Kim Jong Un , President of Noth Korea |
Unfinished journey (72)
(Part seventy-two, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 13
September 2014, 8:42 pm)
North Korea, is a little country in the world which still
adhered to the ideology of communism system, besides Cuba and China, and
Vietnam.
But if other countries are split over different
ideologies such as Germany and Yemen have united (with the peaceful reunification)
like East Germany with West Germany, North Yemen and South Yemen, except
Vietnam war after North Vietnam beat
the United States who support the troops regime Saigon (South Vietnam).
Now the two Korean unification efforts continue to be
made:
Motivations for Inter-Korean Talks and Future Predictions
Cheon Hyun Jun, Northeast Asia Peace and Cooperation
Institute Chairman | 2014-09-01 09:56
On August 11th, the South Korean government suggested
that there be high-level contact between North and South Korean officials at
the Hall of Unification at the Joint Security Area of the DMZ on August 19th.
The South Korean government said that there needed to be discussions about
reuniting families for Chuseok and other such issues. It was Kim Gyu Hyun, the
first deputy director for the Presidential Office of National Security, who
made this suggestion. If high-level contact with North Korea is accomplished,
the South Korean government will take the opportunity to explain in detail the
proposed Dresden Doctrine and the launching of the Committee to Prepare for
Reunification. The South Korean government also explained that they intend to
comprehensively discuss pending issues such as reuniting separated families on
Chuseok, North Korea’s participation in the Asian Games, dissolving the May
24th sanctions, and reopening tourism at North Korea’s Geumgang Mountain.
However, the “Ulchi-Freedom Guardian (UFG)” South Korea-U.Ss Joint Military
Exercise will be held on the 19th as well. South Korea, in fact, did not fix
the date for high-level contact with the North for the 19th; rather, they
flexibly suggested the date to North Korea and said that the North could fix
another date if they so chose. In the past, North and South Korean officials
have met before when South Korea and the US engaged in joint military
exercises, so South Korea is waiting for the North’s response.
There are several reasons why South Korea suggested a
second high-level meeting with North Korea so quickly. First of all, there are
a series of important events coming up: on August 10th a meeting between the
foreign ministers of North Korea and Japan at the ARF, on August 14th Pope
Francis’ visit, on August 15th National Liberation Day, the Ulchi and
Ulchi-Freedom Guardian military exercises from August 18th, Chuseok from
September 8th, the Incheon Asian Games from September 19th, the U.S. midterm
elections and APEC summit in Beijing in November, etc. With so many important
events coming up, the Park Geun Hye Administration seems to think of this as
the golden opportunity to take command of the problems on the Korean Peninsula.
They want the Korean Peninsula to be peaceful especially for the Pope’s visit
and National Liberation Day.
Second, the Park Geun Hye Administration seems to feel
that since the Saenuri Party won the National Assembly’s by-elections, there is
proper support for forward-looking actions regarding issues between the North
and the South. President Park announced her “Unification is Jackpot” policy on
January 6th and the “Dresden Doctrine” in Dresden, Germany on March 28th.
However, because of the Sewol Ferry incident, she was unable to make
reunification a national issue. The Preparation for Reunification Committee has
not been successfully launched yet either. Because of various domestic issues,
President Park’s reunification plan has suffered many disruptions. There is not
much time left to meaningfully save the North Korean people and establish
peace, and it is in this state of affairs that the “apostle of peace”, the
Pope, will come to the Korean Peninsula. President Park seems to have made an
opportunity out of her party’s July 30th by-election victory.
Third, North Korea has continuously threatened the South.
After the high-level meeting and reunion of separated families in February, the
threats from the North have been continuous. North Korea, undeterred by time or
region, has fired missiles, putting the Korean Peninsula in a state of tension.
The Korean National Intelligence Service reported to the National Assembly’s
Senate Intelligence Committee that between February and July, North Korea has
fired 8 kinds of missiles 250 times. They have distorted and criticized the Park
Geun Hye Administration’s “Unification is Jackpot” policy as “Reunification by
Absorption”, “Dresden Doctrine” as “Hope for Liberal Democratic Unification”,
and the Korea-US Joint Military Exercises as “Exercises to Invade the North”.
These kinds of misunderstandings are a huge obstacle for progress on the Park
Geun Hye Administration’s various policies and plans including the “Korean
Peninsula Trust-Building Process”, “Dresden Doctrine”, and the “DMZ World Peace
Park”. There is now a dire need to explain South Korea’s sincerity to the
North, no matter what it takes. Policies regarding the North will be hard to
achieve without the North’s cooperation.
Fourth, countries neighboring the Korean Peninsula are
changing their attitudes. On May 28th, Japan decided, in Stockholm, that a
full-scale re-investigation into the Japanese families kidnapped by North Korea
would be conducted. When this happens, the authoritative sanctions against
North Korea will finally be lifted. Under the pretext of weakening relations with
the South, Japan suddenly decided to initiate direct contact with North Korea.
North Korea, while waiting for the chance to weaken relations between South
Korea and Japan, was caught off guard. China, on the other hand, is maintaining
good relations with South Korea on the surface, but has effectively and quietly
continued giving support to the North. China, too, is strongly demanding
improved relations between North and South Korea. Russia has demanded a change
in South Korea’s policy because of its involvement in the development in the
Rasun area and Russia’s gas pipeline in North Korea.
The Park Geun Hye Administration proposed high-level
contact to North Korea with this in mind. However, instead of immediately
giving a response, North Korea is stalling by thoroughly weighing the pros and
cons. They are acting as if time is on their side. North Korea seems to think
that they lose nothing by stalling. The Pope, as an “apostle of peace”, will
emphasize peace on the Korean Peninsula and dialogue between the North and the
South. North Korea, who has always been of the opinion that it is the South
that has been ruining the peace on the peninsula, will interpret this as the
South being pressured.
Noth Korea Power Dinasty |
Second is President Park’s congratulatory speech on
August 15th. During the speech, if she mentions anything with a forward-looking
attitude about North Korean issues such as re-opening tourism at Geumgang
Mountain, it won’t be too late, even then, for North Korea to give an answer.
It will be difficult for North Korea to refuse South
Korea’s suggestion at present. There is a possibility that they may just
counter with a date-change. North Korea won’t be able to change the fact that
it is participating in the Incheon Asian Games, and as such, must maintain
dialogue with South Korea in order to receive various benefits. Moving forward,
North Korea must reopen tourism at Geumgang Mountain and get the May 24th
sanctions dissolved in order to promote economic development in the Won
Mountain area. Kim Jong Un intends to improve relations with Japan and South
Korea because North Korea’s relationships with China and Russia bear little
fruit. With the Saenuri Party’s victory in the by-election on July 30th, it
will be difficult for the North to continue to use South Korea’s inner
political strife as a tactic any longer.
Because North Korea stands to gain nothing, it cannot
continue this tactical behavior forever. Although it is maintaining a bare
minimum economic relationship with China, although it is trying to improve relations
with Japan, and although Russia is implementing friendly policies towards North
Korea such as remission of debt, Kim Jong Eun is still absurdly short of the
foreign capital he needs for his 20 economic development zones. This is
especially true because there is a high possibility that the US will pull the
brakes on the improving relations between North Korea and Japan, slowing down
the process, and making it more difficult for North Korea to succeed in getting
funds from Japan to develop the zones. Therefore, North Korea only has the
South to depend on.
I have discussed the reasons behind the Park Geun Hye
Administration’s suggestion to North Korea for high-level contact, but I do not
know if the Park Geun Hye Administration feels the increasing need to open
dialogue between the North and the South. Opportunities like this do not come
often. North Korea will have to quickly accomplish its goals before the Park
Geun Hye Administration changes its mind. Time will not always be on North
Korea’s side.
* Views expressed in Guest Columns do not necessarily
reflect those of Daily NK.
History of North Korea
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the history of Korea before its division, see History
of Korea.
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v t e
The history of North Korea began with occupation of the
Korean Peninsula north of the 38th parallel by the Soviet Union at the end of
World War II, a division of Korea with the United States occupying the south.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) was established in 1948.
The early years[edit]
This section needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2006)
In the aftermath of partition of Korea, Kim Il-sung had
arrived in North Korea on August 22 after 26 years in exile in China and the
Soviet Union. In September 1945, Kim was installed by the Soviets as head of
the Provisional People’s Committee. He was not, at this time, the head of the
Communist Party, whose headquarters were in Seoul in the U.S.-occupied south.
Kim established the Korean People's Army (KPA) aligned
with the Communists, formed from a cadre of guerrillas and former soldiers who
had gained combat experience in battles against the Japanese and later
Nationalist Chinese troops. From their ranks, using Soviet advisers and
equipment, Kim constructed a large army skilled in infiltration tactics and
guerrilla warfare. Before the outbreak of the Korean War, Joseph Stalin
equipped the KPA with modern medium tanks, trucks, artillery, and small arms.
Kim also formed an air force, equipped at first with ex-Soviet propeller-driven
fighter and attack aircraft. Later, North Korean pilot candidates were sent to
the Soviet Union and China to train in MiG-15 jet aircraft at secret bases.[1]
Although original plans called for all-Korean elections
sponsored by the United Nations in 1948, Kim persuaded the Soviets not to allow
the UN north of the 38th parallel. As a result, a month after the South was
granted independence as the Republic of Korea, the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea (DPRK) was proclaimed on September 9, with Kim as premier. On October
12, the Soviet Union declared that Kim's regime was the only lawful government
on the peninsula. The Communist Party merged with the New People's Party to
form the Workers Party of North Korea (of which Kim was vice-chairman). In
1949, the Workers Party of North Korea merged with its southern counterpart to
become the Workers Party of Korea (WPK) with Kim as party chairman.
By 1949, North Korea was a full-fledged Communist state.
All parties and mass organizations joined the Democratic Front for the
Reunification of the Fatherland, ostensibly a popular front but in reality
dominated by the Communists. The government moved rapidly to establish a
political system that was partly styled on the Soviet system, with political
power monopolised by the Worker's Party of Korea (WPK). The establishment of a
command economy followed. Most of the country's productive assets had been
owned by the Japanese or by Koreans who had been collaborators. The
nationalization of these assets in 1946 placed 70% of industry under state
control. By 1949 this percentage had risen to 90%. Since then, virtually all
manufacturing, finance and internal and external trade has been conducted by
the state.
In agriculture, the government moved more slowly towards
a command economy. The "land to the tiller" reform of 1946
redistributed the bulk of agricultural land to the poor and landless peasant
population, effectively breaking the power of the landed class.[2] In 1954,
however, a partial collectivization was carried out, with peasants being urged,
and often forced, into agricultural co-operatives. By 1958, virtually all
farming was being carried out collectively, and the co-operatives were
increasingly merged into larger productive units.
