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Chairman Kim's dissolving kingdom
Sunday Times ^ | 30/01/05 | Michael Sheridan

Posted on 01/30/2005 2:36:51 AM PST by flitton

FAR across the frozen river two figures hurried from the North Korean shore, slip-sliding on the ice as they made a break for the Chinese riverbank to escape a regime that, by many accounts, is now entering its death throes. It was a desperate risk to run in the stark glare of the winter sunshine. We had just seen a patrol of Chinese soldiers in fur-lined uniforms tramping along the snowy bank, their automatic rifles slung ready for action.

Police cars swept up and down the road every 10 or 15 minutes, on the look-out for refugees. A small group of Chinese travellers in our minibus, some of whom turned out to have good reasons to be discreet, pretended not to notice.

The two made it to shelter and we ploughed on towards a border post that offered us a rare opportunity to cross into the northeastern corner of the last Stalinist state, posing as would-be investors in an experimental free trade zone.

We had already witnessed one sign that North Korea’s totalitarian system is dissolving, even as its leaders boast of owning nuclear weapons to deter their enemies.

“It’s just like the Berlin Wall,” Pastor Douglas Shin, a Christian activist, said by telephone from Seoul. “The slow-motion exodus is the beginning of the end.”

In interviews for this article over many months, western policymakers, Chinese experts, North Korean exiles and human rights activists built up a picture of a tightly knit clan leadership in Pyongyang that is on the verge of collapse.

Some of those interviewed believe the “Dear Leader”, Kim Jong-il, has already lost his personal authority to a clique of generals and party cadres. Without any public announcement, governments from Tokyo to Washington are preparing for a change of regime.

The death of Kim’s favourite mistress last summer, a security clampdown on foreign aid workers and a reported assassination attempt in Austria last November against the leader’s eldest son, Kim Jong-nam, have all heightened the sense of disintegration.

The Japanese intelligence agency, in an unclassified report issued on December 24, referred to “signs of instability” inside the political establishment and predicted a feud among the elite as they strive to seize power from Kim.

Jang Song-thaek, Kim’s ambitious brother-in-law, was purged from party office after he tried to build up a military faction to put his own son in power. Mystery surrounds the fate of Vice-Marshal Jo Myong-rok, the soldier once sent as Kim’s emissary to meet Bill Clinton in the White House.

The dictator’s favoured heir apparent, his son Kim Jong-chol, 23, who was educated in Geneva, is reported to have staged a shoot-out inside a palace with Kim Jang-hyun, 34, an illegitimate son of Kim Il-sung, father of the dictator and founder of the dynasty.

Rumours of rivalry and bloodshed have multiplied since the Dear Leader’s last meetings with dignitaries from Russia and China last September. Since then Kim has vanished from view.

Analysts in Seoul say that in recent propaganda pictures the bouffant-haired dictator is wearing the same clothes as in photographs from two years ago, suggesting that they may have been taken then. Observers await Kim’s official birthday, February 16, to see if the state media accord him the usual fawning adulation.

According to exiles, North Korean agents in Beijing and Ulan Bator are frantically selling assets to raise cash — an important sign, says one activist, because “the secret police can always smell the crisis coming before anybody else”. Once we had crossed the steel bridge into this hermetic member of President George W Bush’s “axis of evil”, much of what we saw suggested that the party’s reign is a facade. As we shivered in the frontier post the portraits of Kim and his late father, Kim Il-sung, stared down from the wall as if nothing had changed. But the cult of the Kim dynasty, its “perfect” theory of Juche — patriotic self-reliance — and the utopian society of which the official guides boast are visibly breaking down.

Word has spread like wildfire of the Christian underground that helps fugitives to reach South Korea. People who lived in silent fear now dare to speak about escape. The regime has almost given up trying to stop them going, although it can savagely punish those caught and sent back.

“Everybody knows there is a way out,” said a woman, who for obvious reasons cannot be identified but who spoke in front of several witnesses.

“They know there is a Christian network to put them in contact with the underground, to break into embassies in Beijing or to get into Vietnam. They know, but you have to pay a lot of money to middlemen who have the Christian contacts.”

Her knowledge was remarkable. North Korean newspapers are stifled by state control. Televisions receive only one channel which is devoted to the Dear Leader’s deeds. Radios are fixed to a single frequency. For most citizens the internet is just a word.

