North Korea
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After Kim Jong Il: A Policy Discussion
Wednesday, December 21, 2011 | 10:30 AM- Event Content: itms://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/corporate-views-on-korea-from/id210903888?i=108819060#
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With the passing of North Korea’s Kim Jong Il, we have seen telecast images from Pyongyang of mass grief; South Korea offering sympathy to the people of North Korea and permitting the Hyundai and Kim Dae Jung families permission to attend observances; the United States noting the passing and reiterating its desire for stability on the Peninsula and its support for the ROK-U.S. alliance; and China’s Wen Jiabao, Hu Jintao, and Xi Jinping offering condolences at the North Korean Embassy in Beijing. Reportage... Read More -
Refugee Insights
Thursday, September 8, 2011 | 12:00 PM- Event Link: <p style="text-align: justify;">Marcus Noland is senior fellow and deputy director of the Peterson Institute for International Economics. He has been associated with the Institute since 1985. He is concurrently a senior fellow at the East-West Center. He was a senior economist for international economics on the Council of Economic Advisers (1993-94); visiting professor at Yale University, Johns Hopkins University, the University of Southern California, Tokyo University, Saitama University (now the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, and the University of Ghana; and a visiting scholar at the Korea Development Institute. His work encompasses a wide range of topics including the political economy of US trade policy and the Asian financial crisis. His areas of geographical knowledge and interest include Asia and Africa where he has lived and worked. In the past he has written extensively on the economies of Japan, Korea, and China, and is unique among American economists in having devoted serious scholarly effort to the problems of North Korea and the prospects for Korean unification. He won the 2000–01 Ohira Memorial Award for his book Avoiding the Apocalypse: The Future of the Two Koreas.</p>
- Podcast URL: <p style="text-align: justify;">Witness to Transformation Refugee Insights into North Korea</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">MARCUS NOLAND:</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">I feel like the guys in Spinal Tap, when they try to go onstage and they end up wandering around the bowels of a stadium somewhere in the American Midwest.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Thank you very much for that very generous introduction, Steve. Return engagements are always especially gratifying because they suggest that you didn't screw things up too badly the first time around.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Two North Korean acquaintances met on the street, Mr. Park and Mr. Kim. Mr. Park said to Mr. Kim, "Comrade Kim. Good to see you. Hey, how about that new oil refinery up in Hamhŭng?"</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Mr. Kim said, "New oil refinery? I was just in Hamhŭng last week. I didn't see any new oil refinery."</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Mr. Park said, "Well, how about the new textile mill in Ch'ŏngjin?"</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Mr. Kim said, "Mr. Park, I was in Ch'ŏngjin yesterday. There is no new textile mill."</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Mr. Park said, "Comrade Kim, you should stop getting around so much and start reading the newspaper."</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The presentation today is going to be sort of a getting around presentation versus what you read in the newspaper. As I was chatting with Ambassador Minton earlier today, there's an obvious and understandable focus on what my colleague Steph Haggard always refers to as the high politics of diplomacy.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Are we going to reengage in the Six-Party Talks and, if so, under what conditions? And if we do, exactly what are we going to accomplish? But there's another aspect of reality, and I don't want to call it low politics. I think it deserves something greater than that. It is about people's everyday lives and the internal dynamics of the society.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">What I'm going to focus on today is a discussion of the ongoing, dynamic changes that are occurring in North Korea that we see only vaguely and to a large extent are obscured through the window of the testimonies of refugees.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The work is based on two surveys. The first was a survey of approximately 1,300 refugees done in China in calendar year 2005. The survey was done surreptitiously. The people we were interviewing were, in effect, illegal aliens subject to forcible deportation to North Korea where they could face very severe punishment. And so for understandable reasons, the standards of that survey did not necessarily reach classic social science standards as practiced in other environments.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">In part because of those concerns, we were able to receive a grant and do a second survey in November of 2008. This was conducted in South Korea. In this more secure legal environment, we were able to administer a much longer and more nuanced survey questionnaire. We were quite relieved to find that the results that we received from this second, higher quality survey almost entirely coincided with the results we obtained earlier when we did our work in China.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Today what I'm going to do is present some of our work. It's going to be largely from that second survey done in South Korea, but some of it may be from the China survey. I'll let you know as we go along.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">There are basically two reasons why we're interested in North Korean refugees. The first is we're interested in them in and of themselves. The refugee problem in North Korea is a first order humanitarian problem. These people exit largely from North Korea to China because of the government of China's unwillingness to allow the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to do asylum assessments in China.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">These people are forced to do a second out-migration to a third country where they can make their asylum claims: either Mongolia or countries in Southeast Asia such as Vietnam or Thailand. It is truly an arduous journey that these people, some of whom are families with children, are forced to undergo. And due to their lack of legal status, they are subject to all kinds of depredations in China. It is, indeed, a very difficult and tough life. And so our first reason for concern about the refugees is because of the refugees, themselves.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Secondly, as I've already indicated, the refugees provide a window into North Korea, and in this kind of information-constrained environment, they can bring a lot to bear in terms of our understanding of North Korean society and the changes that it's going through.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">What I'm going to do in the next few minutes is walk through the book. First I'll spend a little time on that first topic, the refugee experience itself, and then look at what the refugees tell us about North Korea. And I'm going to look at basically three topics: first, what they tell us about the changing economy of North Korea; secondly, what they tell us about the use of the penal system in North Korea; and finally, what kind of political implications these developments may have for North Korea.