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Hooray, You're Number 3

April 1, 2009:  Last Fall, the North Korean government sought to control the growing importance of the free markets, by restricting how often they could be open, and what goods they could sell. These new rules have largely been ignored. The police assigned to monitor the markets were simply ignored, or bribed. No one higher up in the security services bothered to press the issue, another indicator of how essential the free markets have become amid North Korea's crumbling economy. The torture has been known about for many years, because some of the North Korea escaping into China had been in the work camps, or had kin who had, and it was common knowledge in the north. The "torture" is usually physical punishment (not an attempt to obtain information), and meant to intimidate the population and instill fear.

The UN dispensed with its usually diplomatic approach and openly accused North Korea of torturing thousands of prisoners in work camps, and denying over a third of the population food aid. Several weeks ago, North Korea told the U.S. to halt food shipments, and ordered five foreign aid groups that supervised the distribution of food aid, to leave North Korea. This sort of self-destructive behavior has been used before to get attention, and obtain other goals (diplomatic or material). But of late, things are bizarre even by North Korean standards. There appears to be a power struggle and debate going on within the North Korea leadership. Not many details are getting out, and the recent  punishments meted out to some senior officials who gossiped about the activities of the most senior officials, has caused usually reliable sources to clam up. There is growing hunger in many parts of the country, which is made worse by the military going out and taking food from farmers. The troops are not as well fed as they used to be, and they often suffered, along with the civilians, from power and fuel shortages this past Winter.

For years, Kim Jong Il was rated (by using various rankings of national problems and achievement) the worst ruler on the planet. But this year, Kim Jong Il came in third place, behind Zimbabwe (Robert Mugabe) and Sudan (Omar al Bashir). Things haven't gotten any better in North Korea, they've just gotten much worse in Zimbabwe and Sudan.

The North Korean media show, featuring a threatened ballistic missile launch, continues. China seems unconcerned, but all of North Korea's other neighbors have urged that the launch be scrapped. Both Japan and the U.S. have moved Aegis equipped warships to the North Korea coast. These vessels have weapons that can shoot down the North Korean missile. The U.S. said it will not do so, but the Japanese say they will. North Korea says that would be considered an act of war. South Korea and Japan insist that the North Korean launch violates UN sanctions. The entire affair is yet another effort by North Korea to remain in the headlines.  

March 20, 2009: For the second time in two weeks, North Korea has closed its border with South Korea. This meant that trade with the South Korean industrial zone in North Korea was interrupted. As before, the border was opened after a day or two.

March 17, 2009:  Two American journalists were seized by North Korea border guards, as the two women photographed activity in North Korea from the Chinese side of the border. The North Korea guards crossed the border and dragged the women into North Korea, after the women, ignored orders to put their cameras away. North Korea later said the two Americans would be tried for spying. The U.S. will have to trade something valuable to get these two back, which is why North Korea grabbed them in the first place.

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Herald12345    Thje US needs martyrs.....    4/1/2009 8:13:25 AM
and Al Gore's two reporters obliged (Current TV). Let's see if Jimmy Carter, BHO, or he lift a finger to save them?

Herald
 
 
 
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enomosiki       4/1/2009 9:32:11 AM
Lets face it; North Korea is one of the few parasites in the world that hasn't done anything in terms of benefitting the human society in any way possible. And then there's China, pretending as if it doesn't have anything to do with the entire clusterfuck in the region despite the fact that it's pretty much responsible for keeping this malignant cancer going since the '50s, not to mention allying itself with and supporting no one but a whole bunch of rogue states, yet it can't help but to wonder why the rest of the world makes a laughing stock out of it.
 
The only way to slap some reality into North Korea is to completely bypass China during negotiations and cut off their aid. The U.S. pretty much lost the only chance to do it effectively when Truman fired MacArthur.
 
Here's to hope that North Korea will end up imploding soon enough and ROK/U.S. forces rushing into the country before the Chinese can.
 
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cwDeici       4/2/2009 10:21:20 PM
I agree with you, only I think we should all invade them.
 
Blaming us (China) is fair, but saying that we are a laughing stock is wrong. You've given us way too much money, silk gloves and etc. for that. And now it's too late.
 
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cwDeici       4/2/2009 10:24:14 PM
Perhaps cutting off aid would be more humane... then again they'd starve more until collapsing. It'd be better on SK, that's for sure.
 
Anyway, as I was saying China played a deft game of pulling in money for a long time, till Tianamen square (which forced China to clean up it's act which benefited it immensely) June the 4'th. Now we're too big not to be given respect (size counts for a lot in the world).
 
I do wish we'd stop supporting Sudan and Zimbabwe of all regimes though. *sigh*
 
In the event of a new war China would probably side with the West to secure NK land as a bargaining chip and to clean it up.
 
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Chuang Shyue Chou       4/3/2009 4:43:42 AM
Given Kim Jong Il's health problems and his sucession problem, it is possible that we may just be seeing the last legs of this strange state. Without Kim helming a cult of personality, it is questionable if a new leader or a child of Kim would have the ability to hold the nation together. From what I have read, his children are not strong characters, well regarded or feared.
 
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Photon       4/7/2009 12:24:55 AM
Personally, I would not mind seeing each and every one from the North Korean leadership be put to long, excruciating torture during interrogation, followed by criminal prosecution, then conclude with horrific series of executions to finish off the bad circus known as DPRK.
 
However ......
 
As it stands right now, I do not see much enthusiasm for the implosion of North Korea, especially China and S. Korea.  Not only N. Korea has become a political scum of the world, but also an economic one.  Literally an 'ugly duckling' that no one really wants to deal with, and definitely not if it involves having to open up one's wallet pretty deeply!
 
But the way things have been going since the early '90s, N. Korea may end up imploding anyway (more or less continuous stream of unaudited humanitarian aid and other sorts of bribes have kept it going so far) and catches both China and S. Korea not too well prepared for dealing with such massive humanitarian plight blowing up right in front of their faces.  (Although I think both of them will not mind the expenses incurred from 'intensive care unit' that is keeping N. Korea under 'life support' at present rate.)
 
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