Yet North Koreans confirmed that they knew that escapers to China should look for buildings displaying a Christian cross and should ask among Korean speakers for people who knew the word of Jesus.

“The information blockade is like a dam and when it bursts there will be a great wave,” said Shin, the crusading pastor.

Here in the north of the country, faith, crime and sheer cold are eroding the regime’s grip at a speed that may surprise the CIA’s analysts: facts that should give ammunition to conservatives in Washington who call for a hardline policy.

Bush’s re-election dealt a blow to Kim, 62, who had gambled on a win by John Kerry, the Democratic candidate. Kim used a strategy of divide and delay to drag out nuclear talks with the United States, China, Russia, Japan and South Korea through 2004.

Kim lost his bet and now faces four more years of Bush, who says that he “loathes” the North Korean leader and has vowed to strip him of atomic weapons.

The regime is fighting to save itself from subversion. Its agents kidnapped Kim Dong-shik, a South Korean missionary, from the turbulent Chinese border town of Yanji in 2000. Last week the South Koreans demanded a new investigation: the clergyman has never been seen again.

The secret police cannot staunch the word of the gospel. Two of our party turned out to be Christian businessmen who had come from China carrying wads of cash. Korean-language Bibles have been smuggled in by the hundreds.

The veneer of communist propaganda is still kept up. “There is no need for religion in North Korea,” said our loyal tour guide. “Personally, I believe in the Korean Workers’ party and our Dear Leader.”

Fifty miles south of the border we watched as schoolchildren obediently filed out in a shrieking gale to follow their teachers in pilgrimage along the seashore to a shrine to Kim Il-sung, who is still revered as the “Great Leader”.

Lined up outside a fisherman’s cottage where the Great Leader stayed in 1953, they listened to a revolutionary harangue by a woman teacher with more attention than most seven to 12-year-olds might muster. They had marched two miles, wrapped up like small bundles against a wind that blew off the Sea of Japan so bitterly that the spray froze on the lines of the fishing boats. It was –15C that day. These are children whose average weight and height after years of malnutrition are 20% less than those of their equals in South Korea, according to the United Nations. Their rations were recently cut from 300g to 250g of staple food a day.

Yet the proverbial hardiness of the Koreans — a quality that amazed British soldiers who fought in these conditions from 1950 to 1953 to keep South Korea out of Kim Il-sung’s hands — is no longer enough to make up for his son’s deficiencies.

Two years ago the younger Kim introduced free market reforms in a half-hearted attempt to restart an economy that has been dying since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Rajin, a deepwater port that is open to foreign trade, is supposed to be a showpiece of the new economy in the potentially rich northeast next to China and Russia.

However, here we saw economic chaos that has led to unheard-of social disorder. At the central market child beggars chased us along alleys of shoddy Chinese goods, past stalls heaped with decaying fish. A group of dead-eyed teenagers kicked and shoved the younger boys to go after the foreigners. The guides hastily warned us against robbers.

To most North Koreans the prices must have seemed insane. A crab caught locally cost more than a driver’s monthly wages of £1.40. A Chinese cotton vest cost two weeks’ money.

Still hundreds of people jammed the officially sanctioned market and dozens of illegal vendors froze outside as they touted vegetables, clothes and hunks of rancid meat.

No official intervened to stop the illicit trade. Judging by the aggressive pushing and arguing over the goods, there might have been a riot if they had. A few North Koreans are clearly making money. Many more, though, are falling into penury.

Later we were taken for lunch to a state restaurant where lukewarm fish, vegetables and rice were produced from a chilly kitchen. There were iron bars on the windows and a heavy padlock on the door to prevent looting. Marxists, if there were any remaining in North Korea, might have described the situation as prerevolutionary.

Last April an unknown number of North Koreans died in an explosive fireball that wrecked the railway station at Ryongchon, near the Chinese border, on the day when Kim’s personal train was due to pass through.

Foreign diplomats initially accepted the regime’s explanation of an accident. But two well informed ambassadors in Pyongyang say that they now have doubts.

In a telltale measure, frontier guards ordered us to leave all mobile phones at the Chinese border post — rumour has it that the Ryongchon blast was triggered by a mobile phone.

