Chung Dong-young: Unilateralist

Someone, please cement this man’s mouth shut. I recommend some kind of epoxy-based, waterproof construction adhesive. Yes, the “main enemy” designation is mostly semantic, but it’s also symbolic. I’d even say that the anti-American demonstrations and sentiment–though illogical, in light of the real abuses in the North–are expressions of free speech and assembly. What they mean is that U.S. protection is not serving U.S. political goals, which raises a question for U.S. defense policy. Perhaps Hyde should have brought up...

Breaking the Information Blockade

North Korea is losing–indeed, has probably lost–what Mao termed “the political struggle.” I just don’t have time to comment on this NY Times piece in detail now, but it’s an absolute must-read. The system’s hold on the minds of the people has never looked so shaky. So just how easy is it for a North Korean to break the blockade these days? “He just dials 0082 to get the Korean-speaking Chinese operator, then makes a collect call to here,” Mr....

Chung Dong-young: Unilateralist

Someone, please cement this man’s mouth shut. I recommend some kind of epoxy-based, waterproof construction adhesive. Yes, the “main enemy” designation is mostly semantic, but it’s also symbolic. I’d even say that the anti-American demonstrations and sentiment–though illogical, in light of the real abuses in the North–are expressions of free speech and assembly. What they mean is that U.S. protection is not serving U.S. political goals, which raises a question for U.S. defense policy. Perhaps Hyde should have brought up...

Breaking the Information Blockade

North Korea is losing–indeed, has probably lost–what Mao termed “the political struggle.” I just don’t have time to comment on this NY Times piece in detail now, but it’s an absolute must-read. The system’s hold on the minds of the people has never looked so shaky. So just how easy is it for a North Korean to break the blockade these days? “He just dials 0082 to get the Korean-speaking Chinese operator, then makes a collect call to here,” Mr....

The Death of an Alliance, Part III

Today, it’s the Brookings Institution . . . in the Washington Times, meaning that we’re not merely facing the death of the alliance, but the Apocalypse. For those of you from outside the Beltway, Brookings is a left-of-center foreign policy think tank that’s been supportive of negotiations with North Korea, often in the face of evidence that those negotiations have bought us little. Jack Pritchard has a job there, which might normally settle the matter. Author Richard Halloran, however, has...

Understanding South Korea Today

Two South Korean protestors today at which of the following locations? a. The American Embassy, after a U.S. soldier was accused of bending the antenna on his Korean neighbor’s new Hyundai Chairman; b. The Chinese Embassy, to protest China’s forcible deportations of thousands of North Koreans to nearly certain death; c. The U.N. mission, to protest that organization’s failure to act forcefully to protect North Koreans’ human rights; d. The Unification Ministry, to protest against North Korea’s splurging on arms...

The Death of an Alliance, Part III

Today, it’s the Brookings Institution . . . in the Washington Times, meaning that we’re not merely facing the death of the alliance, but the Apocalypse. For those of you from outside the Beltway, Brookings is a left-of-center foreign policy think tank that’s been supportive of negotiations with North Korea, often in the face of evidence that those negotiations have bought us little. Jack Pritchard has a job there, which might normally settle the matter. Author Richard Halloran, however, has...

And in the naked light, I saw . . .

Update 11/28: Welcome TKS readers, to Washington’s most influential Web log on humanitarian, political, and military developments on the Korean peninsula. Stop by and visit the main page, or check the sidebar for fiskings, analysis, and first-hand reports, including your correspondent’s November 16th meeting with Ambassador John Bolton, as part of a delegation of the North Korean Freedom Coalition. ——————————– One million people, maybe more. Or put another way, about 30% of the total population of Lebanon, which includes infants,...

Understanding South Korea Today

Two South Korean protestors today at which of the following locations? a. The American Embassy, after a U.S. soldier was accused of bending the antenna on his Korean neighbor’s new Hyundai Chairman; b. The Chinese Embassy, to protest China’s forcible deportations of thousands of North Koreans to nearly certain death; c. The U.N. mission, to protest that organization’s failure to act forcefully to protect North Koreans’ human rights; d. The Unification Ministry, to protest against North Korea’s splurging on arms...

And in the naked light, I saw . . .

Update 11/28: Welcome TKS readers, to Washington’s most influential Web log on humanitarian, political, and military developments on the Korean peninsula. Stop by and visit the main page, or check the sidebar for fiskings, analysis, and first-hand reports, including your correspondent’s November 16th meeting with Ambassador John Bolton, as part of a delegation of the North Korean Freedom Coalition. ——————————– One million people, maybe more. Or put another way, about 30% of the total population of Lebanon, which includes infants,...

The Death of an Alliance, Part II

Add the Asian Wall Street Journal and Thomas Barnett (The Pentagon’s New Map) to the list of those who’ve noticed that the United States and South Korea suffer from a visible lack of common interests and policies these days. The ASWJ said friction between Seoul and Washington was particularly intense over the joint North-South Kaesong Industrial Project. In the first stage of the project alone, 300 Korean companies were scheduled to employ 75,000 North Korean laborers and invest US$9.6 billion...

The Death of an Alliance, Part II

Add the Asian Wall Street Journal and Thomas Barnett (The Pentagon’s New Map) to the list of those who’ve noticed that the United States and South Korea suffer from a visible lack of common interests and policies these days. The ASWJ said friction between Seoul and Washington was particularly intense over the joint North-South Kaesong Industrial Project. In the first stage of the project alone, 300 Korean companies were scheduled to employ 75,000 North Korean laborers and invest US$9.6 billion...

North Korea Tries to Crush Dissent Along Its Borders

Chosun Ilbo correspondent Kang Chol-Hwan has a disturbing new report on a North Korean crackdown on dissent and efforts to destroy evidence of the regime’s atrocities. Kang himself is a survivor of North Korea’s Yodok labor camp district, a complex of camps that covers a vast, remote area of northeaster North Korea. Kang was sent to Yodok while still in elementary school because of a political transgression by his grandfather. You can read the full story in his autobiography. The...

How Many Divisions Does the EU Have?

It must be the dumbest thing I’ve heard all year. The EU, which– lacks any military relevance to Northeast Asia other than its anxiousness to arm China; has done (along with its member states) virtually nothing to contribute to the security of Northeast Asia since 1953; has an abyssimal diplomatic record even on its own continent; wants a seat at the six-party table. How typical of them to wait until North Korea completely walked away, revealing the nullity of the...

111073291395521318

Greatness Comes from Goodness: The paleo-right in America, of which George W. Bush is a reformed member, never tired of expressing its derision for “nation-building,” questioning its value to U.S. interests and deriding the lives thus saved as so many drops in an ocean of misery. In fact, our nation-building exercises have not always been planned, accepted, and executed intelligently, but those that were saved thousands of lives. There simply isn’t another force on earth that can move and deliver...

How Many Divisions Does the EU Have?

It must be the dumbest thing I’ve heard all year. The EU, which– lacks any military relevance to Northeast Asia other than its anxiousness to arm China; has done (along with its member states) virtually nothing to contribute to the security of Northeast Asia since 1953; has an abyssimal diplomatic record even on its own continent; wants a seat at the six-party table. How typical of them to wait until North Korea completely walked away, revealing the nullity of the...