Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Comrades, more truths from a progressive blog:
DPRK as Visible Superpower

BRIEFING
By Dari

San Francisco -- As the six-party negotiation proceeds further and further toward the peaceful security settlement in Northeast Asia where the current focus is the Korean Peninsula, Japan seems to feel isolated from neighbours and exposed to uncertainty.

While the Japanese media reflecting the feeling, they also fan a fear even after the multilateral agreemet on February 13. They have reinforced the attempts to invoke the so-called "threat from north Korea".

An example can be found in Yomiuri Shimbun's story titled "North Korea's Nuclear Threat: North Korea 'had plan to attack Japan'" on February 21.

The headline looks like a bone beetling out of a rotten body. The so-called "nuclear threat" would be a statement about the present situation; the so-called "plan to attack" would be a statement about the past affairs. Juxtapositioning the present and the past and mixing imaginative fear and defunct fact, Yomiuri leads readers to the world of horror where the "nuclear attack from north Korea is present".

The UPI recaps this kind of story in a shorter format as follows:

Documents reveal planned invasion of Japan
ImediNews
February 22, 2007, 04:05 AM

London (UPI) -- Documents found in London's National Archives reportedly show China, North Korea and the former Soviet Union may have planned an invasion of Japan.

Kyodo News said it discovered documents showing that U.S. intelligence officials had information that during the Korean War, the three international superpowers planned to attack Japan from the air and the ocean, while also invading Taiwan.

The documents found their way into the National Archives after the U.S. officials shared the information with Britain in 1951.

U.S. officials said the report could have originated from the Japanese Communist Party, in an attempt to boost morale by indicating the Soviet Union's involvement.

History experts dismissed the documents' accuracy, saying Soviet leader Joseph Stalin would never had engaged in such a maneuver.

Stalin was careful not to escalate things into a global war, Manchester University official Peter Lowe told the paper. He felt the Soviet Union would not be ready for a world war until the mid-1950s. In any case, the magnitude of invading Japan and Taiwan would have been beyond the capabilities of the Soviet Union, China and North Korea.

The revealation promises you with something and the last judgement betrays you with nothing. Bear in mind that a monster with dragon's head and snake's tail is a common laughing stuff in the Northeast Asia.

Although the world may be plastical to those with the keyboard that is mightier than the nuke, the DPRK suddenly emerges as one of "the three international superpowers" from the article above. Owing to the designation I had to ask me a question that I had hardly ever asked.

Was the DPRK the superpower six decades ago? After recalling the armistice of July 27, 1953, I may have to say "yes". Is the DPRK the superpower these days too? After reviewing the arrangement of February 13, 2007, I may have to say "yes" again.

Of course, it would not be a moment of laughing when an invisible superpower turns into a visible one. For the moment, let Japan feel isolated and exposed if it wants to feel like that and let's call it "a criminal's fear". Because of its reluctance to repent until this day since the end of World War 2, Japan virtually remains a war-criminal state so as to be put under protection by the US that never wants to see Pearl Harbor to be sunk again. Now that the protector shakes hands with the DPRK to embrace an amity in the near future, the protected trembles.

What a criminal is supposed to do is to repent, not to repudiate. Where there is no repentance, there is no rehabilitation.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Umm no the DPRK is not a superpower it never was and it never will be. In order for a country to be a superpower your country needs to have:

A. A strong economy
B. A strong military
C. An influence on International Politics
D. An influence on world culture (History, music and film etc.)
E. A large landmass and population

The DPRK doesn't have a strong economy, as the average GDP is only $1800 while in the ROK it is $20,590 over 10 times that of the DPRK

As far as the military goes, yes you do have a large army which is one of the largest in the world, but you have a Brown-water Navy and an outdated Air Force with planes over 50 years old!

The DPRK has almost no influence whatsoever on world politics. It is the only Stalinist state in the world and one of only five communist states in the world, the other four are China, Laos, Vietnam, and Cuba, none of which use Juche or Songun policies.

The DPRK's is only 61 years old, and the only part of it's history which is of real significance was the Korean War (or as you call it the Fatherland Liberation War, which would have happened were it not for Chinese Intervention). No one listens to DRPK music outside of the country (except maybe a few in South Korea). And there are no DPRK movies being shown internationally.

Finally, the DPRK has a very small landmass of 120,538 square km., ranked 98th in the world with 23,260,000 people, less that 0.5% of the World's total.

That said, it's clear that the DPRK is not a superpower, it never was, and it never will be. Also if you hate America so much why do you post on an American website? (Blogger was made by Americans)

A SImple Man said...

Firestorm, why do you hate the truth and freedom?

Anonymous said...

I don't hate freedom, I live in a free world and I'm happy with that. Your perception of freedom is very different than mine, and I'm fine with that as well because where I live, people are allowed to think and say what they want. I have spoken my mind for many years, and criticized my government many times and not once, I repeat NOT ONCE! have I been punished by the US government because of it. Also if the DPRK tells truth about how they don't have food shortages and concentration camps, why don't they allow foreigners to see the whole country? Probably because they have something to hide. As far as the truth goes I know that the western media is telling the truth and the DPRK citizens are told lies. How do I know this? Because the US government makes its mistakes known! Every government makes mistakes and the DPRK is no exception, no one will buy the fact that one single government of any country, let alone a third world one has never made a mistake as you might claim.

Finally to prove to you that there is freedom in the U.S., here is a link to an Anti-Bush website that has been up for 4 years and has not been taken down by the government, the copyright date proves it:

http://topplebush.com/

If you hate Bush as much as I think you do you might be tempted to buy a shirt!

A SImple Man said...

All the people of DPRK are free to think and say what they want as well. We all think and say how much we love Dear leader.

Anonymous said...

DPRK is most free society in humankind history. That is why the world calls the nation the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea. The fake South Korea (Republic of Korea) openly admits through its name that it is neither Democratic nor of the people. MANSAE!