An attempt to kill Kim would come as no surprise. Defections by party officials and army officers have increased as the elite senses that it faces disaster. Japan is considering economic sanctions to retaliate for the kidnappings of its nationals by North Korea and some American policymakers think that the regime should be pushed to the point of self-destruction.

Nonetheless, Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, wants to keep pressurising North Korea through negotiations. “The military option is not on the table for the United States,” said an American aid official who is up-to-date with her thinking. To the children of the No 5 junior school in Rajin, that would come as a surprise. Their classrooms boast lurid posters of American marines murdering Koreans and greedy warmongers ganging up on a proud nation, as though Kennedy and Khruschev still held the world in thrall. Their teeth chattering with cold, the children staged a classic communist song-and-dance routine for visitors, the boys clad in miniature military uniforms in tribute to Kim’s Songun — army first — policy.

Paranoia and brainwashing remain the regime’s most effective tools. Yet even as it tries to fight off God it has made its peace with Mammon.

On a freezing night when Rajin was sunk in gloom, its oil refineries empty, its power stations inert, one building stood ablaze with lights on the bleak seashore northeast of the city.

It was a casino, where slate-faced Chinese gamblers squandered thousands of dollars at the baccarat table while impassive guards scrutinised them for any hints of dodgy play.

Given the record of North Korean’s secret police it was hard to imagine anyone daring to cheat


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: dprk; johnkerry; kerry; mesoornery; nk; nkorea; northkorea; operationweasel; opweasel; truthshallsetyoufree
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1 posted on 01/30/2005 2:36:51 AM PST by flitton
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To: flitton
The information blockade is like a dam and when it bursts there will be a great wave,”

Great news...Sounds familiar. Just like the steady trickle of refugees that preceded the fall of the Berlin wall!

2 posted on 01/30/2005 2:41:52 AM PST by lainde
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To: flitton
The collapse of the last Stalinist despotism would send a message to the Communist elites in China. Freedom is on the march.

Denny Crane: "I want two things. First God and then Fox News."

3 posted on 01/30/2005 2:47:09 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: flitton

Good post. Thanks.


4 posted on 01/30/2005 2:47:28 AM PST by Jet Jaguar (Civilization is an enormous improvement on the lack thereof. (O'Rourke))
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To: flitton

I read recently in my Korea discussion group on Yahoo that Chinese cell phone service is available now throughout the DPRK, and that the locals are now able to get news via that system.
Indeed, the walls are crumbling down.


5 posted on 01/30/2005 2:57:00 AM PST by MadJack
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To: lainde
I haven't seen ole Kim on TV lately. is he still in this world?
6 posted on 01/30/2005 3:02:12 AM PST by gulfcoast6 (Love is best,-- when it is shared.)
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To: TigerLikesRooster

I thought you might be interested in this.


7 posted on 01/30/2005 3:03:46 AM PST by flitton
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To: tallhappy; Travis McGee; Squantos; AmericanInTokyo; Howlin; Cindy; Alamo-Girl

kim il ping


8 posted on 01/30/2005 3:07:19 AM PST by piasa (Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
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To: flitton
Here's the latest story on KCNA that features Kim Jong-il:

Kim Jong Il Inspects Pig Farm of KPA Unit

Pyongyang, January 28 (KCNA) -- Supreme Commander of the Korean Peoplefs Army Kim Jong Il, general secretary of the Workersf Party of Korea and chairman of the National Defence Commission of the DPRK, inspected the pig farm of KPA Unit 966. After being briefed on the farm before its panoramic map, he went round production processes including a fattening pen and a processing shop to acquaint himself with the pork production and the pig raising.

He praised the unit for its efforts, noting with high appreciation that it supplied a large quantity of pork to its soldiers by ceaselessly producing it in the revolutionary spirit of self-reliance even in the hard period of the gArduous Marchh the forced march when it was hard pressed for everything.

He set forth the tasks to be fulfilled by the farm.

Recalling that the modern chicken, duck and goat farms and catfish farms built by the army in recent years are profusely paying off, he noted that a new turn will be effected in the diet of the soldiers when the existing pig farms are modernized.

In order to make pig farms fully display their capacities, it is important to settle the feed problem, first of all, he said, stressing the need to steadily increase the fertility of soil in the fields under feed crops and decisively boost the grain production.

