North Korea must choose either to have a future or to have nuclear weapons "but it cannot have them both"

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scholars/academics who specialize in north korean politics i should clarify

i n f i n i t y (∞), Thursday, 20 April 2017 22:48 (seven years ago) link

Has anybody read that The Impossible State by Victor Cha which is a 2013 book by a White house staffer that apparently coversa lotof the history of the country. Just wondering if it is worth picking up.
I just came across it watching through old news satire shows but that was asa serious guest. & I just wonder if it is still worth looking at?

Stevolende, Thursday, 20 April 2017 22:51 (seven years ago) link

you've asked that twice now and no one has answered so i'll give my two cents

i have not read it and never picked it up because my understanding is that it does not deviate from standard us interpretation of nk and it contains pretty egregious errors

have you read the peninsula question by yoichi funabashi?

i n f i n i t y (∞), Thursday, 20 April 2017 23:05 (seven years ago) link

i read "the cleanest race" this week and it's a very quick + provocative take on the ideology of the state + regime.

Mordy, Thursday, 20 April 2017 23:13 (seven years ago) link

http://www.dailynk.com/english/read.php?cataId=nk00100&num=14480

North Korea is actively using pro-North websites and social media networks to encourage a fear of war in an apparent attempt to influence South Korea's upcoming snap presidential election.

...

It has also been noted that North Korea is actually using the hard-line policy of the Trump administration to influence South Korea's 19th presidential election. North Korea appears to have divided South Korea's presidential candidates into two groups, which it labels the 'peace-seeking group versus violence-seeking group’, and is criticizing the possibility of a preemptive strike.

"North Korea is likely to make the best of the frame of 'war versus peace,' following the Trump administration's mention of a preemptive strike on North Korea. Some predict that reckless military provocations will have the opposite effect. But North Korea appears to be confident in the belief that a fear of war will induce voters to support its best interests," Yoo pointed out.

Some analysts note that the South Korean government should take careful measures against North Korea's blatant electoral intervention. "We should be prepared for limited military provocations by North Korea in its efforts to spread a fear of war during the election period," Yoo added, warning that if the South Korean government responds passively to Pyongyang's provocations, it can expect far greater security threats in terms of Pyongyang's interference with the election.

...

Kim Jin, a former editorial writer at the Korea Joongang Daily, commented at the seminar that, "Now it is a time for the so-called 'strongmen' including Trump of the US, Xi of China and Abe of Japan. But we have an unprecedented power vacuum due to the impeachment of the president. The nature of the next presidency will decide the future of South Korea and its people."

i n f i n i t y (∞), Friday, 21 April 2017 17:39 (seven years ago) link

this is an intense time to be alive. so many things seem to be on edge right now.

Karl Malone, Friday, 21 April 2017 21:31 (seven years ago) link

just bored of strategic patience tbh

Brexterminate all the brutes (Noodle Vague), Friday, 21 April 2017 21:35 (seven years ago) link

hey obama is "breaking his silence"

i n f i n i t y (∞), Friday, 21 April 2017 21:37 (seven years ago) link

Barry hasn't been notably silent in this household. We've had about three dozen robo-calls from him since he left office, that all start with a cheery "Hi! This is Barack!"

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Friday, 21 April 2017 22:15 (seven years ago) link

the book excerpt quoted here a few days ago is pretty chilling. weird how nobody ever talks about the korean war now.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 21 April 2017 22:19 (seven years ago) link

Was this posted/mentioned?

http://www.npr.org/2017/04/21/525010775/nuclear-researchers-spot-north-korean-volleyball-games

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

As North Korea keeps the U.S. guessing about its next moves, American analysts are relying on high-resolution satellite imagery to see what Pyongyang is up to. And for the past eight weeks, they have observed a lot of stepped-up activity at Punggye-ri. This is the same place where five nuclear tests have been staged. And Joseph Bermudez of the website 38north.org says these big loads of dirt have been moved there and that it's a possible sign of tunneling.

JOSEPH BERMUDEZ: This leads us to the conclusion that they have prepared the facility for a new nuclear test. Everything is in place.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Bermudez has studied North Korea for 35 years, and he cautions that analyzing satellite imagery is not as simple as just watching for the dump trucks.

BERMUDEZ: North Korea practices what we in the West call camouflage, concealment and deception.

INSKEEP: It could be a head fake for all we know, but Bermudez never expected to see this.

BERMUDEZ: We looked at the Punggye-ri Nuclear Test Facility, and we identified three volleyball games being conducted.