Although developmental debates took place within the
Workers' Party of Korea in the 1950s, North Korea, like all the postwar
communist states, undertook massive state investment in heavy industry, state
infrastructure and military strength, neglecting the production of consumer
goods.[3] By paying the collectivized peasants low state-controlled prices for
their product, and using the surplus thus extracted to pay for industrial
development, the state carried out a series of three-year plans, which brought
industry's share of the economy from 47% in 1946 to 70% in 1959, despite the
devastation of the Korean War. There were huge increases in electricity
production, steel production and machine building. The large output of tractors
and other agricultural machinery achieved a great increase in agricultural
productivity.
The Korean War[edit]
Main article: Korean War
The consolidation of Syngman Rhee's government in the
South with American military support and the suppression of the October 1948
insurrection ended hopes that the country could be reunified by way of
Stalinist revolution in the South, and from early 1949 Kim sought Soviet and
Chinese support for a military campaign to reunify the country by force. The
withdrawal of most U.S. forces from South Korea in June 1949 left the southern
government defended only by a weak and inexperienced South Korean army. The southern
regime also had to deal with a citizenry of uncertain loyalty. The North Korean
army, by contrast, had been the beneficiary of the Soviet Union's outdated
Soviet WWII-era equipment, and had a core of hardened veterans who had fought
as anti-Japanese guerrillas, or alongside the Chinese Communists.[4]
North Korea Misile Nuclear Power |
Initially, Joseph Stalin rejected Kim's requests for
permission to invade the South, but in late 1949 the Communist victory in China
and the development of Soviet nuclear weapons made him re-consider Kim's
proposal. In January 1950, after China's Mao Zedong indicated that China would
send troops and other support to Kim, Stalin approved an invasion.[5] The
Soviets provided limited support in the form of advisors who helped the North
Koreans as they planned the operation, and Soviet military instructors to train
some of the Korean units. However, from the very beginning Stalin made it clear
that the Soviet Union would avoid a direct confrontation with the U.S. over
Korea and would not commit ground forces even in case of major military crisis.
The stage was set for a civil war between two rival regimes on the Korean
peninsula.[4]
For over a year before North Korean forces tried to
attack the southern government on June 25, 1950, the two sides had been engaged
in a series of bloody clashes along the 38th parallel, especially in the Ongjin
area on the west coast. On June 25, 1950, the northern forces escalated the
battles into a full-fledged offensive and crossed the parallel in large
numbers. Due to a combination of surprise, superior military forces, and a
poorly armed South Korean army, the Northern forces quickly captured Seoul and
Syngman Rhee and his government was forced to flee further south. By mid July,
North Korean troops overwhelmed the South Korean and allied American units
defending South Korea and forced them back to a defensive perimeter in
south-east South Korea known as the Pusan Perimeter. However, the North Koreans
failed to unify the peninsula when foreign powers entered the civil war. North
Korean forces were defeated by September and driven northwards by United
Nations forces led by the U.S. By October, the U.N. forces had retaken Seoul
and captured Pyongyang, and it became Kim's turn to flee. But in late November,
Chinese forces entered the war and pushed the U.N. forces back, retaking
Pyongyang in December and Seoul in January 1951. However, U.N. forces managed
to retake Seoul for the South Koreans. The war essentially became a bloody
stalemate for the next two years. The front was stabilized in 1953 along what
eventually became the current Armistice[6] Line. After long negotiations, the
two sides agreed on a border truce.
Postwar[edit]
See also: Korean DMZ Conflict (1966-1969)
The whole of the Korean peninsula lay in ruins when the
armistice was signed at Pammunjon on July 27, 1953. Despite the failure of his
attempt at unifying the nation under his rule, Kim Il-sung considered the war a
victory in the sense that he remained in power. As a result, the North Korean
media made the most of it by focusing entirely on the defeats suffered by the
US and UN forces during the failed invasion of North Korea in late 1950. The
armistice was celebrated in Pyongyang with a military parade in which Kim
declared: "Despite their best efforts, the imperialist invaders were
defeated with great loss in men and material."
Reconstruction of the DPRK proceeded with extensive
Chinese and Soviet assistance, a task that took the next few years.[7] [8] Meanwhile,
Kim began gradually consolidating his power. Up to this time, North Korean
politics were represented by four factions: the Yan'an faction made up of
returnees from China, the Soviet Koreans, native Korean communists, and Kim's
own group, those who had fought guerrilla actions against Japan in the 1930s
and 1940s.
Pak Hon-yong, party vice chairman and Foreign Minister of
the DPRK, was blamed for the failure of the southern population to support
North Korea during the war, was dismissed from his positions in 1953, and was
executed after a show-trial in 1955.[9][10] Most of the South Korean leftists
and communist sympathizers who defected to the North in 1945–1953 were also
accused of espionage and other crimes, and subsequently killed, imprisoned, or
exiled to remote agricultural and mining villages. Potential rivals from other
groups such as Kim Tu-bong were also purged.
North Korea Misile Power Test |
In 1956, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev made a sweeping
denunciation of Stalin, which sent shock waves throughout the communist world.
North Korea, Albania, and China were among the loudest opponents of
de-Stalinization. In addition, there was disagreement over Kim's decision to
follow a rigid Stalinist model of economic development which promoted heavy
industry and energy over light industry and consumer goods.[11] While Kim
Il-sung was visiting Moscow to personally meet with Khrushchev that June, a
group of his opponents tried to seize control of the government in Pyongyang.
