Posts Tagged ‘North Korea’
Kim Jong Il, the long time leader- dictator of North Korea, died of a heart attack on Saturday.
The state media announced his death on Monday.
Most believe that his son, Kim Jong-un, will be the next leader of North Korea. If he is as eccentric and unpredictable as his father, we are in for long and bumpy ride. (cartoon by KAL)

Thanks to Fratboysports.com!
Jail-free paradise at last for the West Memphis Three.
What do the Death Penalty and Miami Football have in common? The NCAA will tell you.
Question of the Day: What action do you take for an undocumented hero?
Asia
North Korea recently joined YouTube and Twitter, using the social media platforms to mock South Korea and the United States. Interestingly, the messages are aimed at South Koreans, not at North Koreans, who are denied access to websites like YouTube and Twitter.
Europe
Ladies of Italy, rejoice! Venice is soon going to see its first female gondolier! Until recently, the trade has been limited to men due to the tradition of fathers training their sons to become gondoliers. Now, there is a course in becoming a gondolier and more women can try their hand at the profession.
Middle East
There’s another controversy involving Facebook! An Israeli soldier posted pictures of herself smiling and posing next to blindfolded and handcuffed Palestinian prisoners, causing an uproar among Palestinian groups. The Israeli Defense Force has released a statement disapproving the picture, but the soldier sees nothing wrong with her actions.
Thanks to Wikicommons.
Fishing Fuels Fued? North Korea seizes South Korean fishing vessel after claims of fishing in Northern territorial waters.
Tragedy strikes aid workers. Ten people involved with providing medical care to Afghanistan’s remote areas slain by Taliban.
Floods continue to strike Asia. With Pakistan flood waters still high mudslides and floods kill 127 in China.
Thanks to Wikicommons.
As if fission didn’t anger the US enough… Iran announces start of fusion power program.
Is N. Korea actually at fault? Questions over supposed torpedo attack on South Korean ship.
US Soldiers captured. Taliban forces seize two US soldiers in Afghanistan.

Thanks to Wikicommons.
What ever makes them happy? North Korean leader more popular after sunken South Korean ship blamed on North.
A step in the right direction. Oil cap collects 10,000 barrels a day in Gulf.
Terror arrests made in New York airport. Two New Jersey men arrested on accusations of terrorism as they attempt head to Somalia.
You know, just some warheads. Courtesy of Wikicommons.
Have you had a drill in school where you curl up under your desk and hope that the Soviets don’t drop a nuke on you?
Believe it or not this was a standard practice in US schools not long ago. Clearly American school desks were once quite robust if they could protect children from nuclear annihilation.
With poorer school desks available today, we were relieved to learn that the Russians and the Americans have agreed to reduce their arsenals of nuclear weapons. (Check the link for our explanation.)
Today, President Obama and Russian President Medvedev are set to sign the “new START” (START = Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) in Prague, signaling a new wave for American nuclear policy. To go along with this big meeting, the Obama administration just released the Nuclear Posture Review (NPR).

Happy Birthday, Kim Jong Il! North Korea’s leader celebrated his 68th birthday.
President vs. Prime Minister? Kenya’s two top leaders are in a slugfest!
Disguises, assassinations, and hit men. It sounds like a TV drama, but it’s real life!

Courtesy of the New York Times
He started it… a North and South Korea naval vessels exchange some shells.
Don’t you like what I’ve done with the place…
A Northern Ireland filmmaker has won euro46,000 ($69,000) in damages after a judge ruled that his Irish island home was transformed into a parking lot while he was overseas for six years.

