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Aiding and abetting the "Axis". (Cover Story: Korea).


Even as he prepares to mount an unnecessary war against a prostrate pros·trate  
tr.v. pros·trat·ed, pros·trat·ing, pros·trates
1. To put or throw flat with the face down, as in submission or adoration:
 Iraq, President Bush is offering critical aid to Saddam's more dangerous axis-mate, North Korea.

Saddam Hussein's Iraqi regime may be close to building a nuclear weapon. Kim Jong-Il's North Korean hell state, according to intelligence estimates, currently possesses two nukes, and will shortly develop the capacity to produce an entire arsenal. Under threat of war, Saddam has allowed UN weapons inspectors to canvass Iraq for evidence of weapons of mass destruction Weapons that are capable of a high order of destruction and/or of being used in such a manner as to destroy large numbers of people. Weapons of mass destruction can be high explosives or nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological weapons, but exclude the means of transporting or . Last December, North Korea summarily evicted UN weapons inspectors from its Yongbyon nuclear plant, and disabled surveillance equipment used to monitor the suspected weapons production facility.

Crippled by the 1991 UN-led Gulf War, intermittent bombings by U.S. and British aircraft, and 12 years of devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 sanctions, Saddam's military poses little threat to Iraq's neighbors, let alone the United States. North Korea, on the other hand, boasts the world's fourth-largest military; it has 37,000 U.S. troops within easy striking range of its artillery. Seoul, the South Korean capital, is 34 miles away from the demilitarized zone and well within striking distance of North Korean artillery tubes. And Kim's regime has successfully tested the Taepo Dong, a missile capable of hitting Japan; the missile's next generation may be able to strike Alaska.

Moreover, North Korea brazenly and unrepentantly sponsors and participates in international terrorism. Adept in using infiltrators and sleeper agents, Pyongyang poses a real threat of nuclear terrorism against the region--and conceivably even the United States.

Of these two members of the "axis of evil," North Korea is--by any rational calculation--a far greater threat than Iraq. Yet in dealing with Pyongyang, the president displays none of the stiff-spined, bellicose bel·li·cose  
adj.
Warlike in manner or temperament; pugnacious. See Synonyms at belligerent.



[Middle English, from Latin bellic
 rectitude that characterizes his treatment of Baghdad. Crusading for war against a prostrate Iraq, Mr. Bush strikes poses of jut-jawed, Churchillian resolution; confronting an insurgent INSURGENT. One who is concerned in an insurrection. He differs from a rebel in this, that rebel is always understood in a bad sense, or one who unjustly opposes the constituted authorities; insurgent may be one who justly opposes the tyranny of constituted authorities. , nuclear-equipped North Korea, he essays a credible Neville Chamberlain impersonation Impersonation
Patroclus

wore the armor of Achilles against the Trojans to encourage the disheartened Greeks. [Gk. Lit.: Iliad]

Prisoner of Zenda, The
.

Why is this so? How could the same president who identified North Korea as a member of an "axis of evil" now stand ready to lavish that terrorist regime with aid, trade, and technology? Mr. Bush, recall, has condemned not only terrorism but those countries supporting terrorism. "[W]e will pursue nations that provide aid or safe haven to terrorism," he said in a nationally televised address to a joint session of Congress shortly after the 9-11 terrorist attacks. "Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists. From this day forward, any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime."

How does Mr. Bush reconcile this tough stance with aiding North Korea, the most militant of the three "axis of evil" regimes he named? And how does he reconcile that stance with counting as allies in the war against terrorism Russia and Communist China, who are the puppet-masters behind the three "axis" nations? Based on Mr. Bush's own definition, would not his policies qualify his own administration as "a hostile regime"?

Power Behind the Axis

Last December 12th, while the attention was focused on Baghdad and Pyongyang, Russian President (and KGB KGB: see secret police.
KGB
 Russian Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti

(“Committee for State Security”) Soviet agency responsible for intelligence, counterintelligence, and internal security.
 veteran) Vladimir Putin made what the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times described as "a quick but high-profile visit to Beijing" for a summit with Communist Chinese ruler Jiang Zemin. "China and Russia will be good neighbors, friends and partners forever," proclaimed Jiang during the quickie summit, held to reiterate the Sino-Russian "Good Neighborly neigh·bor·ly  
adj.
Having or exhibiting the qualities of a friendly neighbor.



neighbor·li·ness n.