They denounced Kim as a tyrant who practiced arbitrary, one-man rule. When he
hastily returned home, the brief attempt at political liberalization in North
Korea was ended. Moreover, General O Chin-u dispatched troops to the streets of
Pyongyang to prevent any protests in favor of reform from breaking out. Kim and
his guerrilla faction had the advantage of appearing as national heroes due to
their resistance against the Japanese and there was no question about their
patriotism. By contrast, the Yan'an and Soviet Korean groups tended to appear
as the representatives of other nations. A series of purges followed in
1956-1958, and by 1961 the last remaining opposition to Kim had disappeared.
Kim Il-sung had initially been criticized by the Soviets
during a previous 1955 visit to Moscow for practicing Stalinism and a cult of
personality, which was already growing enormous. The Korean ambassador to the
USSR, Li Sangjo, a member of the Yan'an faction, reported that it had become a
criminal offense to so much as write on Kim's picture in a newspaper and that
he had been elevated to the status of Marx, Lenin, Mao, and Stalin in the
communist pantheon. He also charged Kim with rewriting history to appear as if
his guerrilla faction had single handedly liberated Korea from the Japanese,
completely ignoring the assistance of the Chinese Communist Party. In addition,
Li stated that in the process of agricultural collectivization, grain was being
forcibly confiscated from the peasants, leading to "at least 300
suicides" and that Kim made nearly all major policy decisions and appointments
himself. Li reported that over 30,000 people were in prison for completely
unjust and arbitrary reasons as trivial as not printing Kim Il-sung's portrait
on sufficient quality paper or using newspapers with his picture to wrap
parcels. Grain confiscation and tax collection were also conducted forcibly
with violence, beatings, and imprisonment.[12] During Kim Il-sung's Moscow
visit, the Soviets recommended that he discard the personality cult, adhere to
the ideas of collective leadership, remove falsified history accounts from
textbooks, and work towards improving the living standards of the Korean
people, which remained poor and below prewar standards. Foodstuffs during the
initial postwar period were rationed and extremely expensive, as were consumer
items. By comparison, South Korea, which had less of an industrial base than
the DPRK, had a better food supply and was also flooded with American goods
although it should be noted that the overall destruction there during the war
was smaller.
Relations with China also became acerbic in part due to
the continued presence of PLA troops in North Korea following the 1953
armistice. The aftermath of the failed 1956 coup brought about a more
nationalistic mood in Pyongyang and the occupation forces increasingly came to
be seen as exactly that. While visiting Moscow in November 1957 for the 40th
anniversary of the 1917 Revolution, Kim Il-Sung was again told by both Soviet
leaders and Mao Zedong to adhere to collective leadership and not publish
falsified history texts. An irate Kim responded by protesting the Chinese
military presence in the DPRK, so Mao finally agreed to a troop withdrawal. The
following February, the last Chinese forces departed from the country. Aside
from that, the leadership in Beijing was nearly as unenthusiastic about Kim
Il-sung as the Soviets, with Mao Zedong criticizing him for having started the
whole "idiotic war" and for being an incompetent military commander
who should have been removed from power. PLA commander Peng Dehuai was equally
contemptuous of Kim's skills at waging war.
In the end however, Kim Il-sung remained in power
partially because the Soviets turned their attention to the Hungarian
Revolution of 1956 that fall. The Soviets and Chinese were unable to stop the
inevitable purge of Kim's domestic opponents or his move towards a one-man
Stalinist autocracy and relations with both countries deteriorated in the
former's case because of the elimination of the pro-Soviet Koreans and the
latter because of the regime's refusal to acknowledge Chinese assistance in
either liberation from the Japanese or the war in 1950-53.[13]
Stalin continued to be honored in North Korea long after
his death in 1953, and a street in Pyongyang bore his name until 1980. By
contrast, neighboring Chinese leader Mao Zedong was mostly ignored and Kim
Il-sung rejected most of his policies such as the Hundred Flowers Campaign and
(later) the Cultural Revolution. However, the Great Leap Forward led to a
Korean imitation in 1958-1960 known as the Chollima (Flying Horse)
Campaign.[14] Still, Kim himself remained the primary object of veneration in
the DPRK. He had always had a personality cult from 1949 onward, and by the
1970s it would reach unprecedented dimensions.
The gradual rift between China and the USSR that
developed in the early 1960s caused North Korea to pursue a delicate balancing
act between the two communist giants. By 1963, this balance clearly tipped
towards Beijing. North Korea joined the Chinese in criticizing Khrushchev for
"revisionism" and for being too soft on the United States. Official
proclamations stated that the DPRK and PRC were in "complete
agreement" on all major issues. Racial, cultural, and historical ties also
pulled North Korea closer to China. However, Kim Il-sung eventually decided
that he was moving too far towards becoming a Chinese satellite. China was also
comparatively un-industrialized and could not provide the technical and
military assistance Pyongyang sought. Finally, the PRC exploded its first
atomic bomb in October 1964 and subsequently refused to give, or even sell,
North Korea any nuclear weapons of its own, apparently fearing that Kim was too
likely to use them in his quest to reunify the peninsula. In 1965, the
pro-Chinese stance of North Korea had noticeably diminished.
Stalin had viewed the DPRK as a strategic asset for the
Soviet Union so that it would have access to warm-water ports and possibly a
springboard in the event Japan would engage in renewed aggression in the
future. However, its value declined after his death when Khrushchev began
emphasizing nuclear power over conventional warfare and also normalized
relations with Tokyo in 1956. Also Khrushchev's primary interest in Asia was
relations with China, to the point where he viewed North Korea, North Vietnam,
and Mongolia as unimportant. In addition, he saw the charismatic leaders of the
Cuban revolution as far more appealing allies than Kim Il-sung's secretive
Stalinist regime.