Lee and Ling, pardoned in North Korea
In recent weeks, months, and years (millenia?) there’s been a lot to say about North Korea.
Whether it’s running jokes about North Korea’s leader on late-night TV…or a professor of international relations stressing out on the radio about the DPRK’s nuclear tests , or anything in between, we here at USDemocrazy have heard it all.
Surely you’ve heard of the imprisoned American journalists Euna Lee and Laura Ling (pictured above) and their release from a hard labor camp in North Korea. (If not, that’s ok… It was on our “What’zup today?” page yesterday!)
The two had been working along the border of North Korea and China, when they were arrested (for spying) and have been held in prison for the past five months, until yesterday.
The two were employed by Current TV, a news channel founded by former Vice President Al Gore. Big Al expressed his joy at a news conference iat the airport where the two landed safely in the United States. Gore mentioned:
It speaks well of our country that when two American citizens are in harm’s way that so many people would just put things aside and just go to work to make sure that this has had a happy ending.
Gore is referring to the outreach from (mostly online) movements to free the two. The site www.lauraandeuna.com and the very active Twitter page tried to raise awareness about the two women’s plight.
Much has been said, too, about just how the pardons from leader Kim Jong-Il came about.
It’s widely known that former President Bill Clinton took a trip to Pyongyang to work his southern charm on the other side of the world.
Politico wanted to know how Bill Clinton got the gig as negotiator for the non-Obama-administration affiliated mission:
In a mid-July phone call to their families from captivity, the two journalists passed along an astonishing offer: North Korea would be willing to grant amnesty and release them, if Bill Clinton would agree to come to Pyongyang as an envoy and seek their release.
Clinton is now being hailed by many as the reason the journalists saw U.S. soil so soon.
However, the Obama administration was sure to mention at every opportunity there was no message whatsoever from their administration to the naughty rogue Kim administration.
Still…Obama was, however, pretty happy with the job Clinton (and Gore) did.
Of course, in true American fashion, not everyone was wholly happy with the “Mr. Clinton goes to Pyongyang” situation. Former ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush, John Bolton, said in an interview with NPR’s All Things Considered:
The symbolism of a former president going to meet with Kim Jong Il I think is something that benefits Kim Jong Il a lot more than the United States, and it only encourages others to do the same thing.
Bolton is sure that Iran is watching this concession: Act up, hold Americans hostage, or otherwise, and you might get some diplomatic talks out of the situation. (And Bolton isn’t the only skeptic on the situation, either.)
Even people in Seoul, South Korea are a little befuddled about the talks with Mr. Clinton, and how they could affect future North Korea/world politics.
So, what’s left to be seen is a lot: What will this mean for six-party nuclear talks? Will North Korea be more willing to engage in diplomatic talks anytime soon? How will the U.S. proceed in its relationship with the DPRK? What will Bill Clinton do next?
Thoughts?
Breaking the Brinkmanship Bonanza… U.S. and South Korea take a firm stand against North Korea.
Extreme Financial Makeover… Obama admin details proposals for overhauling financial regulation.
Blowin’ up the moon… this just sounds cool.
NASA is preparing to fly a rocket booster into the moon, triggering a six-mile-high explosion that scientists hope will confirm the presence of water
Woman suspected in 3 holdups in 35 minutes… say what you will, but she’s efficient.

This is just begging for a good caption.
North Korea has really got the USDemocrazy team in a foreign policy funk. The nuclear nastiness in the North is not going away…
You might remember our posts on North Korea’s nuclear tests (but if not, read one here, and the other here).
Because of North Korea’s testiness, members of the United Nations Security Council are up in arms (nuclear arms). They have agreed on a consensus on a draft resolution that would further sanction the North Korean nuclear knuckleheads. (Yes, a draft… Not the real deal… yet.)
As for what the US thinks, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton came out as a hard-liner on Sunday. On “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” she said that North Korea could go back on the list of card-carrying members of the terrorism-supporting club. She also warned if things don’t change soon, the world could face some dire consequences, namely:
an arms race in Northeast Asia.
It’s been said before, and it’ll keep being said (as in here, by the LA Times) that sanctions against the rogue state is sticky territory. (Maybe Kim Jong-Il spilled liquor everywhere?).
The “dear leader” of North Korea is so crafty, he gets his away around sanctions – at least when it comes to his personal goodies (caviar, Cognac, and good ol’ DVDs from the West ). However the already-impoverished population of the state suffer terribly under these same sanctions.
So, what to do? Well, it seems the US has already ruled out invading the DPRK, according to special envoy Stephen Bosworth. (It would appear the US has got its hands tied in invasions elsewhere.)
To further complicate things, current leader Kim Jong-Il seems to ready to pass the torch (and keys to the nuclear weapons stockpile, one would presume) to his youngest son, Kim Jong-un. Not surprisingly, no one really knows too much about this guy, other than his adoration of Michael Jordan when he was in boarding school. (Cutting off supplies of re-run Chicago Bulls games to North Korea could be the next sanction)
In response, the eldest son of Kim Jong-Il, Kim Jong-nam, has appeared on Japanese television saying he’s apathetic when is comes to politics. Sure.
Right now, Mark Thompson wrote for Time that there could be a new Korean War (or a resumption of the old one, as the case may be) as a result of all this, and particularly because on May 27 the DPRK removed itself from the armistice signed in June of 1953, and no longer guaranteeing the safety of ships sailing off its west coast.
Basically, North Korea is all kinds of crazy right now.
What’s the solution, guys and gals?
China’s chastising… And the US is glad!
Nine years later, no more fighting! Bush v. Gore lawyers join together for an important battle!
Is the economy staging a comeback? We surely hope so…
Pondering your freshman year? President Obama and the rest of the nation relive his!