GREENE: Yes, he said volleyball.

BERMUDEZ: The presence of three groups of people playing three separate volleyball games at the nuclear facility is very unusual. We've seen occasionally one game over the past several years. But all of a sudden to have three is quite unusual.

GREENE: Now, he says this could mean that all the preparations for a nuclear test are complete and the personnel are being allowed some downtime. Or it could be the North Koreans were effectively waving hello to the satellite.

BERMUDEZ: This leads us to the conclusion that they're trying to send a message to us. What that message is isn't necessarily clear. It could be, one, that they're trying to tell us they are not going to test. Two is they could be trying to deceive us into believing they're not going to test but they are going to test.

GREENE: Or three, maybe they just like volleyball.

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 21 April 2017 22:29 (seven years ago) link

quality kremlinology there

Οὖτις, Friday, 21 April 2017 22:33 (seven years ago) link

maybe they have a tournament going on

El Tomboto, Friday, 21 April 2017 22:46 (seven years ago) link

Xxp

I read that

It's bullshit

Activities for military like that are not unusual

Military are expected to have some outlet outside of military life, especially in down time

i n f i n i t y (∞), Friday, 21 April 2017 22:47 (seven years ago) link

The US should call their bluff and challenge them to a volleyball tournament.

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 21 April 2017 22:50 (seven years ago) link

Spike in activity

virginity simple (darraghmac), Friday, 21 April 2017 23:49 (seven years ago) link

lock thread

El Tomboto, Saturday, 22 April 2017 00:40 (seven years ago) link

we can pause to savor a while when a great wit makes his mark, but ilx marches on and so must we.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Saturday, 22 April 2017 01:41 (seven years ago) link

that...doesn't seem good

Karl Malone, Monday, 24 April 2017 17:24 (seven years ago) link

https://kr.nknews.org/번역완-에어차이나-북경-평양-노선-5월5일-재개/

중국국제항공(에어차이나)이 오는 5월5일부터 베이징-평양 항공편을 운항 재개한다. 이는 지난 3월 말 NK 뉴스 소식통들이 올해 남은 기간 동안 중국국제항공이 해당 노선 운항을 중단할 것이라고 전했던 것과는 상반된 소식이다.

sorry for the korean article. the english version requires membership

air china will resume flights from beijing to pyongyang starting may 5

i n f i n i t y (∞), Monday, 24 April 2017 17:31 (seven years ago) link

that...doesn't seem good

― Karl Malone, Monday, April 24, 2017 5:24 PM (ten minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

seems like a first 100 days stunt to me.. but you know its not an accurate measure, or was it really technically 100 days because trump hasnt really been thinking hard about much until recently.

officer sonny bonds, lytton pd (mayor jingleberries), Monday, 24 April 2017 17:36 (seven years ago) link

AP story, as written, seems to assume that all 100 senators will obediently go to this briefing, just because all 100 were invited. This is the sort of thing senators resist, because it implies publically that they are not a co-equal branch to the president. The more usual attitude would be "let them come here if they have something to say."

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 24 April 2017 17:38 (seven years ago) link

^^^

Οὖτις, Monday, 24 April 2017 17:39 (seven years ago) link

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/twenty-five-million-reasons-the-us-cant-strike-north-korea/2017/04/21/47df9fea-2513-11e7-928e-3624539060e8_story.html

North Korea has “a tremendous amount of artillery” right opposite Seoul, said Joseph S. Bermudez Jr., a senior imagery analyst at 38 North, a website focused on North Korea.

The Second Corps of the Korean People’s Army stationed at Kaesong on the northern side of the DMZ has about 500 artillery pieces, Bermudez said. And this is just one army corps; similar corps are on either side of it.

All the artillery pieces in the Second Corps can reach the northern outskirts of Seoul, just 30 miles from the DMZ, but the largest projectiles could fly to the south of the capital. About 25 million people — or half of the South Korean population — live in the greater Seoul metropolitan area.

“It’s the tyranny of proximity,” said David Maxwell, who served in South Korea during his 30 years in the Army and now teaches at Georgetown University. “It’s like the distance between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. Imagine a million-man army just outside the Beltway with artillery they could use to terrorize Washington.”

About half of North Korea’s artillery pieces are multiple rocket launchers, including 18 to 36 of the huge 300mm launchers that Pyongyang has bragged about. State media last year published photos of the system during a test firing that Kim attended.

The 300mm guns could probably fire eight rounds every 15 minutes, Bermudez said, and have a range of about 44 miles.