While Kim Il-sung could not afford to alienate Moscow too
much, he did nonetheless chafe under theirs and Beijing's thumb. He became
agitated when the Chinese and Soviets forced him to reinstate some of his
enemies into the Politburo following the August 1956 coup attempt (although as
mentioned above, he did end up purging them in the next three years). The
Sino-Soviet split proved an asset to North Korea since it allowed Kim a freer
domestic hand. He also rejected North Korean participation in COMECON so as to
not end up a Soviet economic colony. Trying to maintain favorable relations
with Moscow, Pyongyang referred to the Soviet reaction to the Cuban Missile
Crisis as "a wise decision for the sake of world peace" while by
comparison, the Chinese accused Khrushchev of cowardice in the face of
imperialism.
However, North Korea ended up falling out with the Soviet
Union when they flatly rejected a shopping list that was sent to them by Kim
Il-sung including requests for SAM missiles, Mig-21 fighter jets, and
submarines. Following the DPRK's shift to a pro-Chinese stance in 1963, Moscow
dismissed them as the PRC's puppet and that Kim's juche philosophy was a cover
for obedience to Beijing. Kim told Alexei Kosygin in 1965 that he was not
anyone's puppet and "We implement the purest Marxism and condemn both the
mistakes of the CPC and the CPSU".
Despite this, it was obvious that North Korea had more in
common with China than the Soviet Union, including the above-mentioned racial,
cultural, and historical connections. Kim Il-sung joined with Mao Zedong in
supporting a hardline anti-US stance and in rejecting Khrushchev's
de-Stalinization and criticism of personality cults, in addition to a dislike
for COMECON and other attempts to promote economic integration among the
communist bloc.
China however had been the imperial overlord of Korea in
past centuries and Kim became concerned that that this kind of relationship
would return, thus he decided to avoid moving too far into Beijing's arms. Also
Kim Il-sung was eager to promote his own leadership in the Third World
independent of the Chinese and Soviets.[15] The fall of Khrushchev from power
in 1964 proved advantageous to North Korea as it allowed them to pull away from
Chinese dominance. Much like Stalin, Khrushchev maintained direct, personal
control of Soviet foreign policy and the new leadership of Brezhnev and Kosygin
were virtual neophytes who knew little about world affairs except in simple
ideological terms of "socialist world=good", "capitalist
world=bad". Kim Il-sung thus easily convinced them to supply 150 million
rubles worth of military assistance, 50% greater than his 1962 demands in
exchange for which Brezhnev and Kosygin promised to purchase North Korean
products even though the Soviet Union had no use for them and as Kim even
admitted, were "too poor quality to sell abroad". North Korea also
requested Soviet aid in several economic ventures, all of which the new
leadership in Moscow readily agreed to despite their skepticism over Kim's
domestic and foreign policies, as they believed it to be their duty to a
fraternal socialist state and to keep Pyongyang out of the Chinese orbit. In
this sense, Moscow could feel quite satisfied at North Korea's divorce from
China after 1964 and Kim Il-sung's condemnation of the Cultural Revolution as
"insanity". It was of course inevitable that Kim did not want to
become a Soviet puppet any more than he wanted to become a Chinese puppet and
so he hurried to restore ties with Beijing as soon as the chaos of the Cultural
Revolution subsided.[16]
Pyong Yang City |
Meanwhile, the peninsula remained divided and relations
with the ROK and the United States were bitterly hostile. But when the US
became engaged in Vietnam around this time, Kim saw an opportunity. Inspired by
the actions of the Vietcong, he began employing his own guerrilla squads to
infiltrate South Korea, spread propaganda, and commit sabotage. North Korean
agents came south in 1966-1969, creating disruption, but ultimately failing to
win over the South Korean populace. Actions such as an attempted assassination
of ROK president Park Chung-hee in Seoul failed, and Kim publicly disclaimed
any responsibility for them. North Korean fighter pilots were also sent to
Hanoi's assistance (and conversely South Korea sent a contingent of troops to
aid the government in Saigon).
Relations with China collapsed when that country became
engulfed in the Cultural Revolution. North Korea refused to condemn the
campaign, stating that it was Beijing's internal affair. However, when visiting
Moscow in 1966, Kim expressed to the new Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev his
bewilderment at the Cultural Revolution in China. The Red Guards then denounced
Kim as a "millionaire, a revisionist, and a capitalist" who lived in
splendor and luxury while American imperialists made war on Vietnam (all the
while ignoring Pyongyang's secret assistance to the DRV). In the end, North
Korea could not condemn a neighbor that was easily capable of putting a million
troops on its border poised to invade, and had no choice but to lie low until
the Cultural Revolution ended. There were isolated clashes with Chinese troops
along the border in 1968 as Chinese and North Korean troops exchanged small
arms fire with each other. As a result, the Red Guards erected loudspeakers on
the border facing North Korea where they denounced Kim Il-sung and read
quotations from Mao's Little Red Book. North Korean troops responded by
erecting their own loudspeakers towards the Chinese border and airing
quotations from their leader's writings. But by 1970, most of the storm clouds
of the Cultural Revolution had blown away and relations with China quickly
returned to normal. Chinese premier Zhou Enlai visited Pyongyang that year and
apologized for the attacks made on Kim by the Red Guards. At the same time, the
Soviets were again criticized by both Chinese and North Korean officials for
being too soft on the United States. The Cultural Revolution was now viewed in
North Korea as an excellent idea and "completely correct".