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">And then finally at the end, being from the Peterson Institute for International Economics, I have to be prescriptive, so there's some stuff on policy recommendations. That's the basic outline. Let's start with the beginning, the refugees, themselves.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">As I indicated, we did two surveys: one in China and one in South Korea. By and large what we found is that the refugees indicated they left North Korea for economic reasons, but the share that cited political motives was rising and were, in the more recent survey, more than one-quarter of the people we interviewed.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We found that probably half or more of the people we interviewed in China in a clinical setting would be diagnosed as suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome. Indeed, in South Korea, there is growing medical literature and medical practice involving dealing with the psychological afflictions of the refugee or defector population once they make it to South Korea. We find that the psychological distress is linked both to their experiences in North Korea, in particular the continuing reverberations of the famine experience on this population, as well as their experiences in China, which as I indicated can be quite harsh.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Among the refugees we interviewed in China, relatively few had an interest in remaining in China, at least under rules current at the time. If their status was regularized, then a substantial number of these people might be willing to essentially stay in China, living in the border area within the Korean-Chinese community there. But under the current rules where they are subject to forcible repatriation to North Korea, not very many want to stay in China.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Most of them want to go to South Korea, but interestingly enough the younger, more educated ones express a preference for coming to the United States. I find it really extraordinary. Despite the fact that they have been subjected to lifelong, virulently anti-American propaganda, the young, educated North Korean refugees want to come to Disneyland. I think I'll leave it at that and move on in the interest of time.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">What about the economy? Well, one of the things we know is that the North Korean economy has basically marketized over the last fifteen to twenty years. That marketization was not any kind of intentionally planned, top-down reform, but rather a product of state failure, and the state has never been comfortable with that process. And so much of the book is devoted to household economics and understanding how people operate in this new kind of semi-reformed, highly corrupt market economy that North Korea has become.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Just to give you some indications of some of the interesting things that came out of that is we asked people what the best way is to make money in North Korea, and as you can see, the best way to make money in North Korea is go for the green. It is to engage in market activity. But the growth sector (and each of these panels represents people who left at a different time, so it's looking at change over time) is the one in red, and that is those who stated they engage in corrupt or criminal activities.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We asked them another question about what the best way was to get ahead. As you can see, these blue panels remain the dominant way of getting ahead, and that's the state or the party. So the state remains the dominant institution in society. The growth industry, or the one of increasing preference, is going into business. Interestingly enough, joining the Army (the red one) almost disappears despite military-first politics. For the average North Korean conscript, it is increasingly well understood that joining the Army is not the way to get ahead. And these two panels are linked, as I will discuss in a moment.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Increasingly in North Korea, involvement with the state or the party is not undertaken out of patriotism or some sense of fidelity. Rather, the state and the party are platforms for corruption. They are platforms for economic predation and enriching yourself on the backs of your neighbors. I will elaborate on that in a moment.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Whenever you do research, you go into the project with a set of prior beliefs or expectations, but one almost always, if you're doing good research, finds things that you were not anticipating. One of the things that Steph and I didn't fully anticipate when we began this research was the extent to which the penal system in North Korea increasingly functions not only in its traditional role as a mechanism of criminal control or political repression, but increasingly as a mechanism for economic extortion.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">For example, we found that among the respondents in our samples, those who were engaged in market activities had a 50 percent higher arrest rate. And once they were arrested, they were subject to punishment without any kind of due process, in most cases. We asked them if before they were incarcerated they had any formal legal procedure or trial, and only 12 percent said yes. The vast majority said there were no formal legal proceedings and that they were just incarcerated.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Once in incarceration, they were subjected to severe punishment. North Korea has a highly articulated penal system ranging from what are called labor retraining centers at the bottom through institutions that would be roughly equivalent to jails and felony prisons up to the political gulag. We expected to observe an escalation of these rates of abuse in institutions as you went from the relatively mild institutions to the hardest core political prisons. Indeed, we do observe that escalation of abuse.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">However, the escalation is far milder and the slope is far flatter than we expected. Even people in those lowest-level institutions, that by and large are where many of these so-called economic criminals are incarcerated, are subject to fantastic rates of abuse. You basically have a system in which, roughly speaking, because of incredibly broad definitions of economic crimes, any average, non-elite North Korean going about their day-to-day life is probably in violation of one stricture or another. The police are given extraordinary discretion about who they arrest, how long they detain them and the conditions under which those individuals are detained.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Given that set of facts, this is an almost perfect mechanism for extracting bribes, because if you know that the police can take not only you, but your family, and incarcerate them in these facilities where terrible abuses are practiced, you will be willing to pay to keep yourself from being entangled in such a system. We find, for example, that even prisoners in these lowest level facilities for the median length of incarceration (I don't want to call it a sentence, because it's not a sentence) reported a 60 percent likelihood of observing an execution and more than an 80 percent likelihood of observing forced starvation. These conditions are really quite horrific.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">As I mentioned, it is what they reported. These are self-reported accounts, and we have no way of checking the accuracy of those accounts. But we had little tricks within our survey to informally check to see if the patterns and responses appeared to be running off the rails or not. For example, in the section where we asked people who reported they had been incarcerated about their experiences in incarceration, we start off asking them a hierarchy of questions.