Wednesday, September 27, 2023

No Pre-trial Detention for Democratic Party Leader Lee Jae-myung

Court rejects arrest warrant for opposition leader Lee over corruption charges
Seoul Sep 27, by Park Boram
During the morning session of the hearing, prosecutors reportedly highlighted the seriousness of the charges and concerns of destroying evidence as they made a case for Lee's arrest, while Lee's lawyers claimed he is not a flight risk and thus arresting him for investigation is unnecessary.

The court rejection is widely expected to bolster Lee's standing in the party in the run-up to the general elections in April and would lead to a massive blowback against the government.

By law, sitting lawmakers are immune from arrest while parliamentary is in session unless the National Assembly passes a motion giving its consent to the arrest, a measure intended to shield lawmakers from political persecution.

Last week, the National Assembly voted to lift the opposition leader's arrest immunity in a surprise, narrow 149-136 vote attributed to a number of dissenting ballots from his own party that commands a majority of parliamentary seats...

The Yonhap article describes this as Lee averting "...the biggest crisis yet for the former presidential candidate." This is a crisis for South Korea as a "democratic" state. Lawyers noted before the hearing that there is no physical evidence, only statements of witnesses, which one witness in relation to a charge this morning in this case, noted was coerced by adamant prosecutors that he publicly regrets making. This is part of a pattern by Han Dong-hun/ Yoon Seok-yeol directed political prosecutions. The purpose is to persecute the opposition, not to enforce the law. So far, the judges in Lee's cases have demonstrated "noon chi" a kind of political intuition, knowing that jailing Lee on such flimsy evidence would rip South Korea apart politically.

I understand Lee had to be transported to the Seoul jail while he was waiting for the court's decision, where he was stripped searched, fingerprinted, stood for a mugshot, etc. They probably forced him to wear the prison jumpsuit. This is from the police description of what they said they would do as "standard procedure" while waiting for the court order. Lee is going back to Green Hospital for treatment.

Meanwhile, this short video below (in Korean) displays virtually the entire South Korean OOB. One interesting aspect is that the organizers used AI (augmented reality?) to depict a South Korean Aegis class destroyer sailing down the main drag between the high rise buildings. (I think this is Sejongno in Seoul). One report said the Armed Forces Parade went from Gwanghwa Plaza to City Hall.


The parade celebrates the 75the Anniversary of the ROK Armed Forces. An administrative unit from the US 8th Army participated in the parade, said to be 300 in number. They appear briefly near the end of the video. The AI depiction of the ROK destroyer appears at 01:11. The video is under two minutes long. Similar technology exhibited at the Asian Games opening in China a few days ago. Yoon is on a power trip. This parade is to distract the public from his administration's incompetence, oppression and disadvantageous foreign policy, while attempting to glorifying himself with "patriotic" credentials.


Sunday, September 24, 2023

Rahmbo "going rogue" on China


Rahm Emmanuel in Japan, goes rogue on China
Responsible Statecraft
DANIEL LARISON
SEP 22, 2023


Emanuel was always a curious choice for a prominent diplomatic post, given his record as a crude, knife-fighting political operative, but in recent weeks he outdid himself with his trolling comments about China. When the then-defense minister, Li Shangfu, had not been seen in public for several weeks, Emanuel tweeted a mocking reference to Agatha Christie’s "And Then There Were None" as he called attention to the growing list of top Chinese officials removed from their positions over the last few months.

This briefly earned the ambassador some favorable coverage back home, including a report in The Wall Street Journal last week that billed him as a “warrior diplomat,” but like the so-called wolf warrior tactics that Emanuel has been imitating it ended up backfiring on him.

The ambassador’s social media antics have done nothing to advance U.S. interests, and it is hard to see how it benefits Japan or the U.S.-Japanese relationship to have our ambassador in Tokyo flinging insults at a neighboring country. As the NBC News report said, a “second administration official said for Emanuel to make these comments makes no sense and does not advance U.S. strategic goals with China or with the Asia-Pacific region.”

The U.S. doesn’t send its ambassadors abroad so that they can play at being the ugly American for online clout, but lately that seems to be what Emanuel thinks his job is.


Great article. I would add two things. First, Rahmbo's slant if you will is to deliberately undermine any sort of diplomatic reconciliation with China. This is totally consistent with the Congressional drift back in the states. Sometimes its seems the Whitehouse can't decide which way it wants to go. Or is the old horse soldier speaks with forked tongue routine? Blinken goes one way then another. Typically he likes to chastise and lecture the Chinese. Biden says one thing, then another. Then Congress does something or says something concerning China policy that is the opposite of some less provocative or conciliatory statement temporarily expressed by the administration.

Secondly, even if Rahm's inexperience, lack of appropriate temperament for diplomacy, and his wild egoism weren't all there already, the political environment he operates in Japan, has other detrimental influences. The US military (INDOPACCOM) dominates the relations between the US and China. This is the social/political milieu as well for American officials living overseas in Asia. So essentially, when you're looking at US foreign policy in East Asia, you're looking at what the major military command there wants. (Trump was the only one who tried to make his own policy there, which had some other defects). In terms of the domestic political environment in Japan, the embassy is dealing with the LDP government, which while reputed to be dominated by the US, is actually far right and currently predisposed to revisionist views of its position in Asia, and expresses a desire to resume a "normal military" like other states. This means doubling their defense budget and acquiring all sorts of offensive strike weapons. In other words, Japan is returning to its former militaristic perspective. This is true particularly of some of the leadership in the dominant factions of the LDP, if not the entire LDP rank and file. Japanese pacifism and the "peace constitution" are passe and being trashed by the ruling party.

The political environment that the US embassy in Japan is a part of, is a militaristic far right hotbed of extremist views concerning China, North Korea, South Korea, Taiwan, the East China Sea, Russia, the South China Sea, and every other relevant foreign policy issue. It's an echo chamber that drives itself to more and more extreme views on the world situation and what our policies and those of our allies in the region should be. The US establishment really doesn't get it, that diplomacy and militarism are qualitatively different. That's why they thought not too long ago, that the former PACCOM commander Harry Harris would make a suitable ambassador to Seoul. He did little but offend the politicians he interacted with in South Korea, because they weren't (at that time) far right ideologues like himself or adequately subservient to US demands. The current South Korean administration fits right in now with the US/Japanese far right ideology. In South Korea they call it the "new right" ideology.



The political persecution of Democratic Party leader Lee Jae-myung in South Korea is taking place precisely because he would return South Korea to policies based on putting the interests of the Republic of Korea first, and returning to the nationalist aspiration for independence from foreign domination. Lee ended his hunger strike on its 24th day to face yet another judicial hearing next week on whether he should be jailed pretrial on what are fabricated charges. He also needs to return to his parliamentary duties in effort to reform the nomination process for party candidates in the next election. This so those within his own party that voted to allow the government to jail him, could be identified and kept off the ballot.

The demonstration on Thursday outside the National Assembly building during the vote on Lee's legislative immunity during session, was in the tens of thousands. Police efforts to restrict the crowd with barricades were contested by numerous men in the demo of all ages, off and on, all day long. The administration's reaction to these frequent demonstrations was to consider crowd control remedies, including blocking subway exits leading to assembly venues, potentially using water cannon (previously ruled unconstitutional) which have not been used yet, and granting police immunity/indemnity in situations where they might incidentally injure or kill demonstrators. A a metal worker was seriously injured by police earlier this year and another trade union rep burned himself to death in front of a court house. A dusk to dawn ban on assemblies is being considered by the National Police Agency. The ban is currently from midnight to dawn. The former is regarded as unconstitutional as a matter of law. So the administration is trying to get by with half a loaf, midnight to six am, which many attorneys regard as also unconstitutional. I had wondered what had happened to the metal worker labor union demonstrations lately, some of their permit applications had been denied. From Thursday's demo in support of Lee Jae-myung in front of the National Assembly building-



Yeouido, in front of the National Assembly building Sep 21


Took a couple of screen shots of today's candlelight movement demonstration (below). The size was difficult to evaluate because of their confinement to only two lanes of traffic and no overhead cameras. I estimate it was in the tens of thousands. The organizers said 20 thousand. The police said 3 thousand which is a joke. It assembled between Namdaemun and City Hall, and ultimately marched to Samgakchi plaza near the Yongsan presidential office and back to Namdaemun. Listened to the speech of the former Justice Minister Chu Mi-ae, who described the former administration's failure to decrypt Han Dong-hun's Apple hand phone with his (alleged) incriminating fabrication of charges against Yoo Shi-min, another former minister, as a coup d'etat. Han had discussed with Channel A News reporter, the means to fabricate charges of financial corruption against Yoo, a popular spokesperson, and public figure on the left.

The failure to decrypt Han's phone led to the dismissal of the charges against Han Dong-hun for "lack of evidence." This ushered in the now a seemingly unchallengeable press-prosecution-president collusion dictatorship currently running South Korea. Han, the current Justice Minister under Yoon, is a despicable character acting as the enforcer for Yoon.

From Namdaemun/Seungnyemun (south gate) to City Hall, candlelight demonstrators gathered for the procession to Samgakchi, early Saturday evening 9.23 Seoul time.

Candlelight movement demonstration returned to Namdaemun-City Hall station venue later on Saturday night September 23.


Thursday, September 21, 2023

Betrayal is a bitter cup for Lee Jae-myung supporters

Lee Jae-myung's legislative immunity to arrest and detention removed by a National Assembly vote.

28 members of his own democratic party, the majority party in the legislature defected to vote with the conservatives to give them a majority vote in favor of the resolution to drop Lee's immunity. This betrayal of their own party leader effectively seals the factional split within the democratic party before the upcoming election campaign season. The defecting group of democratic assembly members are labeled "su bak" (watermelons) one color on the outside another on the inside. They are considered by the progressive democrats who support Lee, as seeking their own personal gain rather than the public interest. In the US context, they would be called "democrats in name only" who merely represent special interests and really are more like conservatives and implicitly allied with conservative interests.

(Source MBC News live 9.21.23) Angry demonstrators near National Assembly building in Yeouido confront police. They anticipated that the resolution to allow any arrest and confinement of Lee Jae-myung would be denied because of the large majority of Democratic representatives. However it is estimated that 28 members of the party betrayed the party leader after he declined to give up his weighted voting power in the nomination process for the spring elections. 국회 앞 이재명 대표 지지자 희비교차..체포동의안 부결 '기대'에서 가결 '낙담-분노'



(Source MBC News live 9.21.23) Supporters of Lee Jae-myung outside the National Assembly building in Yeouido before the announcement of the vote to drop the legislator's immunity from arrest and pre-trial confinement. They were calling for the National Assembly to decline the prosecutor's proposal to let the court's proceed to determine whether Lee should be jailed.

We'll see what happens tomorrow during the regular Saturday demonstrations. Democratic supporters of Lee are angry. Will the courts test the anger and resentment of Lee's supporters by finding that the contrived politically motivated charges against Lee are supported by credible evidence to warrant his pretrial detention?

[Column] Once a model democracy, Korea’s governing system is seriously unwell
Hankyoreh Sep 21

Yoon’s “Yongsan totalitarianism” is a threat to Korean democracy


The primary figure in Yongsan totalitarianism is the president himself, of course. Under the banner of “freedom,” the president has divided the nation and placed the country’s foreign policy on a US-oriented line as part of his purely black-and-white mindset.

The president stands on the front lines of ideological disputes and historical debates, seeking to erase the legacy of the independence movement against Japan on the grounds that some freedom fighters had communist sympathies.

All media outlets, opposition parties and civic groups that criticize the government are branded as “anti-state forces,” with the public prosecutors and the Board of Audit and Inspection serving as effective weapons toward that end.

The president doesn’t respect the National Assembly and circumvents it using his legal prerogatives to veto laws and make appointments.

The ruling party that ought to be providing balance between the president and the public has been reduced to a presidential lackey, forfeiting its relevance and independence.

Yongsan totalitarianism is a threat to democracy. It’s become common for not only politicians of all stripes but even ordinary people to talk about “the worst politics in history.” But what they’re really saying is that Korean democracy is seriously unwell.


https://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/english_editorials/1109545.html

I left out the column's rather rudimentary and simplistic comparison to Jan. 6, Trump, etc., as irrelevant. The last part of the column is what is important. US domestic politics is really not germane, except to the extent that Yoon is directed if not controlled by US national security interests and Yoon's own domestic pro-Japan constituency.