The year of 1968 was mainly dominated by the capture of
the USS Pueblo, a reconnaissance ship captured in the Sea of Japan that
January.[17] The crew were held captive throughout the year despite American
protests that the vessel was in international waters and finally released in
December after a formal US apology was issued. North Korea went in for a repeat
performance in April 1969 by shooting down an EC-121 aircraft, killing everyone
on board. The Nixon administration found itself unable to react at all, since
the US was heavily committed in Vietnam and had no troops to spare if the
situation in Korea escalated. However, the Pueblo capture and EC-121 shootdown
did not find approval in Moscow, as the Soviet Union did not want a second
major war to erupt in Asia. China's response to the USS Pueblo crisis is less
clear.[18]
In 1972, the first formal summit meeting between
Pyongyang and Seoul was held, but cautious talks did not lead much of anywhere
and relations between the two Koreas continued down the path of hostility.[19]
North Korea's official reaction to the visit of President
Richard Nixon to China in February 1972 was one of celebration on the grounds
that the US could not diplomatically isolate China and had been forced to
finally negotiate. Privately though, Kim Il-sung was worried about this development
and paid a visit to Beijing a few months later in which Mao Zedong told him
that China merely wished to acquire technology from the US and was not
attempting to sell out to capitalism.
With the fall of South Vietnam to the North Vietnamese on
April 30, 1975, Kim Il-sung began to feel that the US had shown its weakness
and that reunification of Korea under his regime was finally possible. Kim
visited Beijing in May 1975 in the hope of gaining political and military
support for this plan to invade South Korea again, but Mao Zedong refused.
Despite public proclamations of support, Mao privately told Kim that China
would be unable to assist North Korea this time because of the lingering
after-effects of the Cultural Revolution throughout China, and also because Mao
had recently decided to restore diplomatic relations with the US. Afterwards,
Kim went home empty-handed.[20]
Relations with China remained on an even course after
Mao's death on September 9, 1976. China's new leaders, Hua Guofeng and Deng
Xiaoping, both visited North Korea in 1978, although they failed to reach a
common understanding on relations with the Soviet Union (Beijing was not on
friendly terms with Moscow during the 1970s, while Pyongyang continued its
usual balancing act with both the Soviet Union and China). The Chinese
establishment of formal diplomatic ties with the US in early 1979 was welcomed
in Pyongyang and official proclamations congratulated "our brotherly
neighbor for ending long-hostile relations and establishing diplomatic ties
with the US."
Economic decline[edit]
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Due to a series of ill fortuned policy decisions
concerning military expenditures and mining industries and the radical changes
in international oil prices by the late 1970s, the North Korean economy began
to slow down. These decisions eventually affected the whole economy, forcing
the nation to acquire external debts. At the same time North Korea's policy of
self-reliance and the antagonism of America and its allies made it difficult
for them to expand foreign trade or secure credit.
North Korea Troops |
In the 1970s, expansion of North Korea's economy, with
the accompanying rise in living standards, came to an end and a few decades
later went into reverse.[21] Compounding this was a decision to borrow foreign
capital and invest heavily in military industries. North Korea's desire to
lessen its dependence on aid from China and the Soviet Union prompted the
expansion of its military power, which had begun in the second half of the
1960s. The government believed such expenditures could be covered by foreign
borrowing and increased sales of its mineral wealth in the international
market. North Korea invested heavily in its mining industries and purchased a
large quantity of mineral extraction infrastructure from abroad. However, soon
after making such investments, international prices for many of North Korea's
native minerals fell, leaving the country with large debts and an inability to
pay them off and still provide a high level of social welfare to its
people.[22]
Worsening this already poor situation, the centrally
planned economy, which emphasized heavy industry, had reached the limits of its
productive potential in North Korea. Juche repeated demands that North Koreans
learn to build and innovate domestically had run its course as had the ability
of North Koreans to keep technological pace with other industrialized nations.
By the mid to late-1970s some parts of the capitalist world, including South
Korea, were creating new industries based around computers, electronics, and
other advanced technology in contrast to North Korea's Stalinist economy of
mining and steel production.[23]
Continuing a "self-reliance" ideology that had
once been highly successful, Kim Il-Sung was unable to respond effectively to
the challenge of an increasingly prosperous and well-armed South Korea, which
undermined the legitimacy of his own regime. Having failed at their earlier
attempt to conduct market-economy reforms such as those carried out in China by
Deng Xiaoping, Kim opted for continued ideological purity. The DPRK by 1980 was
faced with the choice of either repaying its international loans, or continuing
its support of social welfare for its people. Given the ideals of Juche, North
Korea chose to default on its loans and by the late 1980s its industrial output
was declining.[23] A 1984 visit to Pyongyang by CCP General Secretary Hu
Yaobang was received politely, but failed to sell Kim on making any economic
reforms. The previous year, Kim Jong-il had visited China on his first official
trip abroad since being named his father's successor. The Chinese took him to
see the Special Economic Zone in Guangdong Province, but an unimpressed Kim
referred to the leadership in Beijing as "revisionists". Overall,
North Korea during the 1980s became gradually more isolated from the rest of
the communist bloc and the world in general. Tensions with the US and South
Korea worsened due to President Ronald Reagan's strong anti-communist stance
and more assertive foreign policy, and the number of American troops on the
peninsula increased. During this period, North Korea began to acquire a
reputation as a terrorist state thanks to events such as the planting of a bomb
on a South Korean airliner in Burma during 1983 and kidnappings of Japanese and
other foreign nationals.