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We asked them if they had ever seen a prisoner beaten. The affirmative response rate on that was about 100 percent. I suspect that if you went to the D.C. city jail or Rikers Island and you started asking the inmates if they had ever seen a prisoner beaten, the affirmative response rate would probably be roughly 100 percent. I expect that in most prisons around the world, if you ask prisoners if they have ever seen anybody beaten, they will say yes.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Then we started getting more specific asking if they had ever seen anybody beaten to death or seen a public execution, all the way down to the alleged crime of forced abortion and infanticide. What's very interesting is the patterns of responses drop appropriately as you go from what you would expect to be relatively common, ubiquitous abuses to the highly specific abuse of infanticide and forced abortion, and the pattern in responses line up across the two surveys. This leads us to believe that whether those numbers are absolutely accurate or not, there is serious information contained in them and that the people are not just telling us what they think we want to hear.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">There's also a gender dimension to all of this, and Steph and I are actually in the process of writing a paper devoted to gender issues. One of the ways that North Korea developed in the 1990s is in part due to a lack of any coherent women's movement or feminist thought in North Korea. State employment was supposed to be more politically advanced men's work, and so women were disproportionately shed from employment in state-owned enterprises, party offices, and government offices. They were essentially thrust into this somewhat Hobbesian market economy that was developing in the 1990s.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Among the most recent cohorts of refugee arrivals that we interviewed, 95 percent of the women who were engaged in market activities report that they paid bribes in order to do their work. And among the men, 37 percent (more than one-third of the men) said that the best way to get ahead is crime and corruption.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">And indeed, when we look at the responses by people who work in government offices, they report that, in fact, their colleagues have become more corrupt. They also report that they spend more and more time on ideological indoctrination. The center seems to understand that it is losing control of its agents at the ground level.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The upshot of all this is because of the women being basically pushed out of state employment into the market, the state is increasingly male-dominated, and in fact you have an increasingly male-dominated state preying on the increasingly female-dominated or identified market. There's a gender dimension to all of this, as well.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">What are the political implications of all this? One of the things we found is that our respondents indicate increasing access to foreign media and foreign news sources, specifically. I call this upper chart the Bill Clinton chart (and I should say I used to work for Bill Clinton, so I'm not making some kind of partisan point here. It's just when I saw the chart, I immediately thought of my former boss).</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">What you see in this upper chart is the red part represents the people who said they didn't have any access to foreign media. The blue part represents the people who said they had access to foreign media and they consumed it. The green part are the people who said they had access to foreign media, but they didn't consume." I forget exactly how Bill Clinton put it, but it was something like, "I smoked, but I didn't inhale." I always think of the green people as the Bill Clintons. They had access, but they didn't actually consume.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">One of the interesting things about this chart is you can see the blue part is getting bigger steadily (more people are consuming foreign news media) but the green part is disappearing. The inhibition on consuming foreign media has disappeared. That is important, because access to foreign media is associated with more dissenting views, and increasingly the meta-narrative of the regime (which is that all of their troubles are due to hostile foreign forces) is increasingly disbelieved by the population, at least according to these surveys. Increasingly the population holds their government responsible for local conditions.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">These surveys were done before the November, 2009 currency reform that Steve mentioned in the introduction. I think that after that experience, there are probably very few North Koreans who believe that their problems are primarily due to foreigners. Nevertheless, it is an atomized population. It is a society characterized by very low levels of trust, and I'm sure you can understand why.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We asked our respondents a series of questions that could be thought of as political anthropology. We asked them when they were in North Korea if among friends they joked about conditions or complained about conditions. We asked them if they joked about the government or complained about the government. We asked them if they joked about Kim Chŏngil or complained about Kim Chŏngil. We asked them if they knew people who were organizing against the government.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">This is one of these glass half empty, half full type things. Haggard thinks it's half full. I think it's half empty. Remember, we're interviewing refugees. These people have voted with their feet. Almost by definition, they have negative views of conditions and the regime, otherwise they wouldn't have left the country. Even among this population, the share never rises above 40 percent that report that among their peers, they joked about conditions or joked about the government. So, you have a situation in which there is, I would argue, increasing dissatisfaction, but it is not clear that there are mechanisms for expressing that dissatisfaction.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">This leads me to the last thing I'll talk about in this section which is something again that we hadn't fully appreciated when we began this research. It's something that I ended up calling the market syndrome. We find that people who are engaged in market activities are more likely to identify political reasons as their motive for departure. They are 50 percent more likely to have been arrested. They have even more negative views of the regime than the average refugee. And here is the critical part. They are more likely to communicate those views to their peers.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">In essence, the market is emerging, not only as an institution to address the material deprivation of the North Korean people, but it is increasingly a kind of semi-autonomous zone of social communication and potentially political organizing. And on its own terms, the state is right to fear the market.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">As I mentioned, we're interviewing refugees and these, as I said, are people who have voted with their feet. The immediate question that arises is to what extent are their experiences or their views representative of the remaining resident population of North Korea. On one level, that is a question that is impossible for us to answer because there may simply be characteristics of these individuals that we can't observe that lead them to have very peculiar, distinct views and ideas.