"Meanwhile, back in North Korea..."

From Strategy Page comes this look at North Korea and comparing it with Saddam's Oil-for-food program: bq. Saddam Hussein�s regime thrived on the UN�s corrupted Oil For Food program. A tour of Saddam�s Baghdad digs led former CENTCOM commander General Tommy Franks to quip the scam amounted to little more than "oil for palaces." The UN hasn�t begun to account for the stolen billions pumped into Baathist bank accounts and the toney coffers of European luxury goods suppliers. Oil For Food kept Saddam and his killers living like Hollywood stars while Shia children starved. bq. A similar evil game of elite ritz amidst mass starvation continues in east Asia, except a wag might call North Korea�s shakedown "Food For Fallout." While Kim Jong Il�s strange little Stalinist clique trumpets the development of nuclear weapons, 2.7 million of its citizens face imminent starvation. Last week the World Food Program cut food aid to North Korea because of a lack of foreign donations. bq. The second round of multi-lateral "six-nation" negotiations intended to remove North Korea�s nuclear fangs as well as resolve what is the world�s worst humanitarian crisis begins next month. North Korea, China, South Korea, Japan, Russia and the US are engaged in an dangerous diplomatic waltz. The only certainties surrounding the negotiations are Japanese and South Korean fear, increasing Chinese and American frustration, and North Korean brinkmanship. bq. North Korea�s stone-broke police state is a sad reminder of the Soviet Union�s Cold War legacy of guns, guns, and more guns but damn little butter. In the early 1980s the USSR attempted nuclear blackmail in Europe by deploying mobile ballistic missiles. The goal was to crack NATO. The political blackmail bid failed when the Reagan Administration countered by deploying American theater ballistic and cruise missiles to Europe. NATO didn�t crack and the Cold War�s endgame began in earnest. The failure of the Soviet hardliners� bullyboy strategy gave modernizers (like Mikhail Gorbachev) a chance. Their glasnost and perestroika policies recognized Communism�s grotesque failure to provide butter. bq. They couldn�t reform Communism or save the USSR. However, the Cold War ended with a whimper, not a nuclear bang. South Korea had hoped for a similar break in the North Korean regime, but if there�s a modernizer in Pyongyang he�s in prison or awaiting execution. Kim Jong-Il is running an extortion racket. His North Korean totalitarian police state is a totalitarian crime state. Various criminal enterprises insure its Communist elites have plenty to eat. In 2003, Australia seized a North Korean freighter packed with heroin. The ship sported expanded fuel tanks for long-distance operations. The bust proved smuggling smack is a North Korean state policy, providing cash for Kim�s caviar. bq. Nuclear weapons, of course, are Kim�s big stick. The scam goes like this: Pay us off and we won't make bombs. That was the deal Pyongyang offered the Clinton administration in 1994. The United States hoped that meeting North Korea's basic energy and food requirements would ultimately reduce belligerency. However, North Korea made bombs anyway. North Korea calls its latest negotiating gambit "the order of simultaneous action." Pyongyang will "renounce nuclear intentions" if Washington resumes food aid. The US must also provide "written security assurances." This is still "pay us, then we behave." Steven DenBeste wrote about the need to have many nations negotiating with North Korea - his articles are here, here and here. He has a lot more to say - searching his website for North Korea results in 82 hits...

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This page contains a single entry by DaveH published on January 23, 2004 11:20 AM.

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