Friday, June 03, 2005

That's Mr. Kim Jong Il

Hey everyone, I found this on www.foxnews.com this afternoon; I thought it interesting considering our discussion in class yesterday about DPRK's anti-Bush propaganda efforts.
-John

Bush Praised for Addressing Kim Jong Il as 'Mr.'
Friday, June 03, 2005


SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea gave rare praise to President Bush (search) on Friday, welcoming his use of the honorific "Mr." when referring to leader Kim Jong Il (search) and saying the softened tone could lead to its return to nuclear arms talks.
The United States wants the North to end its nuclear weapons development, and is working with China, Japan, Russia and South Korea to persuade Pyongyang (search) to return to disarmament talks last held in June 2004. The North has stayed away from the table citing a "hostile" U.S. policy and claimed in February that it had nuclear weapons (search).
"If Bush's remarks put an end to the scramble between the hawkish group and the moderate group in the U.S., which has thrown the Korean policy into a state of confusion, it would help create an atmosphere of the six-party talks," an unnamed North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman said in a statement, according to the official Korean Central News Agency.
At a Tuesday news conference, Bush defended his focus on using diplomacy to try to resolve the standoff.
"It's a matter of continuing to send a message to Mr. Kim Jong Il that if you want to be accepted by the neighborhood and be a part of ... those who are viewed with respect in the world, work with us to get rid of your nuclear weapons program," Bush said.
The North said Friday that it had noted Bush was reported as "politely addressing our headquarters of revolution," a reference to Kim.
"We will closely follow if his remarks would not change day and night as this happened in the past," the spokesman said.
The softer tone Friday from the North came a day after Pyongyang called Vice President Dick Cheney (search) a "bloodthirsty beast" and said his recent comment that Kim was an "irresponsible" leader was another reason for it to stay away from the nuclear talks.
This week, the North also took a personal swipe at Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, using language laced with insults to imply she was controlling the White House. In the past, Pyongyang has also called Bush a "political imbecile" and "half-baked man."
The North has demanded an apology for Rice labeling the country one of the world's "outposts of tyranny" earlier this year.
Also Friday, the North again asked for the U.S. to make a "bold decision to withdraw the remark ... to remove the biggest hurdle lying in the way of resuming the six-party talks."
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Friday that Washington would continue to try to solve the dispute through six-nation talks.
"Our policy is what it is, and it's well-known," Rumsfeld said at a meeting with Asian defense officials in Singapore.
Meanwhile, the U.S. ambassador to Japan said in Tokyo that a nuclear-armed North Korea would pressure Japan and South Korea to consider building their own atomic arsenals.
Ambassador Thomas Schieffer also cautioned that the North's return to the six-nation talks would be just the beginning of a long process to persuade it to abandon its weapons.
"We have to be very careful that getting North Korea back to the table does not become an end in itself," he said. "The six-party talks were meant to resolve a thorny issue — they weren't meant to be just an opportunity to talk about it endlessly and achieve nothing."

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"Can we imagine what these people do on farm? They are looking for frogs, snakes, even mice, and grass. They are hungry! America and other countries put economic sanction on North Korea and stop sending food aid to them. They do not punish Kim Jong Il, but these innocent people. Why do we care about this bad guy and ignore those hungry people?"

That is the first thought that occurs to most people's minds. However- firstly, the US is the largest donor of food aid in the entire world to North Korea. These nations North Korea criticizes incessantly- the US, South Korea, send tons upon tons of fertilizer, grain, food, cheese, beans, corn- THEY are one of the greatest reasons why North Koreans are still alive to this day.

The other important fact that most people don't consider is that while the US does maintain sanctions against North Korea, they're very ineffectual- they only ban US folks from trading with North Korea- how many American businesses have or want to have businesses in North Korea? A US sanction is neither a blockade, nor does it apply to other nations. Fiat, the European car maker, maintains a factory in North Korea, as do other foreign firms. A US sanction has more bark than bite.