“This could do a lot of damage,” he said. “If they hit a high-rise building with a couple of rounds of artillery, people get into their cars, causing huge traffic jams, so North Korea could target highways and bridges in cascades.”

If North Korea were to start unleashing its artillery on the South, it would be able to fire about 4,000 rounds an hour, Roger Cavazos of the Nautilus Institute estimated in a 2012 study. There would be 2,811 fatalities in the initial volley and 64,000 people could be killed that first day, the majority of them in the first three hours, he wrote.

Some of the victims would be American, because the U.S. military has about 28,000 troops in South Korea. The higher estimates for the 300mm rocket launcher’s range — up to 65 miles — would put the U.S. Air Force base at Osan and the new military garrison at Pyeongtaek, the replacement for the huge base in Seoul, within reach.

This prospect of extensive damage and casualties has restrained successive U.S. administrations, however provocative North Korea has been.

“Every U.S. administration, as they have looked at this problem, has said that all options are available. But that’s not really true,” said Baker, who is at the Pacific Forum of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “We really don’t have a military option.”

i n f i n i t y (∞), Monday, 24 April 2017 17:51 (seven years ago) link

forgot to quote one more important detail, which is obvious, but worth reminding:

“It would be terrible, but the war would be over [in South Korea], it wouldn’t be here,” Graham said in an interview with NBC.

i n f i n i t y (∞), Monday, 24 April 2017 17:54 (seven years ago) link

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy-defence/article/2089944/opinion-chinas-position-north-korea-appears-shift

Blame for the ongoing nuclear crisis is placed foremost on North Korea for pulling out of the Non-Proliferation Treaty; Niu further notes that regime security (ie, the survival and ongoing supremacy of the Kim family foremost) has become more important than state security in North Korea. Like his fellow historian Shen Zhihua, Niu Jun seems to acknowledge the possibility that North Korea could become an enemy for China.

Both Niu and Shen remind us that any assertions in Chinese state media noting that North Korea should be satisfied with Beijing’s guarantees of security are wildly overoptimistic and unrealistic. For North Korea, no externally generated security guarantees will ever suffice and its nuclear programme will forge forward.

i n f i n i t y (∞), Monday, 24 April 2017 18:38 (seven years ago) link

good article

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/global-opinions/instead-of-threatening-north-korea-trump-should-try-this-instead/2017/04/23/70119194-2527-11e7-b503-9d616bd5a305_story.html

The one promising thing about Kim Jong Un is that he harbors ambitions to improve North Korea’s economy, and his domestic policies have already generated modest growth. But his first priority is regime survival and national security, and for that, he considers the nuclear deterrent is to be essential (a rational proposition, sadly). Eight years of sanctions and pressure — but for one spasm of diplomacy just prior to Kim Jong Il’s death — did little to disabuse Pyongyang of the sense that it needs nuclear weapons, or to prevent North Korea from improving its capabilities and expanding its arsenal.

The Trump administration proclaims that the Obama approach of “strategic patience” has ended. But if it really wants to start a new era, the way to do so is not by distracting the public with reckless threats of war, while waiting in vain for Chinese President Xi Jinping to bring Kim to his knees. Instead, the prudent move would be to open direct talks with Pyongyang that start by negotiating a freeze on the fissile-material production cycle, return of International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors, and moratorium on testing nuclear devices and long-range ballistic missiles (including satellite launches). In return, the United States should at least entertain Pyongyang’s standing request for suspension of joint military exercises with South Korea. Kim may be willing to accept something less, such as an adjustment in scale. Or he may be open to a different kind of trade — initiating talks to convert the 1953 Armistice Agreement into a proper peace treaty to end the Korean War, for example. The only way to probe these options is to get to the table. With two months of large-scale exercises coming to a close, now is a good time to do so.

A freeze is just the initial move in what needs to be a long-term strategy that changes underlying dynamics and addresses what each side sees as the core of the problem. We cannot really know what Kim wants, and what he might give up to get it, until we initiate dialogue. But since he took power, there have been strong signals that his ambitions go beyond a nuclear deterrent, that his real goal is economic development. Rather than threaten war or deepen sanctions, a more productive path is to nudge Kim down the same road that the major countries in East Asia have all taken: a shift from power to wealth. If Kim wants to be North Korea’s developmental dictator, the United States’ best long-term strategy is to help him do so. We cannot rationally expect him to surrender his nuclear deterrent at the beginning of that process, but it is the only realistic path for getting him to do so eventually.