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">But there is quite a bit of demographic information we have on these individuals. We know their gender, their age, and what province they're from. We know what their occupation was. We know what their political classification was. We know what their father's political classification was. We know what their father's occupation was. We know their age. We know a lot of basic demographic information.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We also know something about their life experiences. Did they receive food aid? Had they been incarcerated? What we do in the book is we take all that information that we do have on these individuals and we build multivariate statistical models to try to understand if they have characteristics that would lead them to have unusual opinions or experiences that would not be representative. And then through those models, we actually make counterfactual projections onto the remaining resident population.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">For questions where we're asking them what you might consider factual questions (how much of their household income came from market activities or how much of their household income came from employment in the formal economy) what we found is that the projected differences between the sample that we have and the national population appear to be very slight. For all intents and purposes, they really do, on the factual questions, seem to be pretty representative.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">On questions that relate to opinions, there's a little bit more difference. For example, we asked them some questions that might be considered approval ratings type questions about the political regime, and here's the sample. Here's our projection of the national average, and as you can see it's a little higher. When we calculate what statisticians call the 95 percent confidence interval (are you 95 percent sure that those two numbers are the same, or can you say with a 95 percent degree of confidence that they're different) we can never reject the hypothesis that those are the same numbers.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">In the end, we cannot prove that the responses we had are perfectly representative of the remaining resident population, but we think that given all the analysis that we do in the counterfactuals, there is some basic information that is valid contained in these responses, and deserves to be taken seriously. So, what do we do?</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The refugees, of course, are simply the tip of the iceberg of a much larger human rights and humanitarian problem in North Korea. And so we divided our analysis into policies directed at the refugees and policies directed at the remaining resident population. Then we further divided the policies into what we called direct policies and indirect policies.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Direct policies are things in which you negotiate with the North Korean government. We would want to negotiate about family unification or we might want to negotiate over the terms of humanitarian relief. But then there are also indirect policies. We can provide information to the population of North Korea whether the government of North Korea acquiesces or not.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We understand that the pursuit of some of these things called indirect policies may affect your ability to pursue what we've called direct policies. The North Korean government may not be happy about some of these things, but we think under the circumstances it's worth pursuing this agenda given, frankly, what we see as the relatively meager progress through official diplomatic channels.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">In the end we came up with something called eyes open engagement. Earlier Mark Minton's phrase was engagement without illusions. I think it's basically the same idea. We want to engage with North Korea. We want to stimulate transformation in a constructive direction to encourage a society that is more humane internally, and less bellicose in its external relations, but we have our eyes open about the nature of this regime and the history here.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">In the end, where we really want our focus is information and the market. We want to try to encourage the development of the market in North Korea, because we see it as a way of addressing the material needs of the North Korean people. We see it as a mechanism for reducing the pervasive power of the state creating alternative pathways to status and wealth. We also see it as a mechanism to at least start to create the conditions that impose greater constraints on, if not political power, then the ability of the North Korean government to act in certain ways.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The real tragedy of North Korea is the lack of accountability of this regime. It has an almost unimpeded capacity to impose misery on its own people. What we are essentially trying to do is lay out an agenda in which gradually, over time, one begins to constrain that regime's ability to do that and to try to bring greater accountability into the system. Ultimately one would want to see a fairly dramatic transformation or change in the political regime, but we recognize that, that may be far away.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">What are the basic conclusions? Obviously, North Korea faces a looming succession issue. We think there is probably widespread discontent, but there seems to be a complete absence, at least as far we can see, of civil society institutions capable of channeling that discontent into constructive political action. We hope those institutions and groups are there, but Haggard and I, at least, can't see them.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">There's no Catholic church or Solidarity trade union like there was in Poland. There's no civic forum like there was in Czechoslovakia. There's not even the role that the Catholic church and Cardinal Sin played in the Philippines acting as an alternative moral pole in legitimating dissent. We don’t see any of those things in North Korea. One can imagine how they may be there under the surface in various sorts of ways, but we can't see them. We think it's a situation where there's probably widespread discontent, but little capacity for acting on that discontent.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">As a consequence, what we see people doing is what the sociologist James C. Scott called in a different context exiting the system: everyday forms of resistance including going into the market, listening to foreign news, acting in ways that essentially disengages oneself from the state which is quite difficult given the intimate nature of state control through the criminalization of economic activity in the penal system.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">As I said, we see the market as a zone of autonomy and freedom. We want to strengthen that and ultimately, to use a Marxist phrase, we want to intensify the contradictions. We want to try to encourage transformation that will make the regime more accountable and constrain its abilities to impose misery in the way that it does today.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">That's my presentation. I would be happy to answer any questions or engage in dialogue in our remaining time. I want to give a plug to our blog. Steph and I run a blog North Korea: Witness to Transformation. We have postings daily. I'm not sure what's up today, but it's something Steph wrote. I know I didn't write it. We've given plugs to The Korea Society events and if this is on The Korea Society website, we'll put a link in our blog.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Again, it's been a great pleasure to be invited back, and I look forward to our further discussion. Thank you.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">[Applause]</p>
