Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Like grandfather, like father and like son ( Kim dynasty in the 21st century continue)


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 693
Date:
Like grandfather, like father and like son ( Kim dynasty in the 21st century continue)
Permalink   


 Born to be leader regardless of knowledge , skill , intelligent , well educated  and political experience but spoil with luxury and power and become the leader without being elected by his people .In the same time millions of his people are starving to death.Modern way of  monarchy in the 21st century.

North Korea may continue provocations in 2011

  

 

Kim So-hyun
The Korea Herald
Publication Date : 01-01-2011


김정은
金正恩
250px-KimJongUnLarge.jpg
Kim-Jong-un-006.jpg

 

 

North Korea’s daring military provocations against the South in 2010 have left many wondering what the reclusive state sought to gain from them and whether there will be further attacks.

Ostensibly, the artillery shootings on Yeonpyeong Island on November 23 and the torpedoing of the naval ship Cheonan on March 26 stem from the North’s reluctance to accept the Northern Limit Line, the maritime border drawn by the United Nations Command at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

But many experts here say that the shaky succession process from North Korean leader Kim Jong-il to his youngest son is most accountable for the country’s military adventurism.

Three months have passed since Pyongyang made Kim Jong-un, believed to be in his late 20s, a four-star general and vice chairman of the central military committee of the North Korean Workers’ Party.
 
“Kim Jong-un will be given additional key posts in the party and the military in 2011 to speed up the substantial power transfer,” said Cheong Seong-chang, senior fellow of the inter-Korean relations studies programme at Sejong Institute.

The young successor is also expected to visit China next year.

Chinese President Hu Jintao invited “North Korea’s new leadership” to Beijing in a message delivered by Zhou Yongkang, a senior official of the Communist Party of China, during his meeting with Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang last October.

But this doesn’t mean Jong-un’s takeover will be without bumps.

Whereas Kim Jong-il took three decades to garner the party’s support and build on his political clout before succeeding his father Kim Il-sung in 1994, Jong-un was rushed into the position of heir apparent due to his father’s failing health.

The general North Korean people reportedly have little confidence in the junior Kim because of his young age and lack of experience.

Many North Koreans believe that Kim Jong-un masterminded the November 23 artillery attack, despite Pyongyang’s propaganda that the South provoked it, and blame him for the rising price of rice and foreign exchange rates, US-based Radio Free Asia said last month, citing sources in the North.

Mid-level government officials and intellectuals see Kim Jong-un as a child and have no faith in his future, the sources said.

North Korea watchers here believe that Pyongyang is escalating military tensions in an attempt to seek national unity and stabilise the third-generation power shift amid public unrest over deepening economic woes.

“Discontent and criticism of the undemocratic and regressive manner of the North’s third-generation succession are prevalent not only among the North Korean power elite but also the general public,” Korea University professor Yu Ho-yeol of North Korean studies said in a recent seminar.

“Pyongyang chose extreme military provocation against the South in a bid to solidify the father-to-son succession framework and seek internal unity.”

Lim Jae-chun, another professor at Korea University, noted that the current circumstances are much more disadvantageous for the power transfer to Kim Jong-un compared to when Kim Jong-il was taking steps to take over his father.

The North has lost much of its income from arms sales and other illegal trade under tightened international sanctions and the country’s currency reform in late 2009, believed to be the work of Jong-un, resulted in inflation and more poverty.

“North Korea’s latest belligerence has to do with Kim Jong-il’s anxiety to turn the tables before he dies to lessen the burden on his son,” Lim said.

“It is likely to show greater hostility with increased frequency as it demands economic assistance and a peace treaty with the US.”

Seoul’s state-funded think tanks project that the North will continue with local provocations, including a possible invasion of the five islands near the western sea border in addition to a third nuclear test in the coming year.

The Institute for National Security Strategy (INSS), an offshoot of the National Intelligence Service, said in an annual report last weekend that the North may strike anywhere, by surprise, from submarines to frontline outposts.

The Institute of Foreign Affairs and National Security (IFANS) said the North could conduct its third atomic test as it wants “to seek improvement in its nuclear weapons production capability” and “keep military tension high” while promoting the status of Kim Jong-un as its next leader.