Now is the time to jump-start a diplomatic initiative that reopens channels, lowers tensions and caps North Korea’s capabilities where they are. Then, working closely with the new government in Seoul and others, the United States should support a long-term strategy that integrates North Korea into regional stability and prosperity. Because the nuclear program is the last budget item that Kim will cut, sanctions only deepen the misery of the North Korean population, and pressure fails to improve human rights abuses on the ground. The best way to alleviate the suffering of the North Korean people is to give them a chance to succeed economically and help open up their country step by step.

By simply inflicting economic pain, threatening military strikes and keeping tensions high, the United States is playing into the worst tendencies of the North Korean system. Kim’s nuclear intentions will harden and North Korea’s capabilities will only grow. It’s time to reverse course.

i n f i n i t y (∞), Monday, 24 April 2017 18:58 (seven years ago) link

'It's time to reverse course' = 'Full speed ahead!' in Trumpsylvania.

Crackers and Snacks (Old Lunch), Monday, 24 April 2017 19:09 (seven years ago) link

his first priority is regime survival and national security, and for that, he considers the nuclear deterrent is to be essential (a rational proposition, sadly).

It is sad for the people of NK that they will be the major 'beneficiaries' of regime survival in NK, but anyone who looks carefully at nuclear weapons inescapably concludes that they are total shite as an offensive weapon under current conditions, but most excellent weapons for deterring attack. If it were somehow rendered impossible for them to used by non-state actors or by irrational leaders, then most of their danger would disappear. Because strategically speaking, their only sensible use is to sit idly and deter attack. In this light, NK is acting strategically and rationally. So was Iran. So is Israel. The awful thing about nukes is that simply by existing they could be used. Sometime. Somewhere. By mistake or by miscalculation.

Thank god for the non-proliferation treaty. Because it is the only tool we have for eliminating the obvious rationale for every nation acquiring nukes.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 24 April 2017 19:17 (seven years ago) link

xp

us republicans and south korean republicans pushed to close the kaesong industrial zone back in 2013 i believe

as far as i understand, when it was closed it also meant that the north korean military would leave the major attack route that led to seoul

the us gov't is not completely ignorant, it just likes to play that card to deceive its own people

i n f i n i t y (∞), Monday, 24 April 2017 19:42 (seven years ago) link

NYT possibly reprising its Judith Miller shit

@adamjohnsonNYC
The key claim––since repeated by Vox. Yahoo, UPI & others––is attributed to a nebulous blob of "experts studies" and "classified reports".

"Behind the Trump administration’s sudden urgency in dealing with the North Korean nuclear crisis lies a stark calculus: A growing body of expert studies and classified intelligence reports that conclude the country is capable of producing a nuclear bomb every six or seven weeks.

"That acceleration in pace—impossible to verify until experts get beyond the limited access to North Korean facilities that ended years ago—explains why President Trump and his aides fear they are running out of time."

http://fair.org/home/nyts-impossible-to-verify-north-korea-nuke-claim-spreads-unchecked-by-media/

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 26 April 2017 19:35 (seven years ago) link

yeah I smell bullshit too

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 26 April 2017 19:43 (seven years ago) link

so apparently this big meeting at the WH yesterday was basically nothing, just Trump trying to do something important-looking before the 100 day mark

frogbs, Thursday, 27 April 2017 13:02 (seven years ago) link

I heard it from a reliable source that he invited every senator into the Oval Office, locked the doors, and then farted.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 27 April 2017 14:25 (seven years ago) link

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/china-and-north-korea-on-the-border/article34817039/

“Going ahead with the nuclear test will constitute a serious provocation to the international community, and will bring the most serious sanctions, including oil,” says Prof. Lu. Severing oil shipments to North Korea – which relies almost exclusively on imported crude, most of it from China – would paralyze the country’s economy and military. But mention of this option in China’s state-sanctioned media has suddenly made it a topic of serious discussion.

Such a step would be tantamount to “a nuclear bomb” lobbed toward Pyongyang, says Cheng Xiaohe, deputy director of the Centre for China’s International Strategic Studies at Renmin University. “That would probably be the last economic resort.”

But Beijing has a menu of lesser options that it could consider first, including evicting the tens of thousands of North Korean labourers who have been allowed into China in recent years to work in factories and restaurants.

...

Chinese imports of North Korean gold, iron, tin and rare earths all stopped last year, he said, further evidence of China’s adhering to sanctions. “Big bulk-goods trade of any kind,” Mr. Cui says, “is all now impossible.”

...

