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Happy Birthday, Dear Leader, have a blast!
By Matthew Rusling
TOKYO - Kim Jong-il celebrated his birthday on Wednesday at a time of fevered
speculation regarding the North Korean regime's stability. Given the increased
tension on the Korean Peninsula following his announcement last week that
Pyongyang has nuclear weapons, it would seem that his birthday wish is to
remain in power.
Kim clearly feels targeted by statements made in US President George W Bush's
State of the Union and inaugural addresses. While not naming North Korea, the
Bush administration has outlined one of its second-term goals as being the
spread of American-style democracy. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has
called Pyongyang "an outpost of tyranny", and US hawks have called for regime
change in Pyongyang. Definitely cause for alarm in North Korea.
In the run-up to Kim's birthday, observers were discussing the possibility -
many said probability - of an imminent fall from grace and power. But when
dealing with a country of almost zero-transparency, current and reliable
information of the workings of Kim's impenetrable inner circle is rare.
Conspiracy theories abound concerning the future of the current government,
from military coups to a spontaneous collapse leading to a power vacuum. Of
late, rumors have been circulating that cliques of generals, party cadres or
others within the government may be plotting to or may already have sidelined
Kim.
"Conspiracy theories generally should not be taken at face value, nor should
they be dismissed out of hand," Charles Armstrong, North Korea expert at
Columbia University in New York, said in an e-mail to Asia Times Online.
Despite talk of coups and demise, the regime has endured and may well continue
to do so. It's durability is reinforced by interlocking circles of
relationships among the elite - family, government, the army - so that the
leadership and the major players are dependent on Kim and his coterie staying
in power. Without Kim Jong-il and his hierarchy, the good life goes, and
everyone wants the good times to roll.
"North Korea does appear to be in a period of transition; there are signs that
[Kim] is interested in grooming his own successor, the economic 'experiment'
begun in July 2002 is still ongoing, there are an increasing number of ordinary
and high-level defectors, and not least the US has given signs that it will be
tougher on North Korea [regarding] human rights," said Armstrong. "It looks
like something is going on within [North Korea]. But for 15 years there's been
lots of speculation about regime change in Pyongyang that has been based more
often on wishful thinking than evidence."
Observers will analyze what information is available on Kim's birthday
celebrations and seek to discern whether they receive the normal, annual amount
of fanfare. Some are saying that anything less than the extravagant norm would
be a sign that Kim has fallen out of favor among his own clique, or evidence of
a weakened position, or even of a military coup.
"We hear a lot of rumors [about regime collapse] but nobody knows exactly when
or how or why," said Shioe Okamura, a core member of Life Funds for North
Korean Refugees, a Japan-based non-governmental organization.
Observers have also said the tens of thousands of North Korean migrants in
China are evidence of the regime's loosening grip on the lives of North Korean
citizens, as well as a growing cynicism within the Hermit Kingdom.
On January 30, the Sunday Times of London ran a story predicting imminent
regime change in North Korea. The article quoted Christian activist Douglas
Shin, who said, "It's just like the Berlin Wall ...The slow-motion exodus is
the beginning of the end."
"The idea that a mass exodus, which is not likely, would have an immediate
effect on the regime is doubtful," said Erich Weingartner, a North Korea
expert, formerly of York University in Toronto and currently a consultant for
aid programs to North Korea. "An outflow of refugees would be a symptom that
the system has already collapsed and is not a cause of collapse."
On New Year's Day, Kim made a speech saying that North Korea must focus its
efforts this year on food production, which analysts in South Korea interpreted
to mean that North Korea is almost out of food. The United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) has issued a special appeal for more food. This
focus on food was considered by many to be further evidence that Kim's days are
numbered.
"One should not read to much into [Kim's] statement. North Korea's food
situation has not been exactly rosy for some time, even after the worst of the
crisis was alleviated by foreign aid," said Armstrong. "As I often say, and as
Mark Twain once said of the rumors of his own demise, 'the collapse of North
Korea has so far been greatly exaggerated'," Armstrong added.
North Korea has been a nation under economic strain for some time, but to what
extent is unknown. Recent photos smuggled out of North Korea in September 2004
and published in the Joong Ang Ilbo, a South Korean newspaper, depict homeless
children begging for food or just sitting in the dirt streets. One picture
shows an exhausted little girl, who appears to be about five or six years old,
lying down on the railroad tracks.
But the food situation in North Korea is actually improving, according to some
observers, adding that Kim's New Year's statement should not be given too much
weight. Although North Korea cannot get much food assistance from the West, it
has been able to get some of what it needs from China and South Korea. Whether
the announcement about nukes and withdrawing indefinitely from Beijing-hosted
disarmament talks will make China and South Korea less charitable remains to be
seen.
This is a stark contrast to the situation in 1995, when South Korea was
actively opposing food assistance. By any account, say experts, North Korea has
quite a significant safety net.
China, however, has deep misgivings about the North and from time to time has
made it clear that China's largesse in terms of food and fuel is not unlimited.
It once halted oil deliveries for a painfully long period, saying the pipeline
needed repair - a clear reminder of China's power and its dependence on its old
ally.
To be sure, the Kim regime has survived much worse than any current food
shortage. Accurate statistics from North Korea are hard to come by - some
experts even say statistics from the UN are inaccurate - but estimates in the
mid-1990s of the death toll due to opportunistic diseases caused by hunger
dwarf those of today.
"One could argue that the leadership actually is more secure than it was
several years ago; one would have expected a change in leadership in the
difficult late 1990s rather than now," said Armstrong. "'Change' in North Korea
is a fact. [Kim Jong-il's] imminent fall from power is something else ... for
which there is yet to appear any convincing evidence, in my view," he added.
Fueling speculation, some of the ubiquitous portraits of the Dear Leader have
gone missing in a few public places. Some suggested a fall from grace, others
said that Kim wants to downplay his personality cult in places that foreigners
would visit. One visitor told Asia Times Online that he had not noticed that
any portraits were missing on a recent trip there.
China is also concerned with keeping its historical buffer intact, as the
Korean Peninsula has been the historic gateway for incursions into Chinese
territory. It was used by the Japanese to invade China in World War II, and the
Americans got very close to the Chinese border during the Korean War.
Nor does China want to see a multitude of North Korean migrants spilling over
its borders in the event of regime collapse. Observers have argued that a new
US law could lead to such an outcome, albeit not overnight. The North Korean
Human Rights Act of 2004 has earmarked $24 million annually to support
human-rights groups in North Korea and to make North Koreans eligible for
asylum in the United States.
It remains to be seen - or probably divined at some point - whether Kim's
birthday celebrations will shed any light on the issue of the regime's
durability. "I would never say definitively that the DPRK [Democratic People's
Republic of Korea] isn't going to collapse," said Armstrong. "A sudden,
imminent collapse is certainly within the realm of possibility. I just haven't
seen any convincing evidence that this is the case. Let's see what the regime's
propagandists pull out on … Kim Jong-il's birthday."
Matthew Rusling is a freelance writer in Osaka. He can be reached at
mjrjapan@yahoo.com.
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Kim
Comes Out
An ATol series
North
Korea's long, subtle game
(Feb 12, '05)
NK's deepening succession mystery
(Feb 8, '05)
Welcome to capitalism, NK comrades
(Dec 14, '04)
Cracks in NK 'Stalinism'
(Dec 7, '04)
Hawks push regime change in NK
(Nov 24, '04)
Hunger in the shadow of NK nukes
(Nov 24, '04)
The case of the missing portraits
(Nov 20, '04)
Happy Birthday, Dear Leader, who's next?
(Feb 14, '04)
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