The Tao models itself on Nature





Took this screenshot from a China travelogue being hosted by a South Korean Chinese studies Phd that we watched August 29. Kept it as a note to myself and lost track of the original video source. The caption from the screenshot labels the scene, On the way to a vertiginous Taoist temple built at the mountain's summit. The way of the Tao depicted on the image in traditional Chinese and Hangul-

People model themselves on the earth,
The earth models itself on heaven,
Heaven models itself on the way,
The way models itself on nature.


爲無爲

Moon Jae-in 9.19 summit declaration 5 yr commemoration

(Source-AP youtube) President Moon Jae-in of South Korea and Kim Jong-un at Baektusan in September 2018 during their summit.

Former Moon Jae-in gave a speech September 19, to civil foundations and politicians interested in resuming what is an on again, off again tradition in South Korean politics of trying to maintain a dialogue with North Korea in order to provide a peaceful political environment conducive to economic prosperity.* Moon noted that efforts to promote dialogue with the North by South Korean presidents were associated with periods of economic and trade growth, in contrast to cold war hostility. A balanced foreign policy facilitated good trade relations with neighbors. Moon said he was very disappointed in the approach taken by the current Yoon administration and noted that economic contraction, a record trade deficit, a falling won, and lower per capita income all characterized the Yoon administration. It is disappointing and regrettable that Moon's diplomatic efforts in this regard, and those of several of his predecessors have descended to an unimaginably low level. It's time for South Korea to return to a balanced foreign policy directed toward peace and economic prosperity rather than the undesirable state of affairs during the cold war.



* 팩트TV NEWS Youtube, 9.19.23; 문재인 전 대통령의 강력한 20분 연설...이런 대통령 연설 듣고 싶었다! Former president Moon Jae-in gives a strongly worded 20 minute speech...this is the presidential speech I wanted to hear!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcfJDyqK43A


Wednesday, September 13, 2023

다만 마음으로만 Only in my heart



다만 마음으로만
연인 드라마 ost Lovers Kdrama OST ep. 2

by Kai

아득히 바라본다 Staring from afar
정다운 그대 얼굴 My love's kind face
먼 바람에 실려온 Carried by a distant breeze
그리운 그리운 그 얼굴 Missing, missing, that face

그대도 나만 같아 Beloved, too, as much I?
두 손에 고개를 묻고 In two hands, I bury my head
기다리오 나 그대 I await my beloved
그 길 위로 오시기를 Bringing you over that path

댓잎만 흔들려도 If only the bamboo leaves rustle
해적이는 달빛에도 Even as a buccaneeer in the moonlight
떠오르는 그 뒷모습 That appearance emerges from behind
이제 돌아 미소하네 Now, I turn with a smile

남은 그리움을 저 청유 세월 속에 Lingering desire, my long journey within
한 방울 한 방울 모두 떨구려 하오 Little by little, I make it fade,
그대를 사랑하는 일 Loving you
다만 마음 마음으로 마음으로만 Just in my heart, by my heart, by my heart only

가만히 그대를 Gently, I will try to bury my love
가슴에 숨겨본다 away in my breast


Saturday, September 9, 2023

The North Korean nuclear threat

Former CIA analyst Ray MacGovern off base on the North Korean nuclear threat?

Ray appeared on Judge Napolitano's Judging Freedom September 6 to talk about North Korea, Russia, China, etc. He said the Russians "gave" North Korea their HS-18 missile. It's simply not true. There is a discussion of why it's not true on the 38 North web site. I've been following their reports on North Korea for years, especially on their nuclear and missile programs. It's unfortunate that because Russia has been renewing its relationship with North Korea recently, that everyone now fancies themselves an expert on North Korea and its relationships with China and Russia.

Col. Macgregor's September 6 interview with Napolitano on Russia, North Korea, China had some shortcomings as well, perhaps not as bad. There are certain misconceptions and bias factors to which people who do not study military and political affairs concerning Korean issues fall prey.


