Iraq and 9/11 Redux

No connection whatsoever, right? Well, staking your argument on proving a negative is always exceedingly hazardous terrain, especially when there’s compelling evidence to contradict you. It’s not proof beyond a reasonable doubt, but since when do we give secretive, opaque regimes the benefit of a standard that was designed for jury trials conducted after open-file discovery? The greater point, of course, is that as the Sunni insurgency slowly recedes, our enemy in Iraq is increasingly the same group that attacked...

Chris Nelson on The Press

Recently, a reporter named Chris Nelson, since retired and gone into the consulting business, made the mistake of preparing a confidential report for the South Korean Embassy in Washington, and then erroneously sending that report to his entire list of hundreds of e-mail newsletter subscribers. Two different anonymous sources sent me copies of the report, and the Washington Post has since covered the story of its accidental disclosure. I have decided that at least one section of the Nelson Report...

Remembering Megumi Yokota

Tonight, I’ll be trying to crash a screening of a new film about Megumi Yokota, produced by Safari Media. Here, courtesy of Norbert Vollertsen, is an article about her in Christianity Today. Here is a previous blog post on North Korea’s handover of remains which it claims were hers, but weren’t. And one more. UPDATE: I have so much more to say about this film than I have time to say now. The fund-raiser last night was a spectacular success,...

WaPo on The Nelson Report

You heard it here first. Hat tip: my deep cover source, who I’ll just call Mister Bigglesworth. Nelson, a former UPI reporter and House and Senate staffer, rails at some reporters’ coverage — New York Times reporter David Sanger “is dishonest by omission,” Washington Times reporter Bill Gertz is “dishonest by commission.” He then referred to himself in the third person, saying that his work “has established a position of influence by sheer persistence and focus,” and ” ‘everyone’ talks...

The Nelson Report and The Foreign Agents’ Registration Act

There is a leaked report circulating in Washington today from the author of “The Nelson Report.” The Nelson Report is a Jack Pritchard’s-eye-view paid subscription version of what Korea bloggers give out for free, just not as well written or sourced. Apparently, Nelson was commissioned by the ROK Embassy in Washington to write a summary of who’s who in Washington’s Korea policy-making. My source informs me that the author, who wrote that he’d have to seek political asylum if the...

The New U.S. Ambassador

UPDATE: Welcome FARK readers. No, the full text of the Nelson Report is NOT here (it was dropped in a comment, which I deleted) although you can read part of it here, explaining the South Korean government is trying to influence American media against talking about the political cleansing of 2 million innocent people in North Korea. There are many more substantive posts relating to human rights in North Korea and regional policy here. UPDATE 2: Here’s something else the...

One is called “Dick;” the other one is the Vice President

As predicted, the truth of what took place during the Bush-Roh meeting is starting to leak out from behind the U.S. and Korean governments’ message machine. The “left” faction of Uri, as represented by Anti-Unification Minister (of Silly Talks) Chung Dong-Young, appears to want a do-over, and Chung has stepped up and declared himself the man for the job. Seoul’s most pliable man is now on his way to Washington to bring fresh tidings of the reformed man formerly known...

Jasper Becker on Appeasement

More required reading from Jasper Becker. Thanks to Norbert Vollertsen for the hat tip. What is this nagging inconsistency about the region’s North Korea diplomacy? Becker articulates: Anyone proposing to offer Kim cast-iron security guarantees and unconditional aid thus has to engage in a kind of “double think.” They must ignore their better instincts in order to justify engaging him and simultaneously believe that, given his track record, he is capable of unleashing nuclear weapons. Chinese diplomats routinely claim that...

THE PRICE OF A NUCLEAR FREE NORTH KOREA & REUNIFICATION

A major justification of South Korea’s unification policy is that by continuing to help North Korea, through the “Sunshine Policy,” they are facilitating both an atmosphere conducive to good relations and a way to help North Korea rebuild itself. The idea is that if North Korea is more prosperous, it will be able to rebuild some of its own infrastructure, thus reducing the cost of reunification in the future. Besides overlooking the glaringly obvious fact that if North Korea is...

Nicholas Eberstadt: “Bring Them Home”

This is your must-reading of the day. Nicholas Eberstadt has a new piece out in The Weekly Standard. Here’s a sample. Not far from Seoul–maybe a half hour’s journey north, by jet plane–an untold number of terrified Koreans are hiding in a foreign land, engaged in a grave and uncertain struggle for survival. . . . These wretched vagabonds–most of them women and children–are escapees from North Korea. They have crossed the Yalu and the Tumen into China in tiny...

One is called “Dick;” the other one is the Vice President

As predicted, the truth of what took place during the Bush-Roh meeting is starting to leak out from behind the U.S. and Korean governments’ message machine. The “left” faction of Uri, as represented by Anti-Unification Minister (of Silly Talks) Chung Dong-Young, appears to want a do-over, and Chung has stepped up and declared himself the man for the job. Seoul’s most pliable man is now on his way to Washington to bring fresh tidings of the reformed man formerly known...