Adj. 1.
 Treaty of Friendship The Treaty of Friendship was a treaty signed in 1946 between the post-war states of Yugoslavia and Albania. The treaty was an economic agreement which resulted in customs union. Some Albanians immigrated into Kosovo during this period.  and Cooperation" signed in 2001.

One tangible item of business in the December 2002 Beijing meeting was a joint declaration urging the U.S. to normalize normalize

to convert a set of data by, for example, converting them to logarithms or reciprocals so that their previous non-normal distribution is converted to a normal one.
 relations with North Korea "on the basis of continued observation of earlier reached agreements, including the framework agreement of 1994." Under that agreement, the U.S. and key allies--particularly South Korea and Japan--would pay at least $4 billion to supply North Korea with light-water nuclear reactors (which would be used to produce weapons-grade plutonium) and unspecified amounts to provide Pyongyang with heavy fuel oil and upgrades to its decrepit power grid. In exchange, North Korea supposedly agreed to "freeze" its nuclear program, and submit to international inspections beginning in 1999. In predictable fashion, Kim Jong-Il and his cohorts eagerly accepted these incredible concessions while covertly continuing their "frozen" nuke research.

Incredible as it may seem, the Bush administration allowed oil shipments to North Korea to continue after Pyongyang announced in October 2002 that the 1994 agreement was "nullified nul·li·fy  
tr.v. nul·li·fied, nul·li·fy·ing, nul·li·fies
1. To make null; invalidate.

2. To counteract the force or effectiveness of.
." "Can you imagine the uproar if Bill Clinton had let the deliveries to go forward [sic] if he had been told the agreement was nullified?" commented a Democratic congressional aide to the October 23rd Washington Post.

According to the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency.


(1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy).
, North Korea attempted to buy equipment for a uranium weapons program from Communist China in 2001. During the same year, Beijing provided crucial missile-related technology to Pyongyang, and Russia concluded a defense agreement setting the stage for arms sales and weapons technology transfers to North Korea. This is curious behavior for powers hailed by President Bush as valued allies in the "war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
"--and North Korea was hardly the only beneficiary of this treacherous Sino-Russian support. The CIA report, as summarized by Washington Times defense affairs analyst Bill Gertz, "identified Russia, China, and North Korea as major suppliers of chemical, biological and nuclear-arms goods and missile systems to rogue states or unstable regions."

A Terror Regime

North Korea is a museum-quality exhibit of Communism in the full flower of its malignancy. In congressional testimony last year, Norbert Vollertsen, a German physician who lived in North Korea for a year and a half as a humanitarian volunteer, described how that nation's wretched hospitals are filled with people "worn out by compulsory drills, the innumerable parades, the assemblies from 6:00 in the morning and the droning propaganda. They are tired and at the end of their tether tether

to tie an animal up by the head or neck so that it can graze but not move away. See also barton tether.
. Clinical depression is rampant. Alcoholism is common because of mind numbing rigidities and hopelessness of life."

Mass starvation is a hallmark of Communism, and North Korea has preserved this tragic tradition as well. Since 1992, at least one million North Korean subjects--and perhaps as many as four million, or one-quarter of the population--have died from starvation. And as has been the case in Soviet Russia, Red China, Ethiopia, and Zimbabwe, famine has been used as a weapon of social control. "North Korea is a terror regime," testified Dr. Vollertsen. "They are committing genocide there.... They are using food as a weapon against their own people.... North Korea [represents] the real killing fields of the 21st Century."

