Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty

Home > Other > Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty > Page 128
Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty Page 128

by Bradley K. Martin


  38. “Diplomatic Source ‘Confirms’ Kim Chong-il’s Son Vacationed Often in Moscow,” trans. FBIS, Sankei Shimbun, September 15, 2002, FBIS document i.d. 0h2qz7900k8j47.

  39. “NK Leader’s Ex-Wife Died in May” Yonhap dispatch in Korea Times, Internet edition, November 7, 2002, http://www.hankooki.com/kt_nation/200211/

  40. A German diplomat who asked to remain anonymous told me that a photo showed Kim Jong-il in East Germany in 1984 when his father was visiting there and a sudden crisis came up—a flood in North Korea—that evidently required the younger Kim to travel and get his father’s advice or orders. The diplomat said there was no official record of Kim Jong-il’s presence in East Germany ever, so presumably he went under an assumed name.

  41. Article in Women’s Joongang 21 summarized in Joongang Ilbo, Internet version, November 23, 2000. FBIS article i.d. KPP20001124000008, http://wnc. fedworld.gov.

  42. Yomiuri, May 4, 2001; Japan Times, May 5, 2001.

  43. “Kim’s ‘Son’ Tried Japan’s Soaplands,” japantoday.com, July 15, 2002, a summary translation by Mark Schreiber of an article in Shukan Shincho for July 18, 2002.

  44. I am grateful to Hideko Takayama for pointing out and translating these articles.

  45. Yonhap, “Identity of DPRK Leader’s Son Arrested in Japan,” trans. FBIS, May 3, 2001, FBIS document i.d. 0gcyw5101oxg04.

  46. Article in Women’s Joongang 21 summarized in Joongang Ilbo, Internet version, November 23, 2000. Translation by U.S. Foreign Broadcast Information Service, article i.d. KPP20001124000008, http://wnc.fedworld.gov.

  47. Song Mi-ran, “Partisan’s Son,” Nodong Shinmun, October 6, 2002, trans. FBIS as “DPRK Hails Leader as Partisan’s Son, Mentions Son-to-Grandson Succession,” FBIS document i.d. 0h59iwg02ykiwf

  48. “DPRK Leader’s Eldest Son Said to Remain in Russia,” Chosun Ilbo Internet edition, September 22, 2002, FBIS document i.d. 0h32b5801gsbn8; Pak Min-son, “Kim Jong-chol Rises as Heir in the North,” trans. FBIS, Yonhap (quoting Aera), April 17, 2002, FBIS document i.d. 0guzlkc02mpq4n; “Kim Jong-nam Is Scrambling for Power with His Brother,” trans. FBIS, Ming Pao, May 4, 2001, FBIS translation, document i.d. 0gd0p3a01sdpha; “Kim Jong-il’s Son Kim Hyon in Charge of WPK Propaganda Department,” Jiji Press, August 31, 2002, FBIS document i.d. 0hlv9za018bge9; ‘Highest Ranking’ DPRK Official Said Defected to ROK,” trans. FBIS, Kyonghyang Shinmun, June 7, 1996, FBIS document i.d. 0dssz2200270jy.

  49. Lee Han-yong, Heijou 15-gou; “Song-Yi Telephone Conversation Disclosed,” trans. FBIS, JoongAng Ilbo article, February 17, 1996, FBIS document i.d. 0dn7jom016u5eq.

  50. Based on the timing, it appears one of those two might have been become the mother of Kim Hyon.

  51. “DPRK Leader’s Eldest Son Said To Remain in Russia,” Chosun Ilbo Internet version in English, September 22, 2002, WNC article I.D.: KPP20020924000074.

  52. Under the pseudonym Kenji Fujimoto, he subsequently published a book, Kim Jong-il’s Chef, in Japanese and Korean, in which he repeated that Kim Jong-il favored Kim Jong-un (sometimes rendered as Jong-woon or Jong-oon) as his heir.

  53. See Kim Yeon-kwang, “Second Son Being Groomed as Heir Apparent,” Chosun Ilbo (Internet English Edition) (Seoul), February 18, 2003, http://english.chosun. com/w21data/html/news/200302/200302180027.html; Sankei Shimbun (Tokyo), February 19, 2003; George Wehrfritz and Hideko Takayama with B.J. Lee, “Heirs to the Kingdom,” Newsweek International, March 10, 2003; Wehrfritz, Takayama, Lee, “North Korea: .Mother Knows Best,” Newsweek (U.S. edition), March 10, 2003.