The Transfer of a Russian ICBM to North Korea? August 17, 2023, by Theodore Postol
https://beyondparallel.csis.org/the-transfer-of-a-russian-icbm-to-north-korea/

A Renewed Axis: Growing Military Cooperation Between North Korea and Russia
September 6, 2023, by Victor Cha and Ellen Kim https://beyondparallel.csis.org/a-renewed-axis-growing-military-cooperation-between-north-korea-and-russia/

Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover: North Korea’s HS-18 Is Not a Russian ICBM
https://www.38north.org/2023/08/dont-judge-a-book-by-its-cover-north-kor...

The North Korean ICBM threat is being mischaracterized in the Judge Napolitano videos uploaded to youtube, September 6. North Korea already had the means to nuke a substantial number of targets in South Korea and Japan for a few years. Maybe Guam as well. North Korea doesn't need an ICBM to nuke Japan. The judge's guests are acting like something changed just recently because of the Russian Defense Minister's visit to Pyongyang in late July. This has been the threat for some time. This is why Trump's "sometimes you gotta walk stunt" in Hanoi was so misguided. The Russians are reacting to the US-Japan-South Korea diplomatic and military moves that keep escalating military tensions in the region.

Additionally, the ICBM threat from North Korea has been in the making for some time, and it is probably not perfected yet. If it has any realistic capability to attack the US, it would be unreliable, and with only one warhead on each missile in all likelihood. I've actually not seen any reports on successful reentry tests. Of course there can't be such a thing as a small nuclear threat, that's bad enough. But our posture in South Korea is making the situation worse.

This North Korean threat to North America is the kind of limited "rogue state" nuclear strike, the Ground Based Interceptor was designed to meet. Russia is in a position to advance weapons systems in North Korea. Whether they will do it with advanced ICBM and warhead technology is another matter entirely. The reason for this, is the modified preemptive nuclear strike doctrine of North Korea. The North Koreans have threatened to strike with nuclear weapons if they are attacked conventionally by the US and its allies. This is why there is general agreement, even among some neocons, that the so called "bloody nose" attack, or preemptive conventional decapitation attacks on North Korea are a bad idea.

Why does North Korea have a preemptive nuclear strike doctrine? Because the US consistently except for a short period during the Moon administration in South Korea, has been threatening North Korea with being obliterated and so on. The North Korea conventional forces are not up to the task of deterring a US led attack on North Korea. This is why they find the large joint military exercises in the region so threatening. Nuclear weapons give them a means to deter conventional attack. They are actually less expensive than maintaining, training, equipping and supplying large conventional forces. The US imposed embargo on North Korea makes this choice more likely. The US failed to follow through on a diplomatic strategy to lower the nuclear risk in the region achieved during the Trump administration and some earlier administrations. After the far right hard liner Yoon administration took office in South Korea, the US and ROK pursued an aggressive military posture simulating large attacks on North Korea that elicited the preemptive nuclear threat policy from them. Currently, the US, ROK, and Japan or at least their current administrations, have no negotiating strategy to lower tensions and the threat of war, and demonstrate no real intention to do so. Russia is not going to buy into the NK policy of preemptive nuclear attack. They won't supply finished advanced nuclear missiles or warheads that they designed or made either. There is already a serious and substantial North Korean nuclear threat to military bases in Japan and South Korea, particularly the military bases used by US forces. There is a marginal nuclear threat to North America at present, if any, from North Korea. This will grow over time as the North Korean ICBM weapon system program developes and the support infrastructure to make it effective grow.

The ways to minimize the North Korean nuclear threats are: 1) Stop the huge military exercises, in and around Korea including ground forces and attack aircraft in the region; 2) Attempt to revive the status quo ante at Singapore achieved by Trump during the Moon administration; (do not bring strategic bombers and nuclear submarines into South Korea), and 3) resume diplomatic contact with North Korea, and negotiate from there by offering something for something, step by step, to build trust. The US obstinately refuses to do any of these things. It prefers brinkmanship, arms races, and military tensions. Also inventing new ABM defenses in the region nominally directed against North Korea provides the US with a forward posture to threaten China and Russia. The same goes for Japan.

Japan actually does quite a bit for the US-Japanese alliance in the Western Pacific. Probably more than any other country. To say that they don't is really misleading. What's worse, is that they are acquiring all kinds of offensive weaponry and intend to double their defense budget. Japan has a hard right ruling political party that wants to make Japan "great again." The US one party needs to be careful what they wish for. Colonel MacGregor indicated that Japan doesn't do enough.