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Marcus Noland, deputy director and senior fellow at the Peterson Institute, addresses The Korea Society on his and Professor Stephan Haggard’s study of surveys conducted in China and South Korea of North Korean refugees. Their work both illuminates the plight of the refugees and explores the implications for North Korea’s ongoing internal transformation. Noland, deputy director and senior fellow at the Peterson Institute, discusses the survey findings and his new release. Former ROK Foreign Minister Yoon... Read More -
China’s Approach to North Korea
Thursday, May 5, 2011 | 12:00 PM- Event Content: itms://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/corporate-views-on-korea-from/id210903888?i=94888089#
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Mansfield Foundation Executive Director Gordon Flake discusses the complexities of China’s role in dealing with North Korea. Though stating concern about North Korea's nuclear and missile development and having hosted the Six Party Talks, over the past year and half China has backed more visibly the DPRK regime—even in the face of last year’s provocations. How does this step-up in support impact the United States and South Korea? What are the implications for China’s rise and regional security? This program... Read More -
North Korea’s Leadership Transition: The China Connection
Thursday, February 3, 2011 | 8:45 AM- Event Content: itms://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/corporate-views-on-korea-from/id210903888?i=114394180#
- Event Link: <p><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><strong>Dr. John S. Park</strong> is director of the U.S. Institute of Peace’s Korea Working Group, a consultative body comprising senior experts from the government and think-tank communities chaired by Dr. Richard Solomon, president of the Institute. Dr. Park is also co-director of the U.S.-China Project on Crisis Avoidance and Cooperation, which is a collaborative endeavor with Fudan University and the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations. He is also co-director of the Trilateral Dialogue in Northeast Asia, which brings together U.S., South Korean, and Japanese partners.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt;">Dr. Park came to the Institute from Goldman Sachs in New York. Prior to that, he was the project leader of the North Korea Analysis Group with the Managing the Atom project at the Harvard Kennedy School. Dr. Park’s writings have appeared in Wall Street Journal Asia, Financial Times, Jane's Intelligence Review, International Herald Tribune, Stanford University Press, and Washington Quarterly. He has also commented on Northeast Asian security issues on BBC, CNN, CNBC Asia, Bloomberg, NPR, and Reuters. He received his Ph.D. from Cambridge University and completed his predoctoral and postdoctoral training at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at the Harvard Kennedy School.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-size: 10pt;">This event is held in association with the <strong>Asia Society</strong> and welcomes Asia Society members to <strong>The Korea Society</strong>. Asia Society members will be offered tickets to this event at the member rate of $10.</span></p>
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Dr. John Park, formerly of Goldman Sachs and now director of the Korea Working Group at the U.S. Institute of Peace, explores North Korea’s leadership transition in the context of Chinese and North Korean party connections. Dr. Park addresses the impact of recent events and Chinese foreign policy toward the Peninsula for media and business managing strategic risk. Thursday, February 3 North Korea’s Leadership Transition: The China Connection Executive Policy Breakfast withDr. John ParkDirector, Korea Working... Read More -
In the Wake: Weighing Korean Options after the Cheonan Sinking
Tuesday, April 27, 2010 | 12:00 PMThe Korea Society, the leading American organization dedicated to understanding and cooperation between the U.S. and Korea, will convene a panel of experts to discuss possible Korean responses to the sinking of the Cheonan, a Republic of Korea Navy ship. Ambassador Thomas C. Hubbard, chairman of The Korea Society; John Delury, associate director of the Center on U.S.–China Relations; and David Straub, associate director of the Korean Studies Program at Stanford University’s Shorenstein Asia Pacific Research... Read More -
North Korea as a Challenge to Security and Stability in Northeast Asia
Friday, March 26, 2010 | 10:45 AM- Event Content: itms://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/corporate-views-on-korea-from/id210903888?i=121345693#
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On March 26, 2010, The Korea Society presented a panel discussion at the Association for Asian Studies annual meeting in Philadelphia on the security challenges that North Korea poses to Northeast Asia. Moderated by The Korea Society president Evans J.R. Revere, the conversation included Scott Snyder, director of the Center for U.S.-Korea Policy at the Asia Foundation; Gordon Flake, executive director of the Mansfield Foundation; and Sydney Seiler, deputy North Korea mission manager in the office of the... Read More -
China-North Korea Relations: 60 Years Between Friction and Cooperation
Wednesday, June 24, 2009 | 12:00 PM- Event Content: itms://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/corporate-views-on-korea-from/id210903888?i=121345658#
- Event Link: <p style="text-align: justify;">James Person is coordinator of the North Korea International Documentation Project (NKIDP) at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. In cooperation with the University of North Korean Studies (Seoul), NKIDP addresses the scholarly and policymaking communities' critical need for reliable information on the inner workings and foreign relations of North Korea by widely disseminating newly declassified documents on the DPRK from the previously inaccessible archives of Pyongyang's former communist allies. Person has been a professorial lecturer at Korea University’s Graduate School of International Studies and has researched Chinese and Russian government archives in his role as a diplomatic historian. He is currently completing his Ph.D. in Korean history at the George Washington University. His dissertation examines the DPRK's relations with the PRC and USSR and the evolution of North Korea's Juche ideology from 1953-1967.</p>
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Though once described by Mao Zedong as being as close as "lips and teeth," the sixty-year history of the Sino-DPRK alliance has been littered with instances of tension and conflict. According to James Person, this history accounts for Pyongyang's deep mistrust of China and its interest in developing a relationship with the United States, despite appearances to the contrary. Newly obtained documents from the archives of North Korea's former communist allies shed light on past and present challenges to the... Read More -
Ambassador Stephen W. Bosworth Keynote
Tuesday, June 9, 2009 | 7:00 PM- Event Content: itms://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/corporate-views-on-korea-from/id210903888?i=121345674#
- Event Link:
- Podcast URL: <p style="text-align: justify;">Thank you for inviting me to speak here tonight, and thank you, Evans [Revere], for your kind introduction. I am honored to be here tonight with the Honorable Dr. Henry Kissinger, the Honorable Governor Sonny Perdue [Georgia], the Honorable Governor Bob Riley [Alabama], His Excellency Ambassador Kyung-Keun Kim, His Excellency Ambassador In-kook Park, and Mr. Chong Mong-Koo, Chairman of Kia Automotive Group. It is certainly a pleasure to exchange views with such an esteemed audience. Furthermore, I would like to acknowledge the Korea Society for the wonderful work they have done throughout their history towards fulfilling their goal of promoting greater awareness, understanding, and cooperation between the people of the United States and Korea.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The past few weeks have seen a tremendous amount of action on North Korean issues, including the April 5 Taepo-dong 2 launch and resulting UN Security Council action and the May 25 nuclear test and subsequent missile launches, followed by a unified response again from the UN Security Council. I don’t think—I hope—that these developments are related to my appointment.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">I should also note, at the outset, an important humanitarian matter that is unrelated to the political and security issues I will discuss tonight. As Secretary Clinton has said, we appeal to North Korean authorities on humanitarian grounds to release the two American citizen journalists currently detained in Pyongyang.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Even as we resolutely focus on the current situation in North Korea, tonight I would like to look at the East Asia region as a whole, highlighting the value of the close cooperation of the United States, the Republic of Korea, Japan, China, and Russia in working together towards the common goal of a denuclearized Korean Peninsula. The process has helped these five countries to better coordinate our approaches toward regional security issues. In my remarks this evening, I would like to expand on the importance of our relations with our two alliance partners, the Republic of Korea and Japan, and with China; to comment on the current situation in North Korea; and to lay out a vision for a Northeast Asia that is at once peaceful, prosperous, cooperative, and secure.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">George Kennan’s twentieth century identification of Northeast Asia, together with Western Europe, as the two regions of primary geopolitical importance for the United States seems increasingly prescient in the Twenty-First Century. As events in Europe greatly influenced global developments in the world in the Twentieth Century, so we look to Asia as a harbinger of what the Twenty-First Century will bring. With sixty percent of the world’s population, the second and third largest world economies and an increasing percentage of global trade, Asia has evolved over the past few decades into a strategic center point, both economically and geopolitically.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">For reasons of history and current national interest, the United States regards itself as a resident power in East Asia. Our interests in the region are permanent and profound. They center on our relations with our two alliance partners, the Republic of Korea and Japan, and, increasingly, with China. Our relationships with South Korea and Japan both began with formal military alliances, which continue to serve as a foundation for increasingly expansive bilateral ties. Both alliances have evolved, based on shared values, to encompass a wide range of issues, including a common commitment to political freedom, economic prosperity, and regional and global cooperation.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Republic of Korea</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Let me start with the Republic of Korea. Our relationship with South Korea was already strong when I was the U.S. Ambassador in Seoul. It has grown tremendously in many important respects over the past decade. And our close cooperation with South Korea, demonstrated again over the past few weeks, exemplifies how the security relationship between our two countries continues to anchor our broader bilateral ties. What began with a stronger nation protecting a weaker one has evolved as South Korea has become a developed country with a highly capable military and a global strategic perspective. In 2012 South Korea will assume wartime operational control of its troops, a significant step that demonstrates our true partnership.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Our military alliance is now a more balanced partnership, with the ROK military ready to assume primary responsibility for South Korean defense. Working in concert with our partners in Seoul, we are realigning our troops, consolidating our bases, and shifting command responsibility to the ROK’s armed forces while enhancing our capacity to defend the Peninsula in time of crisis. Our mutual goal is for the United States to field a more tailored force, with a smaller footprint that creates less of an impact on ROK civilians, but which still provides the deterrent necessary to maintain peace on the peninsula. We are in the process of relocating U.S. military bases away from the centers of large cities and realigning our troops so that we field a leaner, more flexible fighting force that is able to defend our treaty allies in a time of crisis.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">It is worth noting that the U.S. – ROK Alliance has matured to the point where we are equally concerned with working together to provide the same security our countries have enjoyed for the last fifty years to people elsewhere who have not had this opportunity. U.S. and Korean forces have worked side by side in international peacekeeping and military operations in Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan. An ROK warship is working with U.S. and other like-minded nations to prevent piracy in international waters off the Horn of Africa. The fact that we are able to look beyond our own security needs is a mark of the maturity and increasingly global nature of our alliance.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Our political alliance with the Republic of Korea is strongly buttressed by our growing economic ties. To that end, in 2007 the U.S. and Korea concluded negotiations for a free trade agreement. Recognizing that a sound free trade agreement could offer benefits to both countries, President Obama and President Lee committed to working together to chart a way forward at their meeting in London on April 2.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Most important are the strong ties between the people of the United States and the people of the Republic of Korea. More than 100,000 students from Korea enrich American classrooms each year. This makes them the largest group of foreign students studying in the United States. To encourage more students to take part in similar experiences, last year the Governments of our two countries signed a Memorandum of Understanding on the WEST program. WEST – Work, English Study, Travel – allows Korean young people to come to the United States to study English, work at a professional internship, and travel on a single visa. Nearly 200 Korean students and recent graduates are currently in the United States taking advantage of this opportunity.