Archive for the 'Policy Elites' Category

If you cannot get enough DPRK propaganda…

Then I have to suggest you take a gander at http://dprk-economy.com. The web site is colorful and sort of tries to keep up with the times. Unfortunately, there are some bugs in it and I have no idea if they will be fixed (such as the header picture is broken in places), but no matter. The content is kind of interesting if you like propaganda:

1. In the bookshop, do not miss the “best sellers” Idle Pig and Japan’s War Crimes-Past and Present (Warning: this automatically downloads a PDF). Of course, one cannot pass one day without the latest mis-adventures of the Dear Leader in the state run periodicals Pyongyang Times and Korea Today. lastly, no DPRK bookstore is complete without the biographies of Kim Jong Il, Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Suk. After all, they are the focus of everything.

2. Next, you need to take a look at the vibrant economy of the Stalinist Utopia. Nothing is broken down, things are getting produced, and they want your investment today! Make sure to take a close look at some of these products: Pyongyang Daesong Tyre Factory, Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory and the Pyongyang Essential Oil Research Centre (they have oil to research?).

3. Look, a more colorful version of the KCNA!

4. Lastly, open your wallets and buy some stuff today! I have no idea if Americans are allowed to buy things, but it sure looks like it. Why not buy a painting, a movie, bearings, or “daily necessities” such as these beautiful boxing gloves (people working the fields and near starvation need these?)!

There is only one question in all of this. Why was this site not launched on the .kp domain? I mean after all, it would make the DPRK really look like it is finally in the 21st century.

Oh wait, never mind.

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Food woes in the DPRK (Resources included)

North Korea farmThis article got me thinking a lot, and the food shortages in North Korea seem to be getting worse and worse.

[...]

According to the survey results, which were announced Thursday, North Korea’s gross production of grains such as rice, corn and wheat, was about 4.01 million tons in 2007, down about 470,000 tons from the year before.

North Korea reportedly needs 6.5 million tons of grain to meet domestic demand, meaning it is facing a shortfall of about 2.49 million tons.

Especially devastating were torrential rains in August and a typhoon in September that hit the Korean Peninsula, which resulted in the flooding of about 11 percent of rice paddies in the country. As a result, rice production was 1.53 million tons, down by 360,000 tons from the previous year.

[...]

(Emphasis mine) North Korea’s food shortages are not new, and while I am not a farmer, I have read several places the land has been so overworked and the hills so stripped bare for fuel, the floods made the crops fare even worse. This article shows an eerie foretelling of the events of August 2007:

Photographs which depict a lush, rural environment are misleading. The country needs an average of 1m metric tonnes in food aid a year.

Yes, we have heard about the model farms before, but after the flooding, even some of the best crops were eradicated. Yes, in North Korea, image is everything, but it seems to me the facade is fading fast with the walls cracking and the real face showing behind it. The more that is shown, the bleaker it becomes. After a while, no amount of “spin” will make it better. In my mind, it is only a matter of time before everything is clear to everybody, and that will not be pretty for anybody.

“North Korea is not an agrarian country,” said Kathi Zellweger, a frequent visitor to the country with aid organisation Caritas. It is mostly rugged mountain terrain, and only about 18% is arable.

It is dependent on fertilizer and machinery to make that land productive, both of which are expensive.

Fertilizer and spare parts seem to be a very serious problem. With a growing population, the demand for more food rises (and you guessed it), the State cannot deliver when there is little to farm the land with. As the article goes on to suggest not only natural disasters takes its toll on food production, but decades of political central mismanagement of the Kims made things even worse (Among other things: see One Free Korea’s review of Marcus Noland and Stephen Haggard’s book on the famine - Markets, Aid and Reform as must read):

[...]

“If their farm produces five times as much, they don’t get five times as much food,” he said. Instead, they concentrate on their own private plots, which they use to feed themselves and to produce food for the markets.

The problem with this system is that market reforms, instituted in 2002, have sent prices soaring at a higher rate than wages. “Who can afford this stuff in the markets?” asked Mr French.

The answer: only the elite. Government officials, senior managers of state enterprises, security forces, and the leadership of the army are all unlikely to go hungry.

But a typical urban family can now only afford to buy 4kg of maize - the cheapest commodity - a month.

[...]

As Children of the Secret State suggested, the poor are only left with crumbs. The article only goes further to show a bleaker picture:

The urban diet is partly made up of a ration provided by the government, but this has dropped from 300-250g of cereals per person per day. North Korean officials have told the WFP they expect it to slump to 200g a day.

“The rural folk have already learned how to cope,” said Tim Peters, director of aid agency Helping Hands Korea. “But the urban people are so dependent on the government for distribution.”

As a result, foreign donations that have helped to prop North Korea up in previous years are doubly important this year.

To date, only 270,000 of the 500,000 tonnes of food needed for 2005 has arrived, the WFP says.

Then the prediction comes:

And there is always the risk of natural disaster.

Floods exacerbated the extreme food shortages 10 years ago, and North Korea’s ability to cope with them “is now probably worse”, said Mr French.