  54. Yi Kyo-kwan, “Kim Chong-il’s Daughter ‘Sol-song’ Receives Training in Economy,” Chosun Ilbo (Internet version) in Korean, October 18, 2001, FBIS document i.d. 0glgev9025f8zh.

  INDEX

  Acheson, Dean, 65–68, 82

  An Act of Sincerity, 241, 251

  agriculture. See farming

  Ahn Choong-hak (logger; defector), 112, 232–234, 382, 420–422

  Ahn Hyuk (prison camp inmate; defector), 318–319, 596–600, 601–602

  Ahn Myung-jin (spy; defector), 316, 535–542

  aid

  from communist countries, 96–97, 390, 396

  international food, 514, 575, 635 (see also United Nations: World Food Program)

  delivery suspended, where monitors denied access, 555–571, 577–578

  diverted from intended recipients, 566, 623–624

  sold in foreign currency shops, 619

  to Third World countries, 137, 364, 577

  Albright, Madeleine, 658–659, 684

  ancestral rites, 300

  Andropov, Yuri, 437

  architecture, 170, 295, 322

  Arirang Festival, 653

  art, 8, 170, 172, 349, 365

  ceramic, 173

  Asian Development Bank, 473, 654–655

  automation, 158, 271–272

  automobiles

  driving style, 367

  manufacturing, 337, 346, 639, 666

  official, 102

  private, 102, 298, 346

  axe killings, at Panmunjom, 138, 278–279, 437

  Bae In-soo (truck driver; defector), 514, 588–590

  Baek Nam-woon (scholar), 243, 366

  Bai Song-chul (also spelled Bae; Society for

  Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries), 3, 6, 183, 287. see also Kim Jong-su