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">A small, but increasing number of Americans are choosing to study in Korea each year. The State Department now offers grants for students from the secondary through post-graduate levels to study Korean. The Fulbright Program offers recent college graduates the opportunity to teach English abroad for a year in select countries through its English Teaching Assistant Program. The program in South Korea has been the most successful in East Asia. Alumni of this program and others like it are part of a growing cadre of the next generation U.S. - Korea studies experts and it is they who will help steer our countries closer together. Regardless of age or education status, all South Korean citizens may take advantage of Korea’s entry into the Visa Waiver Program. In January of this year, Koreans were permitted to travel to the United States under the Visa Waiver Program which allows South Korean citizens who enter the U.S. for personal travel or business to stay up to 90 days without a visa.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">When Presidents Lee and Obama meet next week, they will chart a vision for a U.S. – ROK relationship that is based on strong bilateral cooperation, but aims to expand cooperation to address challenges around the globe ranging from the global financial crisis to combating global climate change.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Japan</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Likewise, nearly fifty years have passed since the United States and Japan signed the Treaty on Mutual Cooperation and Security, the foundation of our strategic alliance, in 1960. We share a strong and vital relationship with Japan based on shared interests, values, and a common vision for the future. As the leading democracies and economies in the world, the United States and Japan have shared interests that cut across a range of difficult issues. From our shared commitment to peace and stability in the Asia – Pacific region to our efforts to push for economic growth in the midst of a worldwide financial crisis, and from our work to counter the scourge of terrorism to our shared interest in mitigating the impact of climate change, it is clear that the issues that face us today are more global in nature than ever before.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">These transnational issues cannot be resolved by the United States or Japan alone, nor by the international community with leadership that does not include both the United States and Japan. The U.S. – Japan alliance continues to evolve to adapt to the global nature of these challenging issues. We are strengthening communication, collaboration, and coordination between our two nations and others. Japanese support to Operation Enduring Freedom has been helpful to the coalition mission in Afghanistan. Japan’s dispatch of two Maritime Self Defense Force vessels to the Gulf of Aden is an important step in the fight against piracy. Of course, the United States continues to strongly support Japan’s efforts in ascertaining the fate of its missing citizens who were abducted by the North Koreans.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">China</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">As China has become a global economic power, its political and diplomatic influence continues to increase. It is one of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, and is a key member of vital regional and international institutions: APEC, the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), the G-20, the WTO, and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. Accordingly, the importance of United States – China relations continues to increase as well. When President Richard Nixon (and Secretary Kissinger) made the historic visit to China in February 1972, it would have been hard to imagine the breadth and depth of issues that we now discuss bilaterally with China on a regular basis.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The Obama administration’s objective is to expand a positive, cooperative bilateral relationship that respects the increasingly complex and comprehensive nature of our relations with China. We convene over fifty bilateral dialogues and working groups spanning subjects from aviation to counterterrorism, to food safety and non-proliferation. When President Obama met with President Hu Jintao on the margins of the G20 summit in London in April, they agreed to seek to build positive, cooperative and comprehensive relations – many of the major challenges facing the world today cannot be successfully addressed without the involvement and assistance of China. We are planning to launch the Strategic and Economic Dialogue in Washington this July in order to maximize opportunities for cooperation that can be better revealed by a strategic, whole of government approach to the relationship. Secretary Clinton’s February visit to Beijing and Treasury Secretary Geithner’s visit to Beijing last week helped lay the groundwork for this new dialogue, which will be based on mutual respect, cooperation and a long-term perspective.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">North Korea</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Against the backdrop of a prosperous and dynamic region, though, North Korea presents a serious contrast. President Obama came into office committed to a willingness to talk directly to countries with whom we have differences and to try to resolve those differences. This commitment was communicated directly to North Korea. In particular, the Administration signaled a willingness to pick up on the progress made by the Six-Party process, to continue bilateral dialogue and to work toward denuclearization and a normal relationship with North Korea. To date, we have had no positive response to these signals.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">In fact, North Korea’s actions and statements run directly counter to the interests of regional peace and security and violate North Korea’s obligations under UN Security Council Resolution 1718. They have renounced their clear Six-Party commitments to disablement of their nuclear program and, through their missile and nuclear tests, have further defied the UN Security Council. As President Obama said in response to the May 25 nuclear test, “North Korea is directly and recklessly challenging the international community.” This is a challenge that the international community must meet. We call on the DPRK, therefore, to refrain from further provocative actions, to uphold its commitments, and to abide by its international obligations. North Korea will not find international acceptance unless it abandons its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">I recently participated in an interagency trip, led by Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg, to consult with our Asian partners in response to North Korea’s recent statements and actions. Our discussions were very productive and reinforced our unity and coordination with our allies and partners in dealing with the challenges coming from North Korea. North Korea’s nuclear threat is not a problem for the United States alone. It is a threat to the ROK, Japan, China, Russia, and the broader international community. Therefore, we must all be a part of the solution aimed at maintaining peace and establishing lasting stability in the region.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">We have also conducted intensive consultations here in New York at the UN Security Council. Discussions at the United Nations are ongoing, and Ambassador Rice continues to work with her colleagues in the Security Council to craft a strong, unequivocal, and unified response to North Korea’s violation of its obligations under a binding Security Council resolution, which we have all agreed is required.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The United States shares with our allies, the Republic of Korea and Japan, and with China and Russia a common interest in improving security and stability in the region through the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. The fundamental goal of the United States, the complete and verifiable denuclearization of the Korean peninsula, remains unchanged. I cannot envision a situation in which we would change that goal.