That same year in 1984, North Korea again drifted towards
the Soviet Union after Kim visited Moscow during a grand tour of the USSR (his
first trip to Moscow since 1966) where he met Konstantin Chernenko (his first
and only meeting with this Soviet leader). Kim also made public visits to East
Germany, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia.
However, DPRK-USSR relations ran out of gas by 1986. The basic nature of
Pyongyang's political system was very different from Moscow's. The Korean
Workers Party still existed, but it was essentially ceremonial and had long
since been subordinated to Kim's personal dictatorship. Moreover, his Juche
philosophy had effectively replaced Marxism-Leninism as North Korea's official
ideology (as outlined in the 1974 North Korean constitution). In addition, the personality
cult of Kim had assumed proportions not seen anywhere else in the world. Most
of this (as well as the Juche philosophy) was the work of his son Kim Jong-Il,
who had been officially nominated as his father's successor in October 1980.
The elder Kim was unmoved by the social and economic
reforms of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev starting in 1985, and this
contributed to the decline in relations with Moscow. Chinese economic reforms
also had little effect in North Korea, as did the fall of communist states in
Eastern Europe during 1989. The leadership in Pyongyang responded by
proclaiming that this event demonstrated the correctness of juche on the
grounds that Marxism-Leninism was an outdated idea and the failure of the
Eastern European states to evolve from Marxism to juche ensured the return of
capitalism to them. China endured a period of international isolation after the
Tiananmen Square Massacre, which caused it to embrace Pyongyang as one of the
world's only surviving communist states. Even so, China alienated North Korea
when they participated in the 1988 Summer Olympics in South Korea in defiance
of the North Korean boycott. Relations with North Korea were further strained
in 1990 when the Chinese agreed to recognize both Korean governments equally.
The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 deprived North
Korea of its main source of economic aid, leaving China as the isolated
regime's only major ally. Without Soviet aid, North Korea's economy went into a
free-fall. By this time in the early 1990s, Kim Jong-il was already conducting
most of the day-to-day activities of running of the state, and he apparently
kept his aging father in the dark about the growing economic disaster happening
throughout the country. Also at this time, North Korea was attracting the ire
of the international community for its attempts at developing nuclear weapons.
Former US president Jimmy Carter made a visit to Pyongyang in June 1994 in
which he met with Kim and returned proclaiming that he had settled the nuclear
question.[citation needed]
Succession by Kim Jong-il[edit]
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Kim Il-sung died from a sudden heart attack on July 8,
1994, three weeks after the Carter visit. His son, Kim Jong-il, who had already
assumed key positions in the government, succeeded as General-Secretary of the
Korean Workers' Party. At that time, North Korea had no secretary-general in
the party nor a president. Minimal legal procedure that had been established
was summarily ignored. Although a new constitution appeared to end the war-time
political system, it did not completely terminate the transitional military
rule. Rather it legitimized and institutionalized military rule by making the
National Defense Commission (NDC) the most important state organ and its
chairman the highest authority. After three years of consolidating his power,
Kim Jong-il became Chairman of the NDC on October 8, 1997, a position described
by the NDC as the nation's "highest administrative authority," and
thus North Korea's de facto head of state. His succession had been decided as
early as 1980, with the support of the military and party apparatus.[citation
needed]
The fundamental cause of this decline is that the state,
which runs the entire economy, cannot pay for the necessary imports of capital
goods to undertake the desperately needed modernization of its industrial
plants. The inefficiency of North Korea's Stalinist-style agricultural system
also contributed to the disaster. In addition, North Korea spends about a
quarter of its GDP on armaments, including the development of nuclear weapons,
and establishes a military draft where it keeps nearly all able-bodied males
aged 18–30 in uniform, while the basic infrastructure of the state is allowed
to crumble.
Amid these growing problems, Kim Jong-il began reworking
the DPRK's political system to accommodate his own style of governing. With the
Cold War a thing of the past, the Korean Workers' Party (which was already
largely powerless) was made even more ornamental. Instead, Kim adopted a new
ideology known as "Songun". Translated as "Army First", it
effectively transformed North Korea into a military dictatorship rather than a
traditional communist state. The Korean Peoples Army would dictate policy from
now on.
During the 2000s, Kim Jong-il made no serious effort to
revive the Stalinist economic system his father had spent years building.
During that time, several factories and mines all over the country were
shuttered and abandoned. There was little functioning industry except that
related to defense and tourism. Although the personality cult of the two Kims
remained, as did the promotion of Juche, in effect North Korea by the start of
21st century had become a markedly different nation than it had been during the
Cold War. Also, while still very much a totalitarian state, the DPRK had become
somewhat less rigid than in Kim Il-sung's day. Strict labor discipline broke
down with the economy, and people were no longer required to attend mandatory
lectures on Juche. The country also achieved a cult following among
international tourists, because there was nowhere else in the world like a
closed-off and bizarre society and culture like North Korea. By comparison,
during the Cold War, there were rarely any foreign visitors to the DPRK except
from other communist nations. Although China remained as Pyongyang's main ally,
the two communist countries no longer bore much resemblance to each other or to
their own past in terms of appearance, the economy, and each other's society.
As a result, North Korea is now dependent on
international food aid to feed its population. According to Amnesty
International, more than 13 million people, over half the population of the
country, suffered from malnutrition in the DPRK in 2003. In 2001 the DPRK
received nearly $300 million USD in food aid from the U.S., South Korea, Japan,
and the European Union, plus much additional aid from the United Nations and
non-governmental organizations. Unspecified (but apparently large) amounts of
aid in the form of food, oil and coal are also provided by China every year.