The prospect of military conflict doesn’t much worry Mr. Cui. If fighting breaks out, “we will make a fortune,” he predicts, confident that Chinese troops would move into North Korea in order to keep refugees on home soil, thus allowing his business to continue unaffected.

Such insouciance is commonplace in an area where decades of rising and falling tensions have bred boredom – and disdain for those who suggest that this time is any different from previous rounds of anxiety. In Yanji, Chinese tourist agencies have continued booking trips across the border to nearby towns and tourist attractions.

At the Chinese border town of Tumen, tourists still gather on a local boardwalk to gaze across at portraits of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il, and at the North Korean guards patrolling the far banks of the river on foot. They feel little cause for concern. “The U.S. is just posturing in order to frighten North Korea,” says Wang Jianbin, a young traveller from China’s Hebei province, who travelled here with a friend.

A short drive away, near the city of Hoeryong, North Korean border guards engage in an intense game of outdoor volleyball, their shouts echoing up to a small Chinese hill overlooking the scene. The game disbands when trucks arrive at the two-lane concrete bridge that forms the border here, a picture of peaceful order.

Then, moments later, an SUV filled with Chinese men in uniform arrives at the overlook. They are bearing binoculars, a reminder that this is the front line of a place that North Korea itself has termed “the world’s biggest hot spot.”

Still, even with recent tensions, “it’s no problem getting across the border. It’s the same as usual,” says Han Bing, another Hunchun businessman with a seafood-packaging factory in North Korea. There is a disconnect, he said during an interview in his store – which was jammed with North Korean shellfish and Russian chocolate – between fear on television and what he sees on the ground. Prices are the same. Business continues.

Besides, he says, the idea of violent disruption in a place pinched between the world’s powers – Russia, China and the U.S. – seems so cataclysmic that it’s not even worth contemplating. “Wouldn’t that mean the start to World War Three?” he asks. That would “not be the same as the Second World War. It would be a nuclear war. And once it starts, the Earth will be destroyed.”

i n f i n i t y (∞), Friday, 28 April 2017 18:20 (seven years ago) link

as long as it's not "major major"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LFujE3Y-ZI

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Friday, 28 April 2017 18:24 (seven years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsJjP3He4h8

i n f i n i t y (∞), Friday, 5 May 2017 04:02 (six years ago) link

when your trying to have a nice quiet walk but the revolutionary masses won't leave you alone pic.twitter.com/Qe7JX54Q2D

— sadbukharin (@sadladbukharin) May 12, 2017

i n f i n i t y (∞), Monday, 15 May 2017 19:57 (six years ago) link

one month passes...

https://qz.com/1004330/north-korea-is-sitting-on-trillions-of-dollars-on-untapped-wealth-and-its-neighbors-want-a-piece-of-it/

North Korea’s neighbors have long had their eyes on its bonanza of mineral wealth. About five years ago China spent some $10 billion on an infrastructure project near the border with North Korea, primarily to give it easier access to the mineral resources. Conveniently North Korea’s largest iron ore deposits, in Musan County, are right by the border. An analysis of satellite images published last October by 38 North, a website affiliated with Johns Hopkins University, showed mining activity was alive and well in the area.

China particularly covets North Korea’s rare earth minerals. Pyongyang knows this. It punished Beijing in March by suspending exports of the metals to China in retaliation for the coal trade restrictions.

Meanwhile Russia, which also shares a (smaller) border with North Korea, in 2014 developed plans to overhaul North Korea’s rail network in exchange for access to the country’s mineral resources. That particular plan lost steam (pdf, p. 8), but the general sentiment is still alive.

But South Korea has its own plans for the mineral resources. It sees them as a way to help pay for reunification (should it finally come to pass), which is expected to take decades and cost hundreds of billions or even trillions of dollars. (Germany knows a few things about that.) Overhauling the North’s decrepit infrastructure, including the aging railway line, will be part of the enormous bill.
In May, South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport invited companies to submit bids on possible infrastructure projects in North Korea, especially ones regarding the mining sector. It argued that (paywall) the underground resources could “cover the expense of repairing the North’s poor infrastructure.”

i n f i n i t y (∞), Friday, 7 July 2017 22:32 (six years ago) link

five years pass...

Breaking News: Japan warned some residents to seek shelter after North Korea fired a missile, which flew over the country and landed in the Pacific Ocean.https://t.co/URp51s3wUd

— The New York Times (@nytimes) October 3, 2022

Karl Malone, Monday, 3 October 2022 23:33 (one year ago) link

oops. i meant to bump another north korea thread.

Karl Malone, Monday, 3 October 2022 23:33 (one year ago) link


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