Malachi151
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- May 24, 2003
- Messages
- 1,404
How did North Korean get to its present state today?
Korea was a flourishing country with an excellent culture. It was then invaded by imperial Japan, the people were forced into slavery, and the women were taken as sex slaves, and there was a systematic destruction of their culture by the Japanese destroying their knowledge of their past and disrupting all of their traditions.
Typical imperialism.
During WWII Kim Il Sung and Korean Communists put up the fight against the invading Japanese.
After WWII was over Kim Il Sung and the communist party began to start rebuilding the country.
Kim Il Sung asked for Soviet assistance, and when the Soviets began rolling into Korea Americans freaked out.
At this point Eisenhower advised for the creation of the 38th parallel. This was done by the America alone. There was no discussion with anyone, they just decided to divide the country, they went in and established the boarder, and said that was it.
This was done because Korea contained valuable resources that America deemed important to the America economy and security.
Virtually all Koreans hated the division, virtually all Koreans wanted to reunite the country.
After the division Kim Il Sung requested help from Stalin to help him reunite the country. Stalin at first refused. He finally agreed, and the North Koreans invaded the South in what they thought would be a quick push to reunite their country.
Americans interpreted this as communist expansion and part of the strategy of Moscow to engulf the world in communism. Nothing as farther from the truth. The Soviets wanted little to do with Korea and were afraid to get to involved and ended up giving little support. At that time Stalin wanted to stay out of war and make reparations with the west, but Kim Il Sung's prior was re-unification of his country.
The Americans could see only one thing, Soviet aggression, however that was not reality.
The American invaded and the war lasted 3 years with over 1 million North Korean deaths, and tens of thousand of Americans and South Korean deaths.
In the end nothing at all was gained by either side, but it left the North with a determination to reunite Korea.
Kim Il Sung was loved by his people, and when he died his son Kim Jong Il took power.
Like his father, Kim Jong Il's desire is reunification of Korea.
When Clinton took office the North Koreans were starting a nuclear weapons program. The Clinton administration had no idea how to deal with it, and the solution that they came up with was to pressure North Korean with a threat of military action.
Luckily Jimmy Carter had already gone to North Korea and negotiated a peaceful solution in order to get the North Koreans to stop their weapons program.
The Clinton admin was pleased and glad because it was much better than what they were planning, and they agreed.
Then the plan went to congress to get finalized and the Republicans vetoed the plan. Now the North Koreans had been betrayed after they had already stopped their weapons program, and they felt like fools who had been lied to.
Kim Jong Il made the agreements against the wished of his military, and after the Americans backed out then his military told him that he should have listened to them. All it did was validate their distrust in America.
Then they resumed.
Then we went on a diplomatic mission again, this time with Madeline Albright, and again an agreement was reached and Madeline said that she was surprised by how much she could tell that Kim Jong Il really wanted to reach an agreement and she was certain that the weapons programs were just being used as bargaining chips all along. She said that Kim Jong Il was very intelligent, well mannered, attentive, and respectful of her.
What he wanted was help from the west in deescalating the tensions and moving towards unification with South Korea.
The South Koreans also want reunification, and Roh Moo Hyun was elected president of South Korea on a platform of reunification and cooperation with North Korea.
Then Bush was elected. When he came into office he again broke the agreement that had been made with Kim Jong Il by the Clinton administration, this was the second time in 8 years the US had gone back on its word with the North Koreans.
Bush said simply that he didn't trust him and considered them evil.
Now Kim Jong Il was enraged and vowed to continue the nuclear weapons program because the US had proven to them that they really did not want peace. The main thing is that everyone close to the situation thinks that Kim Jong Il and the North Koreans do not want to use or really even to make nuclear weapons, but they feel that it is their own bargaining chip to get what they want. The country is desperate economically, and wants outside aid and reunification with South Korea.
They certainly have their share of faults, but this is where understanding communism in its real implementation is important.
Communism is a reactionary ideology. This is why North Korean is the last standing Stalinist Communist state. They are still fighting something, they are still feeling pressure.
As is the case with essentially every country that went communist after Russia, it was a response to foreign imperialism. The Japanese have caused all of this. Had they not invaded Korean this situation would not exist.
Then, the creation of the 38th parallel was another mistake. The US should have let the Koreans deal with that themselves, it was not our place to go in and divide their country.
There is existence of a foreign presence again provided the catalyst for aggression. They simply did not want us there, they and did not want the division. This again just brought out the worst of the situation. The militants rose to power in opposition, because the people had something to fight against. If there had been nothing to fight against they would not have been militants.
The Koreans were also pissed off because after WWII Japan got off extremely light, after they had been the most barbaric of anyone in the war and the Koreans felt betrayed by the West, who was now allying with Japan, who, in their mind was still the enemy.
The North Korean invasion was not a communist expansion policy, it was simply the Korean people wanting to have their country back.
The invasion by America only made the North Koreans more sure that they were right, the world really was against them. The Japanese had invaded them, the US betrayed them and then prevented unification, and the Soviets didn't give them the kind of support that they were asking for. They felt alone, so they closed up and were determined to be alone and make it on their own, and one day they would unite the country and do things their way. That’s is the ideology that grew in those conditions.
Then, they finally get some confidence in the West again and start to make progress with Carter and Clinton and Roh Moo Hyun and then they have all of that trust broken again.
Obviously they have internal problems, and obviously they are doing things that are not good. But, playing hard ball like Bush and the Republicans want to do is just plain stupid. They are putting everyone at risk because they want to do things their way. This issues could likely have been resolved a couple of years ago with cooperation, but with hardball it only makes the North Koreans more apt to play hardball.
I think that Kim Jong Il is waiting for the elections and if Bush is not elected and whoever gets elected agrees to work with him I think this can be resolved peacefully. If Bush is reelected I think that war is inevitable.
Korea was a flourishing country with an excellent culture. It was then invaded by imperial Japan, the people were forced into slavery, and the women were taken as sex slaves, and there was a systematic destruction of their culture by the Japanese destroying their knowledge of their past and disrupting all of their traditions.
Typical imperialism.
During WWII Kim Il Sung and Korean Communists put up the fight against the invading Japanese.
After WWII was over Kim Il Sung and the communist party began to start rebuilding the country.
Kim Il Sung asked for Soviet assistance, and when the Soviets began rolling into Korea Americans freaked out.
At this point Eisenhower advised for the creation of the 38th parallel. This was done by the America alone. There was no discussion with anyone, they just decided to divide the country, they went in and established the boarder, and said that was it.
This was done because Korea contained valuable resources that America deemed important to the America economy and security.
Virtually all Koreans hated the division, virtually all Koreans wanted to reunite the country.
After the division Kim Il Sung requested help from Stalin to help him reunite the country. Stalin at first refused. He finally agreed, and the North Koreans invaded the South in what they thought would be a quick push to reunite their country.
Americans interpreted this as communist expansion and part of the strategy of Moscow to engulf the world in communism. Nothing as farther from the truth. The Soviets wanted little to do with Korea and were afraid to get to involved and ended up giving little support. At that time Stalin wanted to stay out of war and make reparations with the west, but Kim Il Sung's prior was re-unification of his country.
The Americans could see only one thing, Soviet aggression, however that was not reality.
The American invaded and the war lasted 3 years with over 1 million North Korean deaths, and tens of thousand of Americans and South Korean deaths.
In the end nothing at all was gained by either side, but it left the North with a determination to reunite Korea.
Kim Il Sung was loved by his people, and when he died his son Kim Jong Il took power.
Like his father, Kim Jong Il's desire is reunification of Korea.
When Clinton took office the North Koreans were starting a nuclear weapons program. The Clinton administration had no idea how to deal with it, and the solution that they came up with was to pressure North Korean with a threat of military action.
Luckily Jimmy Carter had already gone to North Korea and negotiated a peaceful solution in order to get the North Koreans to stop their weapons program.
The Clinton admin was pleased and glad because it was much better than what they were planning, and they agreed.
Then the plan went to congress to get finalized and the Republicans vetoed the plan. Now the North Koreans had been betrayed after they had already stopped their weapons program, and they felt like fools who had been lied to.
Kim Jong Il made the agreements against the wished of his military, and after the Americans backed out then his military told him that he should have listened to them. All it did was validate their distrust in America.
Then they resumed.
Then we went on a diplomatic mission again, this time with Madeline Albright, and again an agreement was reached and Madeline said that she was surprised by how much she could tell that Kim Jong Il really wanted to reach an agreement and she was certain that the weapons programs were just being used as bargaining chips all along. She said that Kim Jong Il was very intelligent, well mannered, attentive, and respectful of her.
What he wanted was help from the west in deescalating the tensions and moving towards unification with South Korea.
The South Koreans also want reunification, and Roh Moo Hyun was elected president of South Korea on a platform of reunification and cooperation with North Korea.
Then Bush was elected. When he came into office he again broke the agreement that had been made with Kim Jong Il by the Clinton administration, this was the second time in 8 years the US had gone back on its word with the North Koreans.
Bush said simply that he didn't trust him and considered them evil.
Now Kim Jong Il was enraged and vowed to continue the nuclear weapons program because the US had proven to them that they really did not want peace. The main thing is that everyone close to the situation thinks that Kim Jong Il and the North Koreans do not want to use or really even to make nuclear weapons, but they feel that it is their own bargaining chip to get what they want. The country is desperate economically, and wants outside aid and reunification with South Korea.
They certainly have their share of faults, but this is where understanding communism in its real implementation is important.
Communism is a reactionary ideology. This is why North Korean is the last standing Stalinist Communist state. They are still fighting something, they are still feeling pressure.
As is the case with essentially every country that went communist after Russia, it was a response to foreign imperialism. The Japanese have caused all of this. Had they not invaded Korean this situation would not exist.
Then, the creation of the 38th parallel was another mistake. The US should have let the Koreans deal with that themselves, it was not our place to go in and divide their country.
There is existence of a foreign presence again provided the catalyst for aggression. They simply did not want us there, they and did not want the division. This again just brought out the worst of the situation. The militants rose to power in opposition, because the people had something to fight against. If there had been nothing to fight against they would not have been militants.
The Koreans were also pissed off because after WWII Japan got off extremely light, after they had been the most barbaric of anyone in the war and the Koreans felt betrayed by the West, who was now allying with Japan, who, in their mind was still the enemy.
The North Korean invasion was not a communist expansion policy, it was simply the Korean people wanting to have their country back.
The invasion by America only made the North Koreans more sure that they were right, the world really was against them. The Japanese had invaded them, the US betrayed them and then prevented unification, and the Soviets didn't give them the kind of support that they were asking for. They felt alone, so they closed up and were determined to be alone and make it on their own, and one day they would unite the country and do things their way. That’s is the ideology that grew in those conditions.
Then, they finally get some confidence in the West again and start to make progress with Carter and Clinton and Roh Moo Hyun and then they have all of that trust broken again.
Obviously they have internal problems, and obviously they are doing things that are not good. But, playing hard ball like Bush and the Republicans want to do is just plain stupid. They are putting everyone at risk because they want to do things their way. This issues could likely have been resolved a couple of years ago with cooperation, but with hardball it only makes the North Koreans more apt to play hardball.
I think that Kim Jong Il is waiting for the elections and if Bush is not elected and whoever gets elected agrees to work with him I think this can be resolved peacefully. If Bush is reelected I think that war is inevitable.