Despite this, North Korea maintained its hostile rhetoric against the U.S.,
South Korea and Japan. The supply of heating and electricity outside the
capital is practically non-existent, and food and medical supplies are scarce.
When there is a bad harvest, as has been persistently the case over recent
years, the population faces actual famine: a situation never before seen in a
peacetime industrial economy. Since 1997 there has been a steady stream of
illegal emigration to China, despite the efforts of both countries to prevent
it. Illegal North Koreans caught in China were often deported back to North
Korea where most of them were tortured, killed, or sent to a reeducation camp.
Those who weren't caught were often forced into slave labor or prostitution
anywhere in China.
Kim Jong-il said that the solution to this crisis is
earning hard currency, developing information technology, and attracting
foreign aid, but very little progress has been made in these areas. So far the
DPRK, not surprisingly given Juche and UN attempts to isolate them, has made
little progress in attracting foreign capital.
In July 2002 some limited reforms were announced. The
currency was devalued and food prices were allowed to rise in the hope of
stimulating agricultural production. It was announced that food rationing systems
as well as subsidized housing would be phased out. A "family-unit farming
system" was introduced on a trial basis for the first time since
collectivization in 1954. The government also set up a "special
administrative zone" in Sinuiju, a town near the border with China. The
local authority was given near-autonomy, especially in its economic affairs.
This was an attempt to emulate the success of such free-trade zones in China,
but it attracted little outside interest. Despite some optimistic talk in the
foreign press the impetus of these reforms has not been followed with, for
example, a large-scale decollectivization such as occurred in China under
Deng.[citation needed]
Current situation[edit]
President Kim Dae-jung of South Korea actively attempted
to reduce tensions between the two Koreas under the Sunshine Policy, but this
produced few immediate results. Since the election of George W. Bush as the
President of the United States, North Korea has faced renewed external pressure
over its nuclear program, reducing the prospect of international economic
assistance.
North Korea remains a totalitarian Stalinist state. The
lack of access to the foreign media and the tradition of secrecy in North Korea
means that there is little news about political conditions, but Amnesty
International's 2003 report on North Korea says that "there were reports
of severe repression of people involved in public and private religious
activities, including imprisonment, torture and executions. Unconfirmed reports
suggested that torture and ill-treatment were widespread in North Korean
prisons and labour camps.[24] Conditions were reportedly extremely
harsh."[25]
There seems little immediate likelihood that North Korea
will undergo an East German-style transition: a prospect that South Korea and
China view with great trepidation because of the fear of a sudden and large
exodus of North Korean refugees into their countries. There appears to be
little significant internal opposition to the regime. Indeed, a great many of
the refugees fleeing to China because of famine still showed significant
support for the current government as well as pride in their homeland. Many of
these food refugees reportedly return to North Korea after earning sufficient
money.[26]
In 2002, Kim Jong-il declared that "money should be
capable of measuring the worth of all commodities", followed by some small
market-oriented measures, and the creation of the Kaesong Industrial Region
with transport links to South Korea was announced. Experiments are under way to
allow factory managers to fire underperforming workers and give bonuses.
China’s investments increased to $200 million in 2004. China has counseled
North Korea’s leaders to gradually open the economy to market forces, and it is
possible this path will be successfully followed as well as China's policy of
keeping political control firmly in the hands of the Communist Party.
China for its part has sought to preserve North Korea as
a strategic buffer zone, in part to prevent a mass influx of refugees and also
out of the desire to not have a unified, American-backed Korea on its border.
North Korea declared on February 10, 2005 that it has
nuclear weapons[27] bringing widespread calls for the North to return to the
six-party talks aimed at curbing its nuclear program. It was initially disputed
by outside sources whether or not North Korea has nuclear weapons, and many
Russian sources denied that North Korea has the technology necessary to build a
nuclear weapon. On Monday, October 9, 2006, North Korea has announced that it
had successfully detonated a nuclear device underground at 10:36 am local time
without any radiation leak. An official at South Korea's seismic monitoring
center confirmed a magnitude-3.6 tremor felt at the time North Korea said it
conducted the test was not a natural occurrence. Associated Press
Additionally, North Korea has a very active missile
development program. In 1998, North Korea tested a Taepondong-1 Space Launch
Vehicle, which successfully launched but failed to reach orbit. On July 5,
2006, they tested a Taepodong-2 ICBM that reportedly could reach the west coast
of the U.S. in the 2-stage version, or the entire U.S. with a third stage.
However, the missile failed shortly after launch, so it is unknown what its
exact capabilities are or how close North Korea is to perfecting the
technology.
North Korea's advancements in weapons technology appear
to give them leverage in ongoing negotiations with the United Nations and other
countries. On February 13, 2007, North Korea signed an agreement with South
Korea, the United States, Russia, China, and Japan, in which North Korea will
shut down its Yongbyon nuclear reactor in exchange for economic and energy
assistance. However in 2009 the North continued its nuclear test program.
Further tensions between the north and south began in
2010 when a South Korean navy ship was sunk, later reports revealed a torpedo from
North Korea was the cause.
Kim Jong-Il died on December 17, 2011[28] and was
succeeded by his son, Kim Jong-un. Tensions between North Korea and democratic
countries have since increased in 2012 and 2013 due to its recent rocket
launches and nuclear weapons testing in defiance of international law, and UN
sanctions have been tightened. (Continoe)
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