy success. As a defense of Clinton-era policies that helped to make matters infinitely worse, it is remarkable for...

Exploitation Watch

From the Chosun Ilbo: Civic groups are demanding that Korea take over prosecution of the U.S. military driver whose truck killed a 51-year-old yogurt delivery woman in Dongducheon last month. An “emergency committee” including the Dongducheon Civil Association and the National Campaign for Eradication of Crime by U.S. Troops in Korea held a press conference in front of the government complex in Gwacheon on Monday to urge the Justice Ministry to wrest the investigation from U.S. military authorities. It will...

A Catastrophe Unfolds

Disturbing reports of a dramatically worsening famine continue to filter out of North Korea, notwithstanding the regime’s Maoist mobilization of schoolchildren and office workers to the countryside. It’s not working, according to South Korean agricultural expert Kang Jong-Man, via the L.A. Times: The rice paddies are thin and uneven. Potato plants are pale and stunted. The fields are not properly graded. Barley still on the stalks should have been harvested weeks ago so that the same fields could be used...