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">North Korea has announced its withdrawal from the Six-Party Talks, but we and the other participants in the talks are committed to work through the Six-Party process to implement the principles of the September 2005 Joint Statement. Notwithstanding North Korea’s recent actions, we and the other participants in the talks remain open to meaningful dialogue and serious negotiations. As we have indicated to Pyongyang, we also remain open to bilateral dialogue and negotiations as part of the multilateral effort. North Korea’s recent actions to develop a nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile capacity require that we expand our consideration of new responses, including our force posture and extended deterrence options. However, the North Korea claim to be responding to a “threat” or a “hostile policy” by the United States is simply groundless. Quite to the contrary, we have no intention to invade North Korea or change its regime through force, and this has been made clear to the DPRK repeatedly. There is no doubt in my mind that negotiation and dialogue are the best means to achieve the goal of complete and verifiable denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. Future negotiations, however, need to establish the irreversible steps that North Korea must take to go beyond the impermanent disablement actions previously taken. In short, we have not walked away from the negotiating table and we remain ready for serious negotiations with the North Koreans.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Though denuclearization is vital and remains our prime and most necessary objective, it should not be the exclusive focus of our talks. North Korea should be shown a clear path towards acceptance in the international community. In joining the international community, North Korea must live up to international standards, particularly with regards to respecting the human rights of its own people. Only when North Korea integrates into the region will its people and the East Asia region as a whole be able to reach its full potential. We and our regional partners seek such integration so that North Korea does not remain a permanent source of instability in this critical region. We must encourage North Korea to define and to manage its own economic destiny.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">The Northeast Asia of the future will include a denuclearized North Korea, a peace regime on the Korean Peninsula to replace the Armistice of 1953 and normal, interlocking relations among all countries, including the DPRK and the United States. It must be a region of open borders and a free flow of communication, ideas, and travelers. Economic cooperation and integration will provide all with opportunities for prosperity.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Before North Korea began backing away from its commitments and then taking a series of provocative actions, the Six-Party Talks process took steps towards achieving this vision. It provided a platform for engagement and dialogue that helps to build mutual trust and understanding. Each member of the Six-Party process was able to raise issues of concern and seek common ground. Each of us will continue to have differences and disagreements with North Korea, but we all understand that negotiation and dialogue are the best tools to solve them. Building a foundation and expectation of mutual trust and transparency will facilitate continued growth and prosperity in the region and make it possible for the people of North Korea to share in it. Continuing to threaten and alienate its neighbors denies North Korea the security and respect it claims to be seeking. The United States will do what it must do to provide for our security and that of our allies. The choices are for the North Koreans. They can stay in the darkness of the cave, and see the world only as shadows. Or they can come out into the light of the international community. We would welcome the day when North Korea chooses to come out and join the international community, and we will be prepared to receive them.</p>
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On June 9, 2009, Ambassador Stephen W. Bosworth, Special Representative for North Korea Policy, addressed members and supporters of The Korea Society at the organization's annual dinner in New York City. Ambassador Bosworth is introduced by Evans J.R. Revere, the president of The Korea Society. Read More -
The Obama Administration and Korea: What’s in the Cards?
Sunday, March 1, 2009 | 12:00 PM- Event Time: Sunday, March 1, 2009 | 12:00 PM
- Event Link: #
On Sunday, March 1, 2009, Evans J.R. Revere, president of The Korea Society, hosted a panel discussion entitled "The Obama Administration and Korea: What’s in the Cards?" on an episode of Asian America TV on New York's NYC-TV-25. Joining Revere was Jeffrey Shafer, vice chairman of Global Banking for Citi, and Professor Donald Zagoria of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy. The panel discussed the challenges facing the Obama Administration with regards to the United States' relationship with South and North... Read More -
China's Rise and the Two Koreas: Politics, Economics, Security
Tuesday, February 10, 2009 | 12:00 PM- Event Content: itms://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/corporate-views-on-korea-from/id210903888?i=121345653#
- Event Link: <p style="text-align: justify;">Scott Snyder is director of the Center for Korea Policy at The Asia Foundation and a senior associate at Pacific Forum CSIS. He lived in Seoul, South Korea as Korea representative of The Asia Foundation during 2000-2004. Previously, he served as a program officer in the Research and Studies Program of the U.S. Institute of Peace, and as acting director of The Asia Society's Contemporary Affairs Program. His previous publications include Paved With Good Intentions: The NGO Experience in North Korea (2003), co-edited with L. Gordon Flake and Negotiating on the Edge: North Korean Negotiating Behavior (1999). Snyder received his B.A. from Rice University and an M.A. from the Regional Studies East Asia Program at Harvard University. He was the recipient of a Pantech Visiting Fellowship at Stanford University’s Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center during 2005-2006, received an Abe Fellowship, administered by the Social Sciences Research Council, in 1998-99, and was a Thomas G. Watson Fellow at Yonsei University in South Korea in 1987-88.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;">John Delury is associate director of Asia Society’s Center on U.S.-China Relations and director of the China Boom Project. He previously taught Chinese history and politics at Brown University, having received a PhD in History at Yale. His article, “North Korea: 20 Years of Solitude,” appears in the current issue of World Policy Journal (Winter 2008/09). He has also written for Far Eastern Economic Review, Policy Review, Project Syndicate and Journal of Asian Studies.</p>
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Entrenched relationships are being redefined across the Pacific, with China now South Korea’s number one trading partner and destination for foreign investment and tourism. What are the implications of this regional sea change for politics and security in East Asia? Join us as Scott Snyder, author of China's Rise and the Two Koreas: Politics, Economics, Security (Lynne Rienner, 2008), discusses the transformation of the Sino-South Korean relationship since the early 1990s with John Delury, director of the... Read More
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