The Bush administration, citing humanitarian concerns, has repeatedly promised to continue providing food shipments to North Korea via the UN's World Food Program. But such aid actually compounds the humanitarian crisis by helping to prop up Kim's regime, which rations the food through the country's Public Distribution System (PDS (1) (Processor Direct Slot) A single expansion slot on certain, early Macintosh models that was used to connect high-speed peripherals as well as additional CPUs. Providing a channel directly to the CPU, the PDS coexisted with NuBus slots on some models. ). A North Korean subject's access to food and other necessities is strictly defined by his loyalty to the regime. According to Sophie DeLaunay of the humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders Doctors Without Borders, Fr. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), international organization that provides emergency medical assistance to people suffering from a natural or societal disaster, such as an earthquake or war. , "the three class labels--'core,' 'wavering,' and 'hostile'--continue to be used to prioritize access to jobs, region of residence, and entitlement to items distributed through the Public Distribution System...."

"There are two worlds in North Korea," observed Dr. Vollertsen. "The world for the senior military, the members of the [ruling] party and the country's elite.... In the world for these ordinary people in a hospital one can see young children, all of them too small for their age, with hollow eyes and skin stretched tight across their faces, wearing blue-and-white striped pajamas pajamas
Noun, pl

US pyjamas

pajamas npl (US) → pijama msg; piyama msg (LAM
 like the children in Auschwitz and Dachau in Hitler's Nazi Germany." In September 1995, Kim Jong-Il issued orders to arrest wandering homeless children found Outside their home counties and imprison im·pris·on  
tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons
To put in or as if in prison; confine.



[Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en-
 them in the North Korean gulag.

While the common people starve, North Korea's Communist oligarchy oligarchy (ŏl`əgärkē) [Gr.,=rule by the few], rule by a few members of a community or group. When referring to governments, the classical definition of oligarchy, as given for example by Aristotle, is of government by a few, usually  lives in royal splendor. Seeking to co-opt Dr. Vollertsen, the Communist government awarded him a "friendship medal" and offered him unprecedented access to the "festivities fes·tiv·i·ty  
n. pl. fes·tiv·i·ties
1. A joyous feast, holiday, or celebration; a festival.

2. The pleasure, joy, and gaiety of a festival or celebration.

3.
 ... [of] all those who are in charge of power in the foreign ministry."

In that company, the German physician saw the country's elite "enjoying a nice lifestyle with fancy restaurants, diplomatic shops with European food, nightclubs and even a casino...." The North Korean nomenklatura no·men·kla·tu·ra  
n.
1. The system of patronage to senior positions in the bureaucracy of the Soviet Union and some other Communist states, controlled by committees at various levels of the Communist Party.

2. (used with a pl.
 does little to disguise its privileged status. The October 5, 1999 South China Morning Post The South China Morning Post, together with its Sunday edition, the Sunday Morning Post, is a English-language newspaper of Hong Kong, with a circulation of 104,000.  reported that Kim's regime purchased a $20 million fleet of 200 Mercedes-Benz S500 class cars for its leadership.

Gangster State

An unavoidable consequence of Communist central planning, the North Korean famine This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject.
Please help recruit one or [ improve this article] yourself. See the talk page for details.
 has been exacerbated by the regime s investment in narco-terrorism. The February 15, 1999 issue of U.S. News & World Report U.S. News & World Report

Weekly newsmagazine published in Washington, D.C. U.S. News was founded in 1933 by David Lawrence (1888–1973) to cover important domestic events; he founded World Report in 1945 to treat world news. The two magazines were merged in 1948.
 observed that up to 17,000 acres of farmland have been locked up by state-mandated opium farming, which began in the mid-1980s under dictator Kim Il-Sung, the present dictator's late father.

Kim Jong-Il has "ordered a major expansion of the drugs-for-export program," noted the magazine, which also reported that "U.S. food aid to the regime--over $77 million worth this year--may be needed in part because farm acreage is used to grow poppies for opium." To that figure can be added millions of additional dollars stolen by the regime from charitable aid sent to North Korea by private and religious relief organizations.

"Interviews with law enforcement officials, intelligence analysts, and North Korean defectors A number of individuals have defected from North Korea.

Different terms are in official and unofficial use in East Asian languages to refer to this group of refugees. On 9 January 2005, the South Korean Ministry of Unification announced that it will use saeteomin
 suggest that the regime is now dramatically expanding its narcotics production and that much of the criminal activity is controlled at the highest levels of government," reported U.S. News. "[lit is clear that the worldwide network of North Korean embassies, coupled with the use of diplomatic pouches and immunity, offers the ideal cover for a criminal enterprise...."