Ongoing land clearance has destroyed natural water breaks, “so it all just comes flooding down”.

…and that is precisely what happened with the major floods of August 2007. Then a little while later, a typhoon hits making the situation even worse. Not a lot has been said as to the result of the 2006 floods and how many people are perishing as a result of it, but the ROK did deliver tons and tons of food/medicine aid to the stricken North. If that helped, I am not sure of. However, one thing is clear. North Korea cannot continue to go on like this, and the people at some point are going to rebel especially if the food shortages hit the elite and/or KPA. It seems like it is happening already.

The DailyNK also paints the same shortfall with some reservations. What was the reservation?

[...]

A North Korean expert observed, “Due to the flood this year, the overall crop yield was reduced, but the products from North Korea’s paddy fields which are spread all over the place do not count in official statistics. When considering the food support from the outside world, the food shortage is not at a worrisome level.”

[...]

So this quote suggests the aid seems to be helping some, but I have to say this is still only a band-aid. I simply cannot see this level of suffering going on much longer without a lot of problems. However, I could be wrong, and have been wrong before. Also:

A majority of defectors insisted that the agricultural production level from North Korea’s individually cultivated lands (including paddy fields and fields attached to homes) will surpass the cooperative farms’ 30% standard.

So again, time will only tell, but along with the other news and rumors floating around including a lot of “firsts” for the reclusive regime tells me volumes. Something is changing in North Korea, and it may be bittersweet.

Also, see:

Country Studies

Food Security in North Korea: Designing Realistic Possibilities (PDF)

Famine and Reform in North Korea (PDF - Marcus Noland)

Hunger and Human Rights- The Politics of Famine in North Korea (PDF Haggard, Noland)

Edit: See One Free Korea

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Movie Time: Pulgasari

Update: I have noticed an influx of traffic to this posting, so I will make this a sticky until the traffic dies down. Thanks to all who have visited. I found this video on a fluke when looking for the Propaganda Time videos.

Here is the last movie made by the kidnapped couple that is very well known. If you have not seen the story, it is here.

Not many people can claim to have spent much time with the enigmatic North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il.

But South Korean film director Shin Sang-ok and his wife, Choe Eun-hui, have that dubious distinction.

They not only knew him well but spent several years living in his summerhouse. They were not his friends or house guests - they were his prisoners.

Choe Eun-hui, an actress now in her late 60s, was the first to arrive after being kidnapped in Hong Kong by Kim Jong-il’s secret agents in 1978.

I was very surprised to find this on Google Video, and I do not know the Copyright status on it. If the movie is indeed copyrighted and cannot be posted here, please let me know in the comments and I will remove it promptly. I am posting this because it is very interesting. I have never seen it before other than a few clips here and there.

In the meantime, enjoy the film.

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Joseph Dresnok syndrome?

Joseph DresnokThere is the lingering and little talked about issue regarding kidnapped South Koreans according to the DailyNK. Apparently, these poor souls got tired of living in South Korea and wanted to defect to the socialist paradise that is the DPRK according to Kim Jong Il:

At the Inter-Korea Summit which was held in Pyongyang on the 3rd, Kim Jong Il insisted regarding the abducted South Korean, “They came to the North voluntarily and we received them through welcoming ceremonies.”

I guess human rights activists were wrong about Roh and he asked about some human rights issues. So it seems to me they should all calm down, “take a chill pill” and understand Roh is doing all he can to make North Korea play nice. In my opinion, if you believe that, I have some ocean front property in Kansas to sell.

Continue reading ‘Joseph Dresnok syndrome?’

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The DailyNK got me thinking: When will times get better?

Chemical Factory(Fixed some grammar and typos) There are some powerful images coming from North Korea that go beyond the propaganda and the partisan rhetoric that goes with it. One in particular are photos from this article from the DailyNK. There are two pictures that caught my attention namely the women behind the barbed wire and the abandoned factory (Picured left).

The article asks an interesting question: “What Does that Girl Beyond The Barbed Wire Think?” I would like to go a little beyond that and ask the question, what does the average person living inside one of the most brutal regimes in the world think? That is a very big question, but that does lend the most important part of the process of brining eventual re-unification and freedom from dictatorship. However, I have noticed the political process has hindered the main focus and instead political points are at expense of the people behind that barbed wire. Something must of been lost along the way because of North Korea’s involvement in nuclear tests, missiles and possibly helping other regimes (such as Syria) carry out the most terrifying prospects of terrorists having access to weapons that can kill tens of thousands of people on impact. That is a very legitimate concern and North Korea should disarm and join the ranks of the international community. Unfortunately, that may be a pipe dream because the DPRK has not done it so far with all the disengagement.

Continue reading ‘The DailyNK got me thinking: When will times get better?’

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The Path to Collapse: A closer look into Juche and the cult of personality Part 2

Kim Il SungIn the last part of this series, we looked into the basics of the Juche idea, how it started, how factions were rooted out, the rise of Kimilsugism and how it differed from the Stalin regime. Much of the content was not mine, but mostly questions and my own interpretations of what was already published on the Internet. As I said before, I am just learning this stuff, and I may have to go back and revise some things as I learn it.

