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To: Pan_Yan

UN is surrounded by elderly leadership....not exactly fresh minds! There’s no way these stoic individuals are going to yield anything to a younger mind even if UN ever thought of changing his country.

The most hope he has is to have a power base himself of younger individuals who want to see the country change...but they are all so brainwashed...impossible situation.

Thanks for posting the ages of the power line....does make a difference, I was wondering about that.


674 posted on 12/20/2011 8:57:45 AM PST by caww
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To: caww; TigerLikesRooster; AmericanInTokyo

Not too suprised to see this kind of sentiment expressed by John Bolton. Not sure where he is getting the information that Kim’s death went undisclosed for “days”. From what I’ve seen, it was only one day, maybe 2 that it went undisclosed.

‘The Great Successor’
There’s no guarantee that the North Korean military will accept another hereditary ruler
John R. Bolton | The Wall Street Journal
December 20, 2011

North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il’s death opens a period of intense danger and risk, but also potentially enormous opportunity for America and its allies. Kim’s health had obviously been poor for some time, and his regime has worked “There is no reason whatever to believe that opinion among the military leadership will be unanimous, either to support or oppose the regime’s succession plan.” —John R. Boltonto ensure an orderly transition to his son, Kim Jong Eun. The Kim family and its supporters, with everything obviously at stake, will work strenuously to convey stability and control. Indeed, the official North Korea news agency has already referred to Jong Eun as “the great successor to the revolutionary cause.”

But the loathsome Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea (DPRK) is not a constitutional monarchy like Britain. While DPRK founder Kim Il Sung was powerful enough to impose his son, no guarantees exist that the North’s military, the real power, will meekly accept rule by his utterly inexperienced grandson.

Under the surface in Pyongyang, the maneuvering has almost certainly already begun. There is no reason whatever to believe that opinion among the military leadership will be unanimous, either to support or oppose the regime’s succession plan. In fact, the early reports are that Kim Jong Il’s death went undisclosed publicly for days, perhaps indicating a power struggle already under way. Many generals may simply not accept that Leader 3.0 is competent or merits their support.

http://www.aei.org/article/foreign-and-defense-policy/regional/asia/the-great-successor/


675 posted on 12/20/2011 9:01:24 AM PST by jhpigott (North Korea - The land of lousy options)
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