Blog LOGIN SIGN UP SITEMAP KOREAN
CFE Viewpoint
Read our Blog Here!
Videos
Contributions
Opinion Board
Opinion Leaders` Digest
Executive Essay
Popular : lartigue,eco..
:: Home > Opinