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Ex-US envoy sees little power for young Kim
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Jan 23, 2012


The former US pointman on North Korea voiced doubt Monday that the communist regime would give significant power to young new leader Kim Jong-Un, lowering chances for a resumption of diplomacy.

"Diplomatically, I think it's likely to be a fairly quiet year," Stephen Bosworth, who stepped down in October as the US coordinator on policy toward North Korea, said at the Asia Society in New York.

Bosworth said he believed that diplomacy was the only option on North Korea, which stormed out of six-nation talks on ending its nuclear program in 2009 when it carried out tests of a long-range missile and atomic bomb.

But Bosworth said North Korea's regime was more collective than many believe and doubted leaders would give decision-making power to the untested Kim Jong-Un, who is in his 20s and succeeded late father Kim Jong-Il last month.

"I do not believe that North Korea's engaged in a collective suicide mission. So I don't think that the senior generals and that the senior party people are going to give Kim Jong-Un anything approaching the level of authority that Kim Jong-Il had," Bosworth said.

"I think they need Kim Jong-Un as a figurehead. They need that face on what is... a dynasty," he said.

Despite his doubts of a suicide mission, Bosworth jokingly drew a parallel between North Korea and Heaven's Gate, a UFO cult in California whose members collectively killed themselves in 1997.

"The average North Korean grows up studying juche and venerating the leadership from the age of two on," Bosworth said, referring to the regime's "juche" philosophy of self-reliance.

"I've always tried to sort of think of North Korea as less a political entity and more of a cult. I sometimes refer to them as the Heaven's Gate of international politics," Bosworth said.

"On the other hand, I think there is good evidence that North Koreans now know more and understand better about the gap that exists between their lives and the lives of people in the neighborhood," he said.

Current US officials have also downplayed chances for diplomacy with North Korea during its transition.

President Barack Obama's administration was considering a new engagement drive that could have included US food aid to the impoverished North, but the plan was put on hold after Kim's death.

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N. Korean air force conducts more training: report
Seoul (AFP) Jan 24, 2012 - North Korea's air force has conducted more training than normal this winter despite the death of leader Kim Jong-Il, a report said Tuesday.

The North's military drills for winter began in late November, showing no "abnormal" activities following Kim's death on December 17, the South's Yonhap news agency said.

"We, however, witness a slight increase in the number of air force flights taking part in training," an unnamed government official was quoted as saying.

The South will go ahead with its planned joint exercise with US troops in March as Pyongyang has not eased its tough stance towards Seoul, Yonhap said.

Kim's youngest son Jong-Un has visited army units as head of the armed forces in an attempt to burnish his military credentials.

Jong-Un, believed to be in his late 20s, was proclaimed supreme leader and appointed commander of the 1.2-million-strong military following the death of his father.

The new regime has vowed retaliation against Seoul for alleged disrespect during the mourning period for its late leader.

Cross-border tensions have been high since the South accused the North of torpedoing a warship with the loss of 46 lives in March 2010.

The North denied involvement but eight months later shelled an island near the tense Yellow Sea border and killed four South Koreans.

Jong-Un chaired a Lunar New Year banquet on Monday for senior officials, the Korean Central News Agency said Tuesday.

At the meeting, leading ruling party official Choe Thae-Bok urged North Koreans to glorify 2012 as "a year of shining victory when an era of prosperity is unfolding", the agency said.

The regime has pledged to turn the impoverished but nuclear-armed country into a "powerful and prosperous nation" this year, which marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of founding president Kim Il-Sung, father of Kim Jong-Il.



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NUKEWARS
Seoul government is a 'disturber of peace'
Seoul (UPI) Jan 23, 2012
South Korea's government of President Lee Myung-bak is a "disturber of peace in northeast Asia," a North Korean government institute said. The Disarmament and Peace Institute, part of the North Korean Foreign Ministry, said the Lee administration, after four years in office, has been fomenting discord in the region, a report by the government-run Korean Central News Agency said. ... read more


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