"Authorities in at least nine countries have nabbed North Korean diplomats with a virtual pharmacy of illegal drugs: opium, heroin, cocaine, hashish hashish (hăsh`ēsh, –ĭsh), resin extracted from the flower clusters and top leaves of the hemp plant, Cannabis sativa, and C. indica. ," continued the report. In July 1998, two North Korean diplomats were arrested in Cairo with six suitcases containing 506,000 tablets of Rohypnol, the so-called "date rape drug date rape drug Public health A popular name for Rohypnol, which is 10-fold more potent than Valium as a sedative hypnotic; its notoriety derives from its alleged ability to ↓ inhibitions and defenses in ♀, helping the female's partner make unwanted sexual advances ." During the same month, Japanese authorities intercepted a North Korean methamphetamine shipment worth $170 million.

Pyongyang is also deeply involved in counterfeiting. According to South Korea's National Intelligence Service, North Korea has printed vast quantities of counterfeit bills, including $15 million in "super notes"-- bogus bills that are very difficult to detect--using new counterfeiting technology. The South Korean report charges that the counterfeiting operation was authorized at the highest levels of the North Korean government and cites as evidence that, in 1999, an aide to Kim Jong-Il was caught trying to exchange $30,000 in counterfeit notes in Vladivostok.

In typical Communist fashion, the North Korean gangster regime often sends politically suspect subjects to the gulag on spurious criminal charges. This was the case with Sun-Ok Lee, a survivor of Pyongyang's gulag. Lee was convicted of spurious embezzling charges - and eventually escaped from North Korea to bear witness of the regime's unfathomable crimes against its most innocent subjects.

"In the 'reform institute' in Kaechon where I was held, there were 200 women housewives as prisoners," recalled Lee in congressional testimony. "In the case of these women, if any is pregnant, the baby would be killed. If the baby's mom was a political criminal, inside her the baby is the same political criminal. So the seed of a political criminal should not be allowed to be born."

Lee personally witnessed instances in which gulag officers would murder newborn infants by "stepping on the baby's neck with his boots once he or she was born. If the mom would cry for help to save her child, it was an expression of dissatisfaction against the party. So such a woman would be dragged out of the building and put to public execution by firing squad Execution by firing squad is a method of capital punishment, particularly common in times of war. The firing squad is generally composed of several soldiers or peace officers. ."

True Face of Evil

Such is the nature of the regime directly supported by our "allies" Russia and Communist China--and which the Bush administration is courting with humanitarian aid and promises of economic and technical assistance.

The Bush administration's treatment of North Korea exemplifies the utter phoniness of the "war on terrorism Terrorist acts and the threat of Terrorism have occupied the various law enforcement agencies in the U.S. government for many years. The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, as amended by the usa patriot act ." Of the three "axis of evil" states, North Korea is undoubtedly the most oppressive and aggressive, and it poses the most immediate threat to U.S. citizens. Yet the administration has chosen to temporize tem·po·rize  
intr.v. tem·po·rized, tem·po·riz·ing, tem·po·riz·es
1. To act evasively in order to gain time, avoid argument, or postpone a decision: "Colonial officials . . .
 in its dealing with Pyongyang in order to focus on the unnecessary, UN-authorized confrontation with Iraq.

And indeed, the North Korean hell state is a direct product of our nation's tragic entanglement with the UN. As the article beginning on page 19 will show, in the early stages of the Korean War the U.S.-led coalition liberated the entire peninsula from Communist hands--only to see the UN reverse this victory. That betrayal, and its tragic consequences, serves as a compelling illustration of the utter foolishness of fighting a "war on terrorism" through the UN.
COPYRIGHT 2003 American Opinion Publishing, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:of evil
Author:Grigg, William Norman
Publication:The New American
Geographic Code:7IRAQ
Date:Feb 24, 2003
Words:2151
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Next Article:Escaping North Korea's prison state. (Cover Story: Korea).



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