Both the IFANS and the INSS said that while ramping up attacks on the South, the North will try to resume the stalled six-nation talks in pursuit of outside aid.

Cha Doo-hyun, chief of North Korean military research at the Korea Institute for Defence Analyses, said Pyongyang could try a “new type of provocation” around March.

“There is a possibility of the North provoking again around March in a way that makes it hard for us to take self-defensive measures, stirring controversy over our right to preventive self-defence,” Cha said in another recent seminar.

He said the North is likely to attack from an area that is difficult to locate or strike back.

 



-- Edited by Dark Angel on Sunday 23rd of January 2011 10:37:45 AM

__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 57
Date:
Permalink   

north-korean-leader-kim-jong-il_1.jpg

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

Bans Communism.

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

North Korea is better off without Communsim.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 693
Date:
Permalink   

Lao Isan wrote:

North Korea is better off without Communism.



         North Korea has been called  a communist country but  the truth is north Korea is not communist country . It seems to me that north Korea is Kim's monarchy and military dictatorship country  which rules by the barrel of the guns and no different from Burma .

 



__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

Dark Angle I agree with you. Commies oppress and keep people poor.

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

At least Laos is not like north Korea. Lao government open up the country and welcome Capitalist.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 693
Date:
Permalink   

Who cares that the system will be called and  it is not important. It could be called capitalism , communism,and socialism ,monarchy or ...what ever ... So it doesn't matter as long as the people have good  jobs  , good living , good education ,good  health care , good and fair justice system and no one above the law and no one under the law,  one and for all. We are all human that makes us  different from the animal. So every person have the human being right in every where on earth.

-- Edited by Dark Angel on Thursday 27th of January 2011 10:45:58 PM

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

Good point Dark Angle. Singapore is one party system. So is China and they're doing well.

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

But I don't like communist. No freedom.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 693
Date:
Permalink   

Lao Isan wrote:

But I don't like communist. No freedom.



          There are more freedom in China and Laos than a lot of countries  in the middle East and a lot of countries in Africa which are calling themselves the free countries.

 



__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

I'm sure about that. Depend on what freedom we're talking about. In China no freedom of press, speech or freedom of expression.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 500
Date:
Permalink   

Kim Jong-Il, like Egyptian Hosni Mubarak who has ruled for 3 decades, is just inebriated with power. The nation's leaders, once they have prioritized themselves over the betterment of their people, fail to be an effective leader. Heavens help the North Koreans and the Egyptians, as well.






__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 693
Date:
Permalink   

eye_sky wrote:

Kim Jong-Il, like Egyptian Hosni Mubarak who has ruled for 3 decades, is just inebriated with power. The nation's leaders, once they have prioritized themselves over the betterment of their people, fail to be an effective leader. Heavens help the North Koreans and the Egyptians, as well.







         Well, could not compare North Korea to Egypt big different  at least Egypt the people have the right to get out of the country  and no soldiers shoot at them when they cross the border   and also no body is starved to death yet . Also they still have the election and the right to vote and the right to protest unlike north Korea million of people are starved to death every year . Also still monarchy system, grandfather ruled yesterday and today the father rules and soon the son will rule regardless of intelligent, well educated , skill ...etc... The people are living in fear  . There are  a lot of Kim status and photos and The government make the people  to worship  him as the living God event they hate him. That is sad in the 21st century the human being are still forced and propaganda to worship the other human being to be  as a living god.



-- Edited by Dark Angel on Sunday 30th of January 2011 09:48:29 AM

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 226
Date:
Permalink   

eye_sky wrote:

Kim Jong-Il, like Egyptian Hosni Mubarak who has ruled for 3 decades, is just inebriated with power. The nation's leaders, once they have prioritized themselves over the betterment of their people, fail to be an effective leader. Heavens help the North Koreans and the Egyptians, as well.

 



Egypt is dictatorship, but supported by U.S. Now it's North Korea people turn for regime change.

 



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 693
Date:
Permalink   

 Kim Jong IL (dictator ) force the people to worship him as the living God



-- Edited by Dark Angel on Monday 7th of March 2011 09:32:12 AM

__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard