North
Korea: Love Thy Leader
By Israel Shamir
Kim’s
Double-Breasted Jacket
May 19,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- A colossal mass demonstration, well choreographed
to the level of ballet but with tens of thousands of
participants in the centre of Pyongyang completed
and sealed an important and unusual political event
in this remote and isolated land of North Korea –
the Party Congress. The demo has been followed by a
show, so big that it could not be staged anywhere
else. Magnificient fireworks, twenty thousand men
and women dancing with torches in the darkness of
Pyongyang night – this show I’ll remember forever.
For the Koreans it was not a show, but a declaration
of their loyalty to the state and the leader – or,
perhaps, even for them it was just a night dance.
Who knows?
A Party
Congress is a rare bird in N Korea. Uncalled for
many years, actually since 1980, the Congress, the
top body of the ruling Workers’ Party, gathered to
confirm consolidation of power in the hands of the
new ruler, Kim Jong-Un, or Kim III, as Western media
calls him. He was duly proclaimed the Party
Chairman, the position previously held by his father
Kim Jong-Il, and before him by his grandfather Kim
Il-Sung.
The people
were visibly excited to see the young Kim, and even
passing by the tribunes they tried to linger and
wave flowers and banners in his direction. Only rock
stars get that much affection in the West. This is
definitely a turning point: the hard bitter days are
over, now things will improve.
The
generation change is a tricky affair anywhere (the
USSR failed it), but it seems that Kim III managed
it successfully. He came to power after premature
death of his father, a plump and soft-looking “Baby
Kim”, with his Swiss schooling, an object of many
South Korean jokes and scorn. But he has not been
chosen and groomed and preferred over his two elder
brothers by his father just for his kind appearance.
The young Kim III pushed forward with modernisation
of the country, with reshaping and rebuilding
Pyongyang, with massive civil engineering projects,
with improving the lot of his citizens – and with
the nuclear program.
During
first four years of his rule, North Korea became a
full-fledged nuclear power, exploded an H-bomb last
January, delivered a satellite to the orbit around
the earth; living standards improved and mass
housing program has been launched. Otherwise, Kim’s
rule could be characterised by words “Continuity
and Modernisation”.
Why the
Party Congress has been assembled just now, what are
the plans and ideas of Korean leadership, what can
we expect from them? All the world was curious, so
was I, and I eagerly (though with some trepidation)
accepted their invitation. I have been exceedingly
well received by these hospitable people, so I can
dispel your fears: the North Koreans aren’t
brainwashed zombies, but perfectly human, though
they belong to a very distinct and different
culture.
On a human
level, they produce and drink very good beer.
Whenever I had an occasion, I had a couple of beers
with locals in a local pub, where all tried to offer
me another mug of their perfect natural brew. The
Koreans are cautious but not paranoid in their
contacts with foreigners, and they are fond of beer.
There were
a lot of bewildered journalists; they tried to
gather what’s going on, afraid to miss a story but
meeting a frustrating stonewalling. The N Koreans
are indeed very secretive: to the last minute, we
did not know when the Congress is about to finish,
and what do they discuss. The BBC team has been
deported from the country for reporting an upsetting
gossip they probably invented or picked from the S
Koreans.
By
listening to some N Koreans and to diplomats
stationed in Pyongyang, I learned that they expect
that Kim will retire some of the old comrades and
promote the younger lot, thus rejuvenating this
unusual socialist state. Korea watchers noticed the
possible rise of relatively young people who
occupied lower rings of the hierarchy: Hwan Byon So,
Tsoi Ren He, and the ideologist of the Party, Kim Gi
Nam.
The theme
of Continuity and Modernisation has been
manifested even in Kim’s appearance: he appeared in
a dark double-breasted jacket and an elegant light
tie instead of Mao-style military wear usual for
Korean officials. For the Koreans, this jacket was
to remind of Kim I, his venerated grandfather, who
first appeared in a very similar wear in the
recently liberated Pyongyang. He was loth to appear
in the Russian military uniform he donned
previously, and preferred the civilian jacket.
This point
has to be briefly elaborated. The Koreans are
fiercely independent folk, ethnocentric to the
extreme, nationalists for whom Korea is above all
and the Koreans are a race apart. Actually, in this
(and many other) aspect they are quite similar to
the Japanese, their neighbours and former colonial
masters for some forty years. But the Japanese went
through seventy years of Americanization,
westernization, liberalization and demilitarization
after their defeat in 1945. The unreconstructed
Koreans retained their national pride, so they are
more similar to the Japanese of 1930s.
The Korean
Communists came to power in the North thanks to the
Red Army. After defeating the Japanese Army of
Manchuria in August 1945, the Russians established a
Communist government in Pyongyang, as was their wont
in every capital they seized in the war. Their man
was Kim Il Sung, at the time a Red Army mayor, and a
native of Korea. But the Korean Communists did not
remain in Moscow’s thrall for any length of time. By
1956, they became fully independent – and they
re-wrote history to fit their ideas. In their
version of history as taught in their schools and
explained in their museums, they themselves
liberated their country from the Japanese rule,
while the Russians were of some valuable assistance.
(According
to their version, they themselves defeated the
Americans in the Korean war, while the Chinese and
the Russians “had sent some volunteers”. This is
annoying for the Russians and Chinese who bore the
brunt of the war, but they understand the Korean
feelings and bite the bullet without argument or
complaint).
Kim I in
his jacket had been a potent symbol of Korean
independence and of their own and unique way to
their own brand of socialism. Kim III is very
similar to his grandfather by portrait likeness, and
even more so by his voice. The jacket of Kim was
supposed to emphasize this similarity and
continuity, while the elegant tie has been a tribute
to modernity.
He promised
to deliver “guns AND butter” to his citizens, i. e.
to improve their lot while keeping the defence
stance. More importantly, Kim had used the Party
Congress and the universal interest it generated to
call for peace with the US and his neighbours Japan
and South Korea.
He said
Korea is a responsible nuclear power; the Koreans
will abide by the treaty of non-proliferation (NPT)
as a nuclear power, meaning it will not share its
nuclear military technology with non-nuclear states,
and it will not use its nuclear weapons unless
attacked by nuclear weapons. This is a message of
peace-seeking: other nuclear states, the US, Russia
and Israel do not promise to avoid using nuclear
weapons even in case of a conventional attack.
“Kim sends
a message of peace,” a high ranking diplomat
stationed in Pyongyang told me. “Alas, it was
misunderstood or distorted by the news agencies.
They quoted him out of context and provided
misleading headlines, in order to demonise him.”
Kim called
for nuclear disarmament, but a general one, not only
for Korea. Indeed while signing the NPT, the nuclear
powers undertook to strive for general nuclear
disarmament and for creation of the world free of
nuclear weapons. This undertaking remained a dead
letter. The last Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev
made some steps in this direction, but the US used
his idealism to increase the power gap between the
two states.
Recently
the US embarked on an ambitious program of total
renewal of their nuclear facilities. Pentagon asked
for the mindboggling sum of one trillion dollars for
this program. At the same time, the US demands
nuclear disarmament of N Korea referring to the same
NPT they are in breach of. Since the NPT has been
signed, some states became nuclear powers – Israel,
India, Pakistan. What’s wrong with N Korea
developing nuclear weapons? The Koreans speak of
double standards and add: if other states will give
up their nukes, so shall we.
A Russian
diplomat in Pyongyang told me: perhaps we should
accept the reality that DPRK became a nuclear power.
It would not have happened if the US and South Korea
did not threaten the North with war. Just a few
months ago, the war in Korea seemed imminent, when
the US and their S Korean allies, some four hundred
thousand troops altogether, practiced the conquest
of Pyongyang and elimination of the NK government.
The N Koreans went ballistic, and I can’t blame
them, – he said. – If we were now to land half a
million soldiers in Cuba and begin to practice how
to sack Washington and destroy the White House, the
US fleet would come all over Cuba in a jiffy. But in
Korea, the Americans just increased their
involvement by bringing in a nuclear armed aircraft
carrier. We definitely understand why N Korean
leadership is worried.
This
response is important because Russia and China
supported the UN Security Council resolution
imposing sanctions on N Korea. Now, apparently, the
Russians have second thoughts. The relations between
Russia and N Korea never were cordial: N Korea has
been too independent for Moscow likes. Still, they
were cool but friendly. The Russians supported the
sanctions at China’s request. The Chinese supported
the sanctions to ingratiate themselves with the US
and with S Korea, an important business partner.
There is an additional factor: possible unification
of Korea.
At the
Party Congress, the young leader of N Korea had
called upon his S Korean counterpart: let us renew
the old idea of uniting two halves of Korea, in one
federated state. Germany and Vietnam had already
united, we also can do it. The regime difference is
not a hindrance: Communist China has reunited with
capitalist Hong Kong under the slogan “one country –
two regimes”.
The process
of unification actually started in year 2000, when
the S Korean president Kim Dae Jung visited
Pyongyang and met with the N Korean leader Kim Jong
Il. He had received that year’s Nobel Prize for
Peace. They established a free trade zone, the
trains crossed the DMZ border, visits and family
reunification began. But the US, the occupying power
of S Korea, hated the idea. The S Korean presidents
supporting unification have been found dead or
jailed. The present S Korean president is definitely
against unification. In S Korea, one goes to jail
for saying a good word about the North. It is
considered “hostile communist propaganda”.
The Chinese
do not mind this. Yes, in the Korean war they fought
for the unification of Korea, but that was then. Now
they do not need a strong and independent-minded
neighbour, while united Korea with its Samsung,
Daewoo, H-bomb and 80 million population will be
definitely a very strong country. For Russia, this
is not a consideration. Even an extra strong Korea
is not a threat for them. They agreed with China and
the US because they support the NPT. But perhaps
this is the time to change some rules, they muse.
Feet on the Ground
DPR Korea
is thoroughly demonised. It is supposed to be the
poorest country (Wikipedia); hell on earth, its
national airline “the world’s worst”, its cities
shambles. The demonisers did a good service for N
Korea as my expectations were so low that I
immensely enjoyed every minute and every meal.
Actually Air Koryo, the native airline, is
not too bad and comparable to provincial airlines of
its neighbours Russia and China.
Pyongyang
airport is eerie if anything. It is big, modern,
advanced, marble-floored, immaculately clean; our
old reliable TU-154 looked like a rusty bus on its
perfect tarmac. Its many immigration booths primed
ready for an endless stream of arrival passengers
let me in smoothly, faster than Heathrow, and the
customs delayed me just for a moment. The customs
officer asked me for the password to check my
laptop, but she did not insist when I demurred. But
this big international Terminal Two was empty of
people; instead of a hundred, just two flights were
showing on the tableau, a Beijing and a Vladivostok
flight.
I stayed in
one of the best hotels, 45-story high twin towers of
Koryo Hotel. This place, normally catering to
hundreds and hundreds of tourists, is practically
empty. Just a few tiny groups, a couple of Dutch and
a few Japanese friends of Korea came to breakfast.
N Korea is
under sanctions, the heaviest sanctions ever applied
by the UN SC against any state. Such sanctions would
send any country reeling. They are construed to
cause collapse, and are just marginally better than
an all-out war. The sanctions are similar to the
interdict the medieval popes applied to rebellious
kings. Such an interdict had sent a stubborn emperor
begging to Canossa.
Pyongyang
the capital city is big and modern, even
ultra-modern; seeing it from my 30th
floor of a downtown hotel, I thought first of
Atlanta, or even Brasilia. There are very few cars,
mainly taxis. Private ownership of cars is not
allowed. Ostensibly there are two million dwellers,
but there are few people on the streets. Where are
the people, I asked my gentle host. They are at
work, it is working time, he says, somewhat taken
aback at my astonishment. After the Party Congress
was over, there were more people around: apparently,
the citizenry preferred to stay home while the big
bosses roamed the capital.
Over the
last forty years, I’ve been to many Third-world
states in their Socialist stage: to Burma and
Tanzania, Angola and Vietnam, Laos and Cuba. If we
are to compare them with neighbouring non-Socialist
states, they were inexpensive, generous with public
space, kids-friendly, scarce of consumer goods, poor
of communications, overcharging foreigners,
currency-fiddling, and rather shabby. I tended to
consider this shabbiness an unavoidable feature of
Third World socialism.
North Korea
is not shabby, at least Pyongyang is not. The city
is built on a large, even magnificent scale, with
broad avenues, neat traffic policewomen in brash
uniforms overseeing the roads and smartly saluting
the passing cars, with imposing buildings and
monuments that would shame those of Washington DC.
The most impressive buildings were erected in the
last few years. There are new apartment high-rise
blocks in prime locations instead of old
Soviet-style five-story tenements. Such apartments
would cost over million dollars apiece in any major
Western city; they weren’t sold but distributed for
free, mainly to scientists and teachers. At least,
so they say.
Last year,
a fantastic and lavish Science and Study Centre had
been build on spacious grounds. Perfect floor and
walls, electronic gates, hundreds of computers,
models and graphics explaining various sciences
would make any city proud. Its purpose is to
encourage kids to become scientists, pure and
simple. Sure, incredible buildings were erected
within last ten years in many parts of the globe, as
the new-rich countries discover the joys of modern
architecture as never before. Dubai, Baku, Moscow
created new wonders. Pyongyang is on the similar
level, on the cutting edge of new architecture.
There are
no older buildings at all. It seems that the city
has been designed and created anew like a Communist
Brasilia. I always prefer old to new, but in this
particular case, there is not much to regret.
Pyongyang has been erased and hastily rebuilt a few
times, most notably in the Korean war 1950-1953,
when the US bombers did not leave a single building
standing.
The
American command “turned its fury on all standing
structures that might shield the Chinese from the
cold; cities and towns all over North Korea went up
in flames <until> Pyongyang resembled Hiroshima”,
says Encyclopaedia Britannica. The US
dropped more ordnance on defenceless Korea than it
did on Germany or Japan. We must keep in mind this
most cruel war of the cruel Twentieth Century, for
otherwise we can’t understand the Korean character
and the recent moves of the Korean leadership.
They are
not afraid of war, because they went through the
terrible war. Once they seized an American vessel in
their waters and jailed the sailors for spying. They
disregarded the US threats of an all-out war. At the
end, the US president LB Johnson apologised in
writing (the only case in the US history they said
they are sorry) and the sailors were released, some
six months later.
There are a
lot of children, many more than you’d expect, a lot
of children on the streets, often unaccompanied by
an adult. The kids appear clean and neatly dressed,
many wear a school uniform or white shirts with red
scout ties.
This is a
socialist state, I remind myself; they are
children-friendly, even children-centred, like “our”
states are more attuned for retired folk. Their
budget goes for kids, best buildings go for
kindergartens and schools.
The Korean
women carry their small kids on their backs, like
the Japanese did, years ago. Now (and I visited
Japan just before coming to N Korea) I haven’t seen
even one mother bearing her child on her back in
Japan in ten days, while in Korea they are
plentiful. There were very few children to be seen
in Japan, as opposed to this lot in Korea.
It is not
that they have more children. Koreans I asked
admitted to have one, rarely two kids. It’s just
their kids play outside and walk streets while our
kids play inside and under supervision. Our children
are immersed in the virtual reality of computer
games, their children walk the earth. They are
rarely alone: usually, they are in a group. Less
frequently, one notices even such small kids that
would never be allowed to go unsupervised in our
cities, bravely stride along big streets of the
city.
As for
other qualities, the Koreans are so generous with
public space, that it would be considered wasteful
and impossible elsewhere. There are many gardens,
great vistas, green lawns, vast squares. I do not
know another city on earth with such unhindered
views as the view across Kim Il-Sung square. You can
see for miles.
And now for
their less pleasant features. Their communications
are quite restricted. They have mobiles, practically
everyone has, but a foreigner can’t make a telephone
call to a native Korean’s telephone. There is no
internet even in an expensive hotel. The Koreans
can’t send and receive emails from abroad, can’t
access any foreign sites at all, only their own
Intranet. They can’t travel abroad, can’t marry
foreigners. It is the HermitKingdom, after all.
The
consumer goods are rather expensive, with a good
average salary about $US400, a good bike or a big TV
easily costs over fifteen hundred bucks. Clothes in
the shop are drab, like in neighbouring Chinese
towns.
The climate
is harsh, the soil is poor. Pyongyang has frequent
sand storms blowing from GobiDesert from Inner
Mongolia. It is too cold or too hot. In short, N
Korea is not paradise, and can’t be turned into
paradise with any regime. S Korea has a better
climate and better soils, but its regime is far from
comfortable. I visited S Korea first time in the
late seventies, when the state was run by the
dictator Park Chung Hee. People would come to me on
the street and beg for an invitation to any country
abroad to leave their wretched place. There was no
freedom, no democracy, no child care, just a
dictatorship and the US occupation troops. This is
the lot of Koreans, North or South.
If in
defence, nuclear power, technology, housing N Korea
has reached 21st century; aesthetically,
it is in a class of its own. Their music and songs
are a rehash of Soviet revolutionary and military
songs. Their typical titles are “Follow the 7th
regiment”, or “Mother’s Voice”. The Mother in the
last hit is the Party, while the Leader is the
loving Father and the People are their children. If
a song is about love, it is love of People to the
Leader.