  banking, 164, 480

  bicycles, 662

  Blue House commando raid, 127–128, 129, 131

  bodyguard service, 426, 429, 431

  division of, to create separate service for Kim Jong-il, 506

  expansion, 20–fold, after Ceaucescus die, 547

  shootout with special forces, 547

  Bonesteel, Charles, 50

  Brezhnev, Leonid, 112

  Bucher, Cdr. Lloyd M. See Pueblo incident

  Buddhism, 20, 351

  Bush, George H. W., 446

  Bush, George W., 654, 656

  “faith-based initiatives,” 678

  loathing of Kim Jong-il, 659

  Nixon-in-China scenario, 671

  bustle, compared with China’s, 185, 662

  Carter, Jimmy, 138–153 passim, 496–497, 506, 510

  Castro, Fidel, 125

  Ceaucescu, Nicolae and Elena, 492, 503, 517, 547

  Chang In-sook (banished architect-engineer; defector), 565–566, 625–628

  Chang Myon (South Korean prime minister), 104

  Chang Song-taek (Kim Jong-il brother-inlaw, confidante), 190, 574, 587, 660, 690

  chemical and biological weapons, 445

  delivery systems, 488

  experiments and accidents with, 488

  sufficient to kill all in South, 487

  Chiang Kai-shek, 85, 86

  Children’s Corps, 2, 168, 169, 230, 403–404

  China

  aid from, 8

  advice from, 8, 336, 338–339

  as coup instigator, in Pentagon hopes, 672–674

  Cultural Revolution, 22, 121

  North Korea’s version compared, 235, 237, 260, 275, 293

  documents, archived, findings from, 66, 79

  economic comparisons, 185, 345–346, 361, 386–387

  interest in continued Korean division, 683

  Kim Jong-il visits to, 323–326, 336, 652, 696

  Korean War intervention by, 81

  “loss” of, by U.S., 74

  merchants, traders, role in informing

  North Koreans of outside conditions, 264, 310, 501, 588

  oil supply from, as leverage in second

  nuclear crisis, 660

  Red Guards, 22, 125, 196, 197

  refugees crossing border into, 628–629, 630

  women sold as wives and concubines, 678

  forced abortions upon return, 679

  Kim Jong-nam assigned to deal with, 696

  as suggested reform model, 342, 397, 465, 474, 481, 658, 667

  ties to South Korea, 465

  Chinese Communist Party, 34

  envy o
f, by North Korean leaders, 62, 63

  Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army of, 40, 48, 109

  Chinese People’s Volunteers, 82

  role minimized, in propaganda, 92

  withdrawal of, 114

  Chistiakov, Gen. Ivan M., 52

  Choe Dong-chul (banished prison guard; defector), 563–564, 608–611, 615

  Choe Gwang (military chief; partisan), 71, 506

  Choe Hyon (vice president; partisan), 222

  Choe Jong-keun (external economic committee chair), 504

  Choe Yong-gon (no. 2 under Kim Il-sung; partisan), 190, 198

  Choe Yong-hae (Socialist Working Youth chair), 222, 574, 579–580

  Choi Eun-hi (South Korean movie actress kidnapped by Kim Jong-il), 326–339

  Choi Jin-sok (guerrilla in Kim Il-sung’s band), 34, 39–40, 41, 42, 44

  Choi Kwang-hyeok (KPA sergeant; defector), 515–516, 518

  Choi Myung-nam (Special Forces; defector), 514–515, 518, 572

  Chollima movement, 102, 122

  Cho Man-sik (nonviolent reformist), 52, 54, 55

  Chondoism, 349

  Chong Ki-hae (repatriate from Japan; defector), 101–104, 263–265

  Chongryon (General Association of Korean Residents in Japan), 101, 297–298, 323, 326, 461–462

  Kim Jong-il’s 1998 talk with representatives of, 573–577, 642–645

  Christianity

  churches, 173, 349–351

  cultural influences of, 172

  evangelicals’ interest in U.S. government decisions on North Korea, 678

  and Korean anti-Japanese movement, 15

  as model for personality cult, 12, 330

  regime’s explicit pre-Christmas comparison, 289

  South Korean, 257

  as target for Korean War occupation purge in South, 89

  Chun Doo-hwan (South Korean president), 151, 343, 673

  Chung Ju-yung (Hyundai founder), 477–478, 480, 648

  class structure, 57, 59, 463, 665–666, 700. See also family background, status and

  Clinton, Bill, 460, 642

  clothing, 160, 265–266, 345

  footwear, 229, 345, 431

  jeans, 311

  manufacture, for export, 477, 480

  one outfit per person per season, 306

  shabby, 469, 500

  rationing suspended, due to shortage, 308

  “silk,” promised by Kim Il-sung, 97

  $67 jogging suits, 469

  co-existence, peaceful, 97, 107, 123, 647

  comebacks, by out-of-favor officials, 279

  communism

  collapse in Soviet and Eastern Europe, 99, 342, 368, 390, 465, 468, 472, 554, 573

  “new human beings” in, 173

  true (stage beyond mere socialism), 102, 112, 162

  communist countries’ economic integration

  resistance by Kim Il-sung to, 112, 157

  socialist barter system, destruction of, 468, 476

  computers, 347, 610, 642

  concentration camps. See punishment: political prisons and prison camps

  concubinage, 188. See also Mansions Special Volunteer Corps

  Confucianism, 8, 60, 159, 167–168, 206, 238, 240, 357, 684, 697, 698, 699. see also Kim Il-sung: filial piety and

  Connally, Sen. Tom, 67

  constitution

  1972, 155, 260

  1998, 641–642

  construction, 292–295, 353, 362–363, 476, 480, 626

  consumer goods, stores, 121, 179–180, 308, 345–347, 360, 449, 469, 583–584

  containment, U.S. policy of, 65, 86

  corruption, 458, 573–575

  bribery, 300, 308, 311, 360, 412, 416–417, 419–420, 421, 430, 494, 531, 545, 574, 583–587 passim, 590, 602–611 passim

  embezzlement of grain, at collective farms, for market resale, 500, 517

  kickbacks, 583

  lack of, in early years, 97

  selling idled factory equipment as scrap

  metal, 573

  technology imports push and, 181–182

  theft, at work, 389

  counties, administration of, 224, 559

  coup d’état

  attempts, plots, 543–550

  Pentagon hardliners’ scenario, 672–674

  prospects, precautions, 483, 486, 489, 492–494, 517, 521, 541, 553

  criticism sessions, 174, 180, 218, 273, 283, 292, 302, 530–531

  Cuban Missile Crisis, 125

  culture

  policy on, 170–173

  North Korean cultural revolution, 237–261, 272–275, 293

  foreign, infiltration of, 336, 457, 521

  See also national character

  currency, foreign, 275, 295, 360, 389, 447, 458–459, 466, 468, 579–591 passim

  accumulated by elite, to fund exile, 494

  counterfeit “Super-K” $100 bills, 499

  exchange rate reform, 653, 663

  motive for missile exports, 636

  regulations, 471

  See also Workers’ Party: Room 39

  currency, North Korean won

  devaluation, 653, 663

  nearly valueless (1990s), 583

  People’s Life Bonds, denominated in, 661

  Daewoo Group, 480–481, 485

  Dean, Gen. William F., 77

  death, on behalf of leader, as 1990s propaganda focus, 510–511

  debts, credit rating,borrowing, 155, 164, 180–183, 276, 339, 347, 442, 475, 476, 634