In order to increase the production of pork it is necessary to fully meet the requirements of the WPKfs policy of bringing about a radical turn in raising pig breeds, put the breeding on a scientific and technological basis and positively introduce advanced technology, he noted.

Then he paid deep attention to the living of workers of the farm, going round their hostel.

He highly appreciated the unitfs successes, saying that it has done a lot of work not only to increase its combat capability but to build logistic bases including the construction of a power station in recent years.

He was accompanied by KPA Generals Ri Myong Su, Hyon Chol Hae and Pak Jae Gyong.


9 posted on 01/30/2005 3:11:05 AM PST by snowsislander
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To: flitton
No whiny liberals worried about prison abuse here:

1990s end : (NORTH KOREA : ASSASSINATION PLOT AGAINST KIM JONG-IL IS FOILED; THE GENERALS INVOLVED ARE BURNED ALIVE IN PYONGYANG MAY DAY STADIUM) At the end of the 1990s, a plan hatched by a number of Korean army generals was uncovered, and the conspirators arrested. After they were interrogated, the generals were executed in Pyongyang's 150,000-capacity May Day Stadium. Petrol was poured over them and set alight, burning them alive. ------"Train blast was 'a plot to kill North Korea's leader' ,"by Sergey Soukhorukov, UK Telegraph, June 13, 2004, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/06/13/wkor13.xml&sSheet=/news/2004/06/13/ixworld.html

10 posted on 01/30/2005 3:11:45 AM PST by piasa (Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
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To: lainde

OPERATION WEASEL
(Helping N Korean nuke scientists escape)
Tuesday, Apr 22, 2003
Posted on Mon, Apr. 21, 2003

20 officials defect from North Korea

By Doug Struck

WASHINGTON POST

TOKYO -The United States and at least 10 other countries helped arrange the defections of up to 20 top North Korean officials including key nuclear scientists in an operation that began in October, according to an Australian newspaper.
The Weekend Australian reported that a man it identified as the "father" of the North Korean nuclear program, Kyong Won Ha, was among the defectors and is providing intelligence information to Western officials.

Kyong and the other officials had escaped to China and went on to other countries with the help of consulates and embassies, the newspaper reported.

The United States helped set up, and pay for, an embassy in Beijing for the tiny Pacific Island of Nauru specifically to help move the defectors, though none eventually went to the embassy, the Australian said.

Nauru, an 8-square-mile island in Melanesia northeast of Australia, was persuaded to cooperate in part because of a promise that the U.S. would help it avoid financial sanctions being considered for the nation as a "non-cooperative country."

The Chinese route for defections from North Korea has become an increasingly sensitive issue.

China, an ally of North Korea, does not accept Koreans who cross the shallow river border as refugees, and has forcibly returned many people.

But other Koreans have been helped out of China by church groups, aid organizations and some diplomatic offices in China.

According to the newspaper, the diplomatic route was galvanized by the United States under the code name "Operation Weasel" to get the top North Koreans out of the country. The report could not be independently verified.
China, in the past, has chosen not to challenge the underground route operated by diplomats, who in return have tried to be discreet about it.

Defectors who ended up in South Korea, for example, were instructed by that government not to disclose that they had gone through China, to avoid embarrassing Beijing.
Some defectors in this latest group, which the newspaper described as members of the "military and scientific elite," have ended up in the United States or other Western countries.

Kyong, the nuclear scientist, is "believed to be in a safe house in the West," the Weekend Australian said.
The newspaper said Kyong had provided "unprecedented insight" into North Korea's nuclear program, but no specifics were reported.

The newspaper said one organizer of the defection network was a Washington lawyer named Philip Gagner. He had contacted the president of Nauru in October and asked the country to agree to open embassies in Washington and Beijing, free of charge.

Among the other countries involved in the operation, according to the paper, are New Zealand, Vanuatu, Thailand, the Philippines and Spain.

The newspaper said it had uncovered the network "through confidential documents and interviews with key players in Washington, the Pacific and North Asia." The newspaper said Australia was not involved and that the operation "has now been wound up."


11 posted on 01/30/2005 3:17:48 AM PST by piasa (Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
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To: snowsislander

So it looks like he's either alive and kicking and still in charge, or if he's not any of those things, someone wants to give the impression that he is. Personally I hope that these are the dying days of the regime the end can't come soon enough.