The CSIS article

Read the article by Theodore Postol. The opinion article is actually posed in the conditional, with the question mark in the title, the use of the words if, potential, it appears, and if this is true. As the article and Ray note, to give North Korea highly sophisticated ICBM technology (if true), is completely inconsistent with prior Russian practice. Postol once he lays out the assumptions of his thesis, recommends policies. First, he advocates the implementation of a new airborne, anti ballistic system in the Korean theater. What a surprise coming from CSIS. Not.

Secondly, Postol recommends the UN authorizing the US and it allies to shoot down any further tests of its "Russian ICBM." How this is supposed to happen in view of who the permanent members of the UN Security Council are is beyond explanation. The normal sequence, after the expected veto or vetoes is for the US and perhaps its allies to proceed unilaterally. There could be a veto and abstentions. I had been concerned about this possibility of a warlike act after North Korean ballistic missile testing activity had resumed, and increased in frequency in violation of UN resolutions. Postol laid out the political posturing that would take place before what is essentially a US preemptive attack on the North Korean testing program. Postol compares not developing and deploying a new airborne ABM weapons system deployed to the Korean theater to reliance on an obsolete Maginot line.

I haven't changed my opinion after a close reading of Postol's article despite my high regard for his prior work. Notice that the 38 North rebuttal includes the likelihood of technology transfer during the turbulent period after the collapse of the Soviet Union. There is also the ever present possibility of North Korean hacking obtaining relevant technological secrets.

It's very unlikely the North Koreans have the full panoply of advanced Russian countermeasures and MIRV technology. There is simply no evidence for this. I note that the photograph in the Postol article ostensibly showing release of the "countermeasures cannister" is actually labeled "second stage separation" in Korean.


Another US military debacle coming in Asia?

Responding to Gordon Campbell on why China isn’t a real military threat
http://werewolf.co.nz/2023/08/gordon-campbell-on-why-china-isnt-a-real-military-threat/

Related: The First Battle of the Next War: Wargaming a Chinese Invasion of Taiwan
Report by Mark F. Cancian , Matthew Cancian , and Eric Heginbotham
https://www.csis.org/analysis/first-battle-next-war-wargaming-chinese-invasion-taiwan


China isn't a military threat because it is more interested in doing business than making war. Gordon Campbell's threat assessment in military terms is unpersuasive. If you go through the US track record in post WWII warfare, it's not all that impressive, beyond its interminable nature.

First of all, the US didn't win the Korean conflict. It actually, embarrassed itself. Initially, China inflicted stunning battlefield defeats on US armed forces in the field. After, the US was unable to dislodge China from North Korea for two years. If one thinks about how poor China was at the time, the military inability of the US armed forces to defeat them should be a lesson to military planners. Wars are fought in a military and geopolitical context.

The Vietnam War was another disastrous debacle for the US military. No need to elaborate.

"Wars" such as Grenada or Panama have little evidential weight. It's laughable that they are even brought up in a context of potential war with a great power. They were colonial operations.

The US struggled for years to suppress resistance in the second Iraq War, after conducting a devastating attack on Iraqi infrastructure and Iraq's armed forces. Iraq a second or third rate military power already debilitated by sanctions and a prior war at that. The war in Afghanistan was a another loss. Of course, one of the major lessons in these wars, was the US cannot afford to take many casualties in far away places politically because the issues in contention although labelled vital national security interests by the US MIC really weren't. Americans asked to put their lives on the line in some contrived military adventure, intuitively come to recognize that. Military conscription has been off the table since Vietnam. Demagogues in the Congress are rewarded by their corporate sponsors, among them the war contractors and weapons manufacturers, to revel in their own war mongering rhetoric. They are far away from the battlefields and the US media will cover for them. The US is reluctant to put its own armed forces on the line in Asia. This is why the US is prodding Japan, South Korea, Philippines, and Australia to step up and take the blows for it. This also reflects an implicit recognition that the US military establishment can't dominate China alone.

The notion that the US would win a war with China in the far east after losses and difficulties with much smaller and less resourceful countries is just bluster. There are several military experts on the Chinese theater who say there is no military solution to the Taiwan issue. Some of them believe the US would suffer massive losses if not outright military defeat. In such circumstances where the US might feel compelled to use nuclear weapons, the military option begins to look absurd, as it should.