But then,
this is usual for an Oriental religious society:
Jews say the Song of Songs is about love of God to
Israel, Muslims say Omar Khayyam actually meant
“Wisdom” when he wrote “Wine”.
The N
Koreans are very kind but so restrictive that I
hesitate to witness. There are many road blocks
checking permits. On no occasion was I allowed to
roam Pyongyang alone; I was not allowed to go to a
restaurant of my choosing, or even to leave a
concert where very loud martial music has been
performed for hours. If they have a program in mind,
they will do the program. Great people, but
definitely no fun. Perhaps the natives have more
choice than visitors, but my stay was an exercise in
humility and submission, like a stay in a monastery.
This religious connotation is intended, as we shall
explain further on.
Love Your Leader
People call
Kim III “The Marshal” and express towards him, as
for his father and grandfather, the emotions usually
reserved for a deity. This is shocking for us, but
not unusual in Asia. Before 1945, the neighbouring
Japanese, people of great culture and refinement,
worshipped their Emperor as the Supreme Deity, and
even now some of them continue to venerate him as a
Shinto god. The Japanese ruled over Korea for 40
years, and during that time, they implanted some
ideas, notably that of a Divine Ruler.
N Korea has
little to do with Marxism, or with Socialism as the
Westerners understand. It is a deeply religious
society based of worship of the three Kims. If
asked, the N Koreans say their rulers have been
“sent by Heaven”. They ascribe every good thing in
their life to their Heaven-sent rulers. They tell of
miracles they performed. A modern-looking lady in
Pyongyang has told me she saw an apparition of Kim
II in the sky on the night of his demise. I saw
people weep when death of Kim II is mentioned – and
that some five years after the event.
For me,
this worship has been a source of minor
embarrassment, especially their custom to bow to the
images or photos of the leaders. I wonder what
Daniel would do? A tour of N Korea has more features
of a religious pilgrimage than of sight-seeing.
Every place I’ve been shown had a connection to the
Kims, and this connection has been elaborated fully.
I visited their memorials, burial place, birth place
and accepted it solemnly as a duty paid for their
hospitality. Likewise, visitors to my Israel are
forced to visit the Holocaust Museum, and it is
easier to acquiesce than to resist. Still, I had a
problem every time I had to bow to these graven
images. Perhaps it is my cultural handicap.
The Kim
Tomb is vast and very impressive. Kim I and Kim II
are buried in the huge former palace-residence of
Kim I, almost Versailles by size and magnificence.
It is open once a month; anyway you can’t go there
(or anywhere else) by yourself. One is being led
through numerous scanners until one meets a perfect
waxwork likeness of the two rulers, larger than
life-size. Such effigies or polychromatic waxwork is
displayed in a few places in Pyongyang as modern
idols. Mme Marie Tussaud may have a business in
Pyongyang after all! Visitors are supposed to bow
many times in many places.
Next to the
sepulchres, there are halls containing memorabilia:
medals, orders and degrees bestowed on the dead
leaders. The only order that Kim Il Sung had been
given for personal martial courage, the Soviet Order
of the Fighting Red Banner, is missing as it does
not befit a great ruler.
Still, he
was definitely a great man of his country and his
generation; he widely travelled and met all
important revolutionary leaders. His son travelled
less, and met fewer leaders, as at that time, N
Korea had already withdrawn into a world of its own.
It is said
that Kim II borrowed the idea from Russia with its
Lenin Mausoleum on Red Square. Perhaps the idea, but
the realisation is not even similar. The Korean
Temple of Sun is 20, 30, no, 50 times bigger than
the modest tomb in Moscow. It can compete with the
equally huge Mao Memorial Hall in Beijing. Likewise,
Kim Il-Sung square is many times bigger than
medieval Red Square of Moscow. Again, size-wise, it
is more comparable to Tiananmen Square in Beijing.
The N Koreans competed with the Chinese, not with
rather modest Russians.
This is
true regarding their attitude to the leaders. The
Russians were fond of old Uncle Joe Stalin, but they
never deified or worshipped him. Stalin has not been
made the main character of Soviet films. In the most
popular and paradigmatic films of Stalin days, like
The Cossacks of Kuban (you can watch it,
still good and pleasant, if you can enjoy The
Fifties) Stalin is never mentioned. There were
practically no films with Stalin as a character, in
Stalin’s days. There were no stamps, no books
dedicated to Stalin, in his lifetime.
You can’t
find a N Korean film without one of the Kims being
presented. A Kim is on the stamps, in theatre
productions, on every wall of every house. It is not
Stalin’s Russia. It is much more massive presence,
tripled as the title passed from father to son to
grandson.
Kim I began
pursuit of nuclear weapons. I’ve been told that he
decided it had to be done after the Cuban missile
crisis. He said, “The Soviet Union can’t be relied
upon” and commanded to begin the work on the A-bomb,
the work that bore fruit in the days of his son and
was completed by his grandson.
In a deep
underground sanctuary, presents given to the three
Kims are preserved for posterity. There is a
basketball given by Madeleine Albright, and a
hunting gun presented by Mr Putin; presents from
Jimmy Carter lay next to swords offered by Saudi
sheikhs. It is very difficult to avoid visits to
these places.
I visited a
Buddhist monastery in the mountains. There were a
few monks, they spoke only of Kim I’s visits. He
came a few times, they said, and told his people to
take good care of the place, but he did not even
enter the prayer and meditation hall. Apparently,
Kim has been more on their minds than the Buddha.
The Koreans
I’ve met claimed they do not worship any god or
Buddha. The churches stay empty. All the religious
feeling has been directed towards three Kims. I
really disliked it, until one occurrence.
I’ve
visited a luxurious and vast Children’s Palace, a
beautiful modern building with dozens of large
halls, where children study dance, painting,
calligraphy, chemistry, swimming, volleyball. Once a
week they have a day of open doors, and a lot of
people come to look at that, and to consider whether
to bring their child to join one of the groups. The
courses are free, and practically every child can
join. Good, but here again, every hall has been
adorned with an image of a Kim. Kim with a child, or
with a group of children, as if he were a living
god.
And now,
just before crying out loud Down with Kim,
I’ll share with you my doubts. Once, Moscow also had
such Children’s Palaces. Many of them were connected
with the Communist Party, many were named after
Lenin, and my generation did not like it. We
objected, and we won, almost. The names of Lenin,
Stalin and that of the Communist Party went down.
And then,
the Children’s Palaces, and kindergartens in
wonderful old villas were privatised by Yeltsin’s
cronies under Milton Friedman and his Chicago Boys
supervision, and they became offices or residences.
One of the nicest Children’s Palaces in Moscow has
been privatised by an ex-KGB man, the oligarch
Lebedev, who is now the owner of the British daily
Independent (incidentally, a great enemy of
Vladimir Putin).
This is the
real choice for many countries: (a) your children
can go to a Children’s Palace named after a Kim, or
(b) your Children’s Palace is being taken over by
the Lebedevs of this world, and you have to pay a
fortune and spend hours to give your children the
upbringing you had. This is not an easy choice. The
robber barons who come after socialism has been
dismantled will make you wax nostalgic for a Kim
quite soon.
The Koreans
are fortunate they adore their rulers. Alexander the
Great, Napoleon, Stalin were adored by their people,
so were the emperors of China and Japan. Perhaps it
is not worse than living under a ruler one despises
as was the lot of the Americans under George W Bush.
It is
unfortunate that they have no contact with their
South. This separation of two halves is the cause of
many problems: the more populous South has all good
agricultural lands, while the North is mainly
mountains and industry. Together, they may found a
good balance.
Bottom line
Not in
vain, Korea has been called the Hermit Kingdom: it
is a country that wants to be left alone. We are not
into religious wars: let them worship whoever they
want. If they are not proper Marxists, it is their
own business. If their propaganda is crude, we are
not exposed to it. If they like the aesthetics of
the 1950s, they may have it. As for their human
rights, they appear content and their level of life
constantly improves.
I’ve been
told by many Koreans that since the Korean war, the
N Koreans have lived in constant fear they will be
nuked by the US. For them, H-bomb is the only
guarantee against a possible US attack. There is no
danger they will interfere with their neighbours.
End of sanctions would allow them to grew
prosperous, and prosperity will help them to regain
self-esteem.
A
proverbial boy pulled his fish from the aquarium for
it is wet there. Fish likes it wet. Koreans like to
live in the atmosphere of religious ecstasy induced
by Kim III. Let them have it the way they like it.
Luckily, they do not force us to like it, too.
This
article first appeared at
The Unz Review
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