12 posted on 01/30/2005 3:20:38 AM PST by flitton
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To: flitton
Re #7

Thanks for your ping. This report contains some fresh details I have not heard before. Still, the picture it portrays pretty much is consistent with what I suspected. The following detail is a surprise. I have never heard it elsewhere.

The dictator’s favoured heir apparent, his son Kim Jong-chol, 23, who was educated in Geneva, is reported to have staged a shoot-out inside a palace with Kim Jang-hyun, 34, an illegitimate son of Kim Il-sung, father of the dictator and founder of the dynasty.

13 posted on 01/30/2005 3:22:08 AM PST by TigerLikesRooster
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To: flitton

Thank you for posting this.

Council of Foreign Relations guy on Russert Saturday night said N. Korea and Iran were too strong and the U.S. too weak for us to do anything but "negotiate" with them and "cut a deal."

Music to Russert's ears; he practically hummed along with the guy's talking points which seemed to have been memorized.


14 posted on 01/30/2005 3:24:29 AM PST by Barset
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To: flitton

Good post!

I remember viewing a nighttime satellite photo of North Korea and South Korea. There were virtually no lights in the North whereas the South was glowing with lights.


15 posted on 01/30/2005 3:24:40 AM PST by kipita (Rebel – the proletariat response to Aristocracy and Exploitation.)
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To: flitton
Here's a picture that KCNA released on January 16th, although the photograph itself is not dated:


16 posted on 01/30/2005 3:27:26 AM PST by snowsislander
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To: flitton; AmericanInTokyo; TigerLikesRooster
Buried DEEP within the article. Bears highlighting:

Bush’s re-election dealt a blow to Kim, 62, who had gambled on a win by John Kerry, the Democratic candidate. Kim used a strategy of divide and delay to drag out nuclear talks with the United States, China, Russia, Japan and South Korea through 2004.

Kim lost his bet and now faces four more years of Bush, who says that he “loathes” the North Korean leader and has vowed to strip him of atomic weapons.

17 posted on 01/30/2005 3:29:26 AM PST by martin_fierro (Then there was that little Ryongchong incident....)
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To: martin_fierro
Re #17

Yep. Kim Jong-il is in real pain. Kim probably knows Bush better than "useful idiots" in D.C..

18 posted on 01/30/2005 3:35:05 AM PST by TigerLikesRooster
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

The ultimate liberal's paradise. No wonder lil Kim is so chagrined his ideological bud Kerry lost...


19 posted on 01/30/2005 3:39:41 AM PST by fieldmarshaldj (*Gregoire is French for Stealing an Election*)
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To: flitton
Here's an amusing article from KCNA:


High Vigilance against U.S. Disintegration Moves Urged

    Pyongyang, January 23 (KCNA) -- All the countries aspiring after independence should counter with high vigilance the U.S. moves to split and disintegrate them from within, clearly seeing their reactionary and dangerous nature, warns Rodong Sinmun Sunday in a signed article. It goes on:
    Those countries which are chosen as targets of these schemes of the U.S. are, without exception, socialist countries, independent countries opposed to imperialism, countries disobedient to it and situated at strategic vantages.
    What draws attention in its split and disintegration moves is that it is intensifying slanderous false propaganda against the political systems, policies and leadership of those countries and pressure upon them in an effort to discredit their leadership.
    Also noteworthy is it that the U.S. is increasing support to the anti-government forces in relevant countries and building up their strength, thereby fostering the fight for power between different political forces and creating internal split and political instability in a bid to find pretexts for interference in internal affairs and pressure and blackmail.
    The U.S. is seeking to sap the morale of the people, whip up dissatisfaction among them and disturb public sentiments in the countries which have become the targets of its aggression and interference by distorting their realities in order to bring their internal political situation to a complicate phase.
    Special mention should be made of the fact that the U.S. is foolishly attempting to disintegrate and degenerate the interior of the DPRK so as to destroy its single-minded unity and realize the "collapse of its system" by increasing the broadcasting hour of "Free Asia" toward it and massively infiltrating into it portable transistor radios and impure publications and video materials. Such stratagem can never work with the DPRK, even though it may go with other countries.
    If vigilance is dulled against such U.S. moves, they may bring no less serious consequences than open military aggression.


20 posted on 01/30/2005 3:47:17 AM PST by snowsislander
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