Author Topic: For Bezor: Thoughts On The Korean Situation  (Read 1380 times)

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Offline MG

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For Bezor: Thoughts On The Korean Situation
« on: May 28, 2010, 07:41:34 AM »
Bearing in mind your family connection to S. Korea, I thought you might appreciate this op-ed piece in today's NYT:

Op-Ed Contributor
South Korea’s Collective Shrug
By B. R. MYERS
Published: May 27, 2010

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Busan, South Korea
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      Times Topic: The Cheonan (Ship)

ONE of the students at my university was killed in the attack that sank a South Korean naval vessel on March 26. A visual communications major, Mun Yeong-uk was only a few months from concluding his military service when a North Korean torpedo split the warship, the Cheonan, in half. His classmates loyally collected money for his family’s funeral expenses, but I was struck by how few people on our campus evinced any real anger toward the regime of Kim Jong-il.

This lack of indignation is mainstream here. Most people now accept North Korea’s responsibility for the sinking that killed Mr. Mun and 45 other sailors. A small but sizable minority suspect an elaborate government conspiracy of some sort. What almost all seem to share is the desire that South Korea put this unfortunate business behind it as soon as possible.

Support for military retaliation appears confined to those too old to fight. Even the rather mild measures that the South Korean president, Lee Myung-bak, announced on Monday — which included the drastic reduction of inter-Korean trade and resumption of the propaganda war along the demilitarized zone — have caused widespread hand-wringing.

The general reluctance to take the North Koreans to task can be partly attributed to a rational apprehension of the military realities. No one here needs to be reminded that Kim Jong-il could bomb Seoul flat even without using his new nuclear capacity. And in a country where all fit young men must spend two years in the military, “chicken hawks” are much harder to come by than in America.

But historical and cultural factors are also at work. By this I do not mean only the collective memory of the Korean War and its manifold horrors. Up until the late 1980s, right-wing governments resorted to North Korea scares so often that many people now refuse to believe any stories about the regime, no matter how overwhelming the evidence. If President Lee thought he could allay doubts with an especially thorough investigation into the sinking, he was mistaken. Left-wing newspapers now accuse him of postponing the announcement of the investigation’s results to exert maximum influence on next week’s regional elections.

It would be unfair to characterize these skeptics as pro-Pyongyang, but there is more sympathy for North Korea here than foreigners commonly realize. As a university student in West Berlin in the 1980s, I had a hard time finding even a Marxist with anything nice to say about East Germany. In South Korea, however, the North’s human rights abuses are routinely shrugged off with reference to its supposedly superior nationalist credentials. One often hears, for example, the mistaken claim that Mr. Kim’s father, Kim Il-sung, purged his republic of former Japanese collaborators, in alleged contrast to the morally tainted South.

Sympathy for Pyongyang is especially widespread in the peninsula’s chronically disgruntled southwest, and not just because this farming region profits whenever food aid is sent to the North. Gwangju, the largest city in the region, just commemorated the 30th anniversary of a brutal government massacre of civilian demonstrators, many of whom were defamed in the official news media of the time as North Korean agents.

South Korean nationalism is something quite different from the patriotism toward the state that Americans feel. Identification with the Korean race is strong, while that with the Republic of Korea is weak. (Kim Jong-il has a distinct advantage here: his subjects are more likely to equate their state with the race itself.) Thus few South Koreans feel personally affected by the torpedo attack.

Besides, Koreans in both the North and the South tend to cherish the myth that of all peoples in the world, they are the least inclined to premeditated evil. The sinking of the Cheonan is widely viewed here as an almost spontaneous byproduct of inter-Korean tension — a regrettable aberration that should not be made too much of. The left attributes the recent increase of tension to President Lee’s rejection of his predecessors’ accommodationist Sunshine Policy. Yet even the conservative news media talk of the attack in terms of an “error” that the North should own up to, not a cold-blooded act. Students in my classes tend to refer to the sinking as an “accident.”

This urge to give the North Koreans the benefit of the doubt is in marked contrast to the public fury that erupted after the killings of two South Korean schoolgirls by an American military vehicle in 2002; it was widely claimed that the Yankees murdered them callously. During the street protests against American beef imports in the wake of a mad cow disease scare in 2008, posters of a child-poisoning Uncle Sam were all the rage. It is illuminating to compare those two anti-American frenzies with the small and geriatric protests against Pyongyang that have taken place in Seoul in recent weeks.

Such are the unique circumstances under which President Lee has tried to marshal a firm and unified response to the North’s latest provocation. So far he has done an excellent job, conveying just the right mixture of resolve and restraint. Where American presidents tend to personalize conflict with foreign powers, Mr. Lee refrained from explicitly blaming Kim Jong-il for the sinking; this may make it a little easier for the dictator to issue an apology without losing face.

Even as the North threatens “all-out war,” the Obama administration would do well to emulate the South Korean leader. It should be mindful enough of Korean nationalism to hold back on its own rhetoric. It would be counterproductive if Washington were to look more interested in punishing North Korea than the injured party is.

B. R. Myers, the director of the international studies department at Dongseo University, is the author of “The Cleanest Race: How North Koreans See Themselves — and Why It Matters.”
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Re: For Bezor: Thoughts On The Korean Situation
« Reply #1 on: May 28, 2010, 08:23:55 AM »
Why are we involved in this nonsense?
“Honi soit qui mal y pense”


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Offline MG

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Re: For Bezor: Thoughts On The Korean Situation
« Reply #2 on: May 28, 2010, 09:47:11 AM »
Because, ummmm......Well, it's like this.......errrr.....You see........ahem.......

BECAUSE WE ARE THE MOST POWERFUL NATION ON EARTH AND IF WE WANT TO BEHAVE LIKE ASSHOLES, WE CAN!    :o


There. Is that plain enough for ya?     :P
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Re: For Bezor: Thoughts On The Korean Situation
« Reply #3 on: May 28, 2010, 09:50:53 AM »
Because, ummmm......Well, it's like this.......errrr.....You see........ahem.......

BECAUSE WE ARE THE MOST POWERFUL NATION ON EARTH AND IF WE WANT TO BEHAVE LIKE ASSHOLES, WE CAN!    :o


There. Is that plain enough for ya?     :P

Power corrupts as recent experience has yet again taught me.
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Offline Bezor

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Re: For Bezor: Thoughts On The Korean Situation
« Reply #4 on: June 15, 2010, 12:18:27 AM »
I love Skype.  Who knows who is listening in....

I had a great conversation with a 14 year old S. Korean student the other day via Skype.   I've met this child in person years ago, and then as now he has continued to surprise me with his political knowledge.  I would be happy to say that as a U.S. citizen our future continues to be bright...if our children were as well informed as this S. Korean adolescent.

There is some hand wringing from the S. Koreans,  as in "what will the N. Koreans do next?" but I don't think this will go any further.  Even though we have parked the U.S.S. Washington off Incheon, the probability that the N. Korean's will respond in kind is nil.  S. Korea is getting tired of the N. Korean threats.  Though S. Korea sends millions in aid and food, N. Korea continues to spite the hand that truly feeds them.  Collectively, the S. Korean’s are thinking enough is enough.

I asked the 14 year old while he ate Baskin Robbins what the N. Korean's would do:   Will this be resolved economically, or through military action?   Knowing the reply, I nevertheless asked:  Do you think N. Korea would like Baskin Robbins or more weapons? 

Call it the Baskin Robbins Offensive. 

My take is that there will be an internal shakeup in N. Korea.  The N. Korean leader is a former shadow of himself, the N. Korean country is dead broke, especially after they reshuffled their currency, effectively bankrupting everyone.   They were poor before, now they are paying the government run factories to keep the employment numbers "legit".  The factory operators will be shut down if they don't have employees.
China won't continue to come to N. Korea’s rescue as China is now a world-wide economic powerhouse, to bail out N. Korea with a military response will be a world-wide economic exposure that China can’t tolerate.   

N. Korea will fire the head of the Navy in what will be called an internal reorganization.  This will satisfy the S. Koreans.  S. Korea will end the economic boycott.