Re: Korea: More rhetoric or is it going to "go time?"
SecState Clinton stated yesterday that the US believes NK has between 1-6 nuclear weapons. These are rudimentary nuclear devices probably similar to our early bombs. The largest missile in their arsenal that I know of is the Taepodong II, a multi-stage missile that theoretically could reach Alaska or the Pacific Northwest, but more likely is limited to East Asia. In test after test, the TPD-II has shown enormous targeting issues, so much so that few experts believe the NK ballistic missile arsenal is effective beyond short range. Then again, NK would never launch against the US. The Kim Regime knows NK would become a parking lot should they launch a direct attack on American soil. North Korea is much more likely to target Japan (probably), or the South (unlikely).
The perception that the US gives North Korea much in the way of aid is grossly overstated. They don't get much from us, except in time of disaster. That aid is used at a diplomatic weapon to generate goodwill among the North Korean population. It was effective enough that the Kim Regime turned it down in 2009 (
link ). Frankly, it was because we didn't fulfill our end of the 1994 Agreed Framework in terms of providing a light water reactor and fuel oil that North Korea restarted its nuclear reactor in Yongbyun. I think they were looking for a reason to restart their nuclear program anyway, but we didn't help matters by reneging.
China does indeed give them more aid money than any other nation, but it's not nearly enough to sustain NK. That's why famine is so widespread there. People are literally scouring the hillsides for tree bark and leaves to boil and eat. Amazingly, North Korea hasn't fallen despite the enormous toll its failed policies have taken on its people.
Still, we are starting to see weariness and unrest within the North Korean population. The most recent catalyst was the currency revaluation a year ago. Because few people were making enough money in their government jobs, enterprising folks created small marketplaces and sold goods to supplement their income. They were selling handicrafts, fruit, vegetables, not the illegal goods like you'd find in a Western black market. Many people engaged in this unauthorized economic activity for years while the government turned a blind eye. For a detailed look at the Kim regime's revaluation, here's the
NYTimes report . I personally believe that punishing its citizens and re-asserting power was NK's primary goal, with any inflation control a distant second.
The currency revaluation created more popular unrest than anything we've seen in years, maybe decades, out of North Korea. It's not much, but it's a start. And don't just wonder why the NK people can't rise up against their government and fight for their freedom. It's a complete police state with a sophisticated internal intelligence infrastructure that seeks out any threats. The NK gulag system is no less intimidating or cruel than Stalin's. Read <span style="font-style: italic">The Aquariums of Pyongyang</span> by
Kang Chul-hwan for some insight into the NK gulags. It is the autobiography of a former North Korean man who was sent to the gulag for a trifling misstep, and then later escaped and made his way to China, and evenutally to South Korea. His tale will blow your mind. To say the NK gulag system is appalling is an understatement.