Yet another impossible dictator
for life has succumbed to natural causes.
Huge uncertainty and the resultant huge opportunity once again will play
out their dance. The countries outright
failure has been apparent for years and the solution has been just as
apparent. It remains for a military
junta to decide that the socialist dream is over and to immediately negotiate
swift reunification with South
Korea .
It worked for East Germany
and will work even better with North
Korea .
The real sticking point will be to find a way to save face for all
concerned.
Conveniently, they can now blame
a dead man for all crimes against humanity.
I cannot see the present leadership allowing this opportunity to pass
when the situation is as bad as they could possibly imagine.
It may play out in a myriad of
different ways and while the public is put on hold during the period of
official mourning, the leaders have a brief pause to sort things out.
The interesting question that we
hope is never answered is what China ,
South Korea and Japan might do
if it appears that we are going to watch the apparent emergence of a young Kim
as the umbrella for more decades of the same.
All have a real stake in seeing a fully reformed North Korea
now. Old promises have kept those needs
from been acted on and all that is now over.
Expect a vigorous push.
Then it will be over and sooner
or later the Koreas
will be reunited. This feels a little
like the last days of the East German regime trying to justify an independent
existence with a fabulously wealthy West Germany at the front door
asking for her hand. The only question
should be to figure out how to keep it respectable.
N. Korean leader Kim dead: state TV
By Jung Ha-Won | AFP – 1 hour 42 minutes ago
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il has died aged 69 of a heart attack,
state media announced Monday, plunging the impoverished but nuclear-armed
nation into uncertainty as it faced a second dynastic succession.
The leader "passed away from a great mental and physical
strain" at 8:30 am on Saturday (2330 GMT Friday), while travelling by
train on one of his field tours, the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA)
said.
It urged people to follow his youngest son and heir apparent Kim
Jong-Un, who is aged in his late 20s and was last year made a four-star general
and given top ruling party posts despite having had no public profile.
"All party members, military men and the public should faithfully
follow the leadership of comrade Kim Jong-Un and protect and further strengthen
the unified front of the party, military and the public," said a weeping
black-clad TV announcer.
KCNA said Kim died of a "severe myocardial infarction along with a
heart attack" and that an autopsy was performed Sunday.
The leader suffered a stroke in August 2008 which left him with
impaired movement in his left arm and leg, and triggered an acceleration in the
succession plans.
Kim's funeral will be held on December 28 in Pyongyang but no foreign delegations will be
invited, KCNA said. A period of national mourning was declared from December 17
to 29.
"We must hold high the flag of songun (military-first) policy,
strengthen military power a hundred times and firmly defend our socialist
system and achievement of revolution," KCNA said.
At the North Korean embassy in Beijing ,
the capital of its main ally China ,
the national flag was flying at half mast.
North Korea's propaganda machine has rolled into action to build up the
same personality cult for Jong-Un that surrounded his father and late
grandfather Kim Il-Sung, the founder and "eternal leader" of North Korea who
died in 1994.
However, little is known about the succession. South Korea 's top official on
cross-border affairs said last month that there would be challenges in
transferring power to the son.
Kim Jong-Il's only sister Kim Kyong-Hui and her husband Jang
Song-Thaek, the country's unofficial number-two leader, are expected to act as
the son's guardian and throw their political weight behind him, analysts say.
The news sent shockwaves around the region where for years tensions
have run high over North
Korea 's nuclear ambitions and aggressive
tactics.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff said it had increased monitoring along the
border along with US forces in the country but that no unusual activity had
been observed.
North and South
Korea have remained technically at war since
their three-year Korean conflict ended only in an armistice in 1953.
The news shocked South Koreans and some expressed fears of renewed
conflict.
"I'm worried there will be a war. I thought it wasn't true at
first," said student Song Bo-Na, 22.
The United States ,
which stations 28,500 troops in the South, said it was closely monitoring
events.
"The President has been notified and we are in close touch with
our allies in South Korea
and Japan ,"
said White House spokesman Jay Carney.
"We remain committed to stability on the Korean peninsula and to
the freedom and security of our allies."
Japan, which has no diplomatic relations with North Korea, offered its
condolences over the death.
The Japanese authorities also called an emergency security meeting and,
minutes after the noon broadcast by Pyongyang ,
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda cancelled a speech and rushed to confer with
senior ministers.
Australia said it was critical that governments including North Korea's
exercised calm and restraint after the death, and urged Pyongyang to engage
with the global community.
KCNA, quoting a statement from the national funeral committee headed by
Jong-Un, said Kim Jong-Il's body would lie in state in Kumsusan palace where
his father's embalmed body is on display.
It said mourners would be allowed to visit from December 20 to 27.
Following the funeral, another event to mourn the leader would be held
on December 29. Mourning shots are to be fired and three minutes of silence
would be observed. All trains and ships will sound their horns.
Kim took over after his father and founding president Kim Il-Sung died
in 1994.
In the mid- to late-1990s he presided over a famine which killed
hundreds of thousands of his people. Severe food shortages continue and the UN
children's fund estimates one-third of children are stunted by malnutrition.
But Kim still found resources to continue a nuclear weapons programme
which culminated in tests in October 2006 and May 2009. The country is believed
to have a plutonium stockpile big enough for six to eight weapons.
For several months there have been diplomatic efforts to restart
six-nation nuclear disarmament talks which the North abandoned in April 2009.
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