  defection

  assassination following, 460

  causes, 267–268, 538

  difficulties, regrets and fears after, 459–460, 523, 619

  gold watches typically purchased

  following, 522

  individual cases, 296–297, 379–380, 395–396, 397, 400–401, 406–407, 413, 417–418, 420, 421–422, 424, 430–431, 459–460, 488, 527–528, 531–533, 535, 542, 543–547, 570, 581–582, 584–585, 587, 588, 590

  by Kim Jong-il’s unofficial wife’s family, 691, 693–694

  punishment of family members following, 268, 269, 380, 459

  rebellion as unrealistic alternative to, 525

  religious ties following, 269, 304, 311

  rescue of left-behind family members, 460, 619

  pressure on South Korea to discourage, 630

  testimony following, use and value of, 402, 459, 496, 555, 567, 629, 708–711

  corroboration by refugees in China, 629

  See also exile

  Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), 9, 87, 559

  loudspeaker broadcasts at, 410, 522, 651

  Democratic People’s Republic of Korea

  (DPRK)

  formation of, 62

  compactness, as aid to regime’s control, 185

  communication among bureaucratic units, lack of lateral, 467

  Deng Xiaoping, 8, 22

  diaspora, Korean, 16–17, 100

  as business network, 481

  homecoming, in 1950s and 1960s, 100–104, 229–230

  dissent, dissidence, 6, 91, 141, 170, 463, 600–603

  domestic faction, 55, 301

  domino theory, 74

  Dong Young-jun (student in Poland; defector), 226–229, 376–378

  drugs, smuggling of, 155

  Dulles, John Foster, 67, 74, 86, 99

  economic planning, 121–122

  calculation, computation and statistics, attitudes toward, 183, 217–218, 225, 272, 473, 654, 661

  cost accounting, 160, 180, 642

  five-year plan (1956), 103

  heavy industry vs. improved living standards, 111, 213, 504

  limits of command economy, 121

  lulling effect of successes, 185

  quota fulfillment falsified, 122, 503

  seven-year plan (1961), 103, 122

  subsequent plans, 180

  economic reform, 481, 641–642, 660–664

  constitution (1998) as promoting, 641–642

  continues despite second nuc
lear crisis, 657, 660, 662

  downsizing bureaucracy, 667

  Hungarian model for, 667–668, 669–670

  ideological justification, 660–661, 665–666

  individual responsibility and, 663

  informal coping mechanisms and, 662–663

  Kim Jong-il’s Jan. 4, 2001, article starting implementation of, 652

  March 2002 measures on prices, wages, taxes, exchange rates, 652–653

  negative effects, 663

  politics separated from economics, 666

  prospects for success, 662–663, 670

  need for external aid, 661, 663, 670

  need for peace dividend, 667

  timing analyzed, 668–669

  economic zones, special, free trade, 465, 472, 473, 474, 480, 640–641, 662

  economy, North-South comparisons

  1950s, 100–105

  1960s, 121, 124

  1970s, 154, 155, 165

  1980s, 342

  1990s, 430–431, 474, 479

  2000, 647–648

  popular knowledge of growing gap, 501

  inspiring dreams of redistribution by war, 540–541

  education, 165–170

  adult, as required daily activity, 179

  after-school, 166

  compulsory, 58, 165

  family background, discrimination based on, 230

  free provision of, as selling point, 101

  nurseries, 117, 166

  overseas study, 291–292, 295, 378–380, 400, 433, 453

  of business administration, 702

  and elite families’ preparations for exile, 494

  favored by Kim Jong-il, 644

  parental role, 165–168

  school building program, 58

  schools in political prison camps, 299

  science, 473

  teachers, 405

  universities, 377–378, 432–433

  vocational schools, 306

  See also Kim Il-sung University; Mangyongdae Revolutionary School; Namsan School

  egalitarianism, 100, 347, 366, 367, 501, 519

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 86

  elections, 114, 116, 270, 551, 694

  enemies’ role in preserving regime power, 107, 111, 513

  energy, 177

  coal, 393, 503

  competition for, between military and

  civilian sectors, 505

  firewood, corn husks, 393, 405

  nuclear (for peaceful use), 435–436, 437–438, 497, 565, 635

  petroleum, 391, 442, 468, 483, 645

  See also Korean People’s Army (KPA): fuel supply

  entrepreneurs, moneyed class

  ideological recognition, 661, 665–666, 700

 

‹ Prev