Today, we look further into the Juche Idea and how it works for the policy elites, normal North Korean people and presentation both inside and outside the reclusive country. From what I have read so far, they all seem different. So we shall dig in the Policy Elites paper a little more too.

As always: Please be aware this is an ongoing research project, and information contained in this post may have glaring factual or missing information that I may not be aware of. If anybody has any insight that will make me better understand it, please say so in the comments and I will love to take your views into consideration and learn something. That is the whole goal of this blog.

Continue reading ‘The Path to Collapse: A closer look into Juche and the cult of personality Part 2′

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A strange concert and a mystery

Since South Korean media is banned in North Korea, I ran into this concert that was held in Pyongyang (so the description says edit: I saw the Kim Il Sung lapel. It’s North Korea alright). So my question is, how was this even arranged? I mean people have been sent to the gulags for humming a South Korean song for Pete’s sake. If anybody has an answer to this mystery, let me know.

Oh one more thing. Look at the audience. They are clearly uncomfortable and are not reacting to the act at all. like everything North Korea, it is so… odd and unreal. Check it out:

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The Path to Succession: The Path to Collapse Part 2

Coat of arms

Sorry for the delay in the posting. I’ll remember not to make fixed dates on postings.

In the last part of the series, I looked at the “When North Korea Falls” article. I read some reactions to the article I did not read before (See comments in the last article of the series), and gave some extra insight into this complex and highly speculative series. In this part of the series, we look further into what else could happen in a former North Korea and the challenges it could face in the country and in the region. Only this time, I would like to make this more on a further tangent into the speculative. I find this stuff very interesting, and will probably go elsewhere too as I research this thing.

But first, I will look into the argument made in the comments:

That’s the money shot. The problem is that a lot of people would die in a short time (months, a couple of years) and governments would feel responsible. As it stands, probably even more have been dying over a much longer period of time. Six in one, half dozen in the other.

That presents a very good argument, and as said in the last part of the series, reunification is going to be a painful process no matter how it is done, and the way things are handled now are too Utopian. As always with this, I present the following disclaimer:

Please be aware this is an ongoing research project, and information contained in this post may have glaring factual or missing information that I may not be aware of. If anybody has any insight that will make me better understand it, please say so in the comments and I will love to take your views into consideration and learn something. That is the whole goal of this blog.

Continue reading ‘The Path to Succession: The Path to Collapse Part 2′

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The Path to Succession: The Path to Collapse (update)

Coat of armsAnother very good possibility in the North Korea saga is the eventual collapse of the regime instead of the continuation of the Kim dynasty. This possibility has been speculated for the last fifteen years or so, and with all the huge events that took place that could have very well have led to collapse, the regime survived. For over 65 years, North Korea has held firm control over everything, and appears to still be in control. However, in my mind, it is not a question of if the DPRK will collapse, it is a matter of when. Today, I explore the possible scenarios on how North Korea could dissolve and what the possible outcomes could be. There are many theories and very few options. However, in my opinion, the regime will fade regardless of when the region is ready, and like many other things in life, it comes when it is least expected and the least convenient. If Eastern Europe and Russia are any indicators of how North Korea will fall apart, then it could very well be unexpected yet expected fate. On the other hand, Korea is way different from the way other Communist regimes were (and are) run.

Please be aware this is an ongoing research project, and information contained in this post may have glaring factual or missing information that I may not be aware of. If anybody has any insight that will make me better understand it, please say so in the comments and I will love to take your views into consideration and learn something. That is the whole goal of this blog.

Continue reading ‘The Path to Succession: The Path to Collapse (update)’

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The Path To Succession: Information Infiltration

DefectorThe cracks in the regime have been widening for some time, and the age of information cannot be suppressed even in the ultra-reclusive policies of North Korea. In days past, the suppression of information was very successful. There are a lot of variables in the succession question, and this could very well be one of them. Today, I explore the infiltration of information, the media and defectors and how it may undermine the legitimacy of the Kim family cult.

As Richardson pointed out in the comments in the last posting, North Korea was not always as bad as it is today. It was a slow downturn over the years and accelerated in the 1990’s when famines and mismanagement took its toll. The collapse of the Soviet Union did not help matters either. During the early days, North Korea had several sets of plans that rapidly built North Korea, and suggested North Korea was better off than the South. In 2002, more sets of reforms took place and in my opinion, were largely unsuccessful (The food, medical, supply, trade and other sectors are still a mess). To get a better understanding of the famines and reforms in 2002, please take a look at Marcus Noland’s book. It talks about it in very vivid detail. Furthermore, you also would want to check out One Free Korea’s postings on Marcus Noland and Stephen Haggard’s book “Famine in North Korea: Markets, Aid and Reform” to gain a better picture.

Continue reading ‘The Path To Succession: Information Infiltration’

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