People often forget the importance of near and far in warfare. Keep in mind the US and its allies couldn't even mobilize adequate military resources to support its Ukrainian proxy war against Russia. That effort, now appears to be on the verge of collapse despite years of US preparation, training and guidance.

It's just the utter stupidity of war in a successful, prosperous part of the world, like East Asia, that deters rational players from pursuing military conflict. But the US and UK unrealistically locked in their 19th Century imperial outlook of innate superiority, not just culturally, but economically and institutionally in a tragic way, don't seem capable of changing direction.


Sunday, September 3, 2023

Losing Control of Events

Is the US losing control in Japan, South Korea, and the Philippines? It looks like a retrograde movement, where pro-US, anti-China elements are digging in and arming up. Perhaps this presents the illusion of control as the situation grows more unstable.

You know if it's Saturday in Seoul, there are a lot of demonstrators out. I hoped to gather the best screen shots I could, but something changed, and I'm having inordinate difficulty with pics today. So Tim made this first demonstration picture easy.



Reported estimates ranged from 200 to 300,000 teachers demonstrating in Yeoido outside the national assembly building. Very impressive and well organized teachers making their voices heard about recent suicides of young teachers caused by family harassment of teachers trying to control their misbehaving children in school. Their demos have been the largest I've seen in some time. Unfortunately, they are basically one issue workplace issues.

These were a couple of other demonstrations. There was an opposition led demonstration against the Fukushima reactor waste water release. Started at 3pm Seoul time and lasted a few hours. Democratic Party National Assembly members were present including the party leader Lee Jae-myung. Also present were a few representatives of the Justice Party and Basic Income Party. Lee started a hunger strike 3 days ago. He didn't limit his dissent to the Fukushima issue but went down the extensive list of shortcomings and failures of the current authoritarian Yoon administration. The media coverage was not extensive.

(Source-OhMyTV youtube 9.02.23) Saturday afternoon demo protesting Fukishima reactor waste water dumping into the Pacific Ocean. I think this assembly is near City Hall in Seoul. There were several thousand people, whom the police apparently separated into two groups when they began marching past Seoul Station.

The later demonstration was the 55th Candlelight movement parade, opposed to just about everything concerning South Korea's current direction. They basically want Yoon impeached or to step down. The parade was led by demonstrators carrying pictures of Korean independence movement heros who opposed Imperial Japan's colonization of South Korea. Recently, the Defense Ministry proposed removal of the busts of some of these leaders from the front of the Military Academy building where officers are trained. This represents an ideological move to change the historical perspective to one beginning with the US post WWII occupation and Korean conflict rather than a national foundation based upon Korean resistance to Japanese domination. This is consistent with President' Yoon's submission to US and Japanese foreign policy goals. It is also consistent with his hard line anti North Korean and anti-communist approach to domestic politics. All domestic opposition is implicitly labelled as communist in nature, or communist sympathizers. The removal of independence fighter busts from the military academy grounds is viewed as an extreme move even by conservatives who are not a part of the Yoon/Lee Myung-bak clique ruling South Korea currently.

Another example of this ideological trend is the gutting of the Unification Ministry by the brand new Yoon appointee, Kim Yung-ho. Who needs exchange or dialogue with North Korea?


(Source 빨간아재 youtube 9.2.23) Candlelight movement demonstrators, Saturday, Sep. 2, carrying placards with images of famous independence fighters who resisted Japanese Imperial rule of Korea. (edit) Korean independence hero General Hong Beom-do (placard fourth from the right) was the focus of the controversy. Kim Ku, the founder of the Provisional Republic of Korea in exile (in China) during the Japanese colonial period is far right. Ahn Joong-geun, (second from the right) was the assassin of Ito Hirobumi, the former Resident General of Korea, and former Japanese Prime Minister.

(Source- MBC News 9.1.23)

From the poem General Hong Beom-do's Cry, by Lee Dong-soon.

While experiencing this humiliation and contempt,
I no longer wish to remain here.

The fatherland I yearned for so greatly,
Since when did it become the land of the Japanese?

At all times, a country currying favor with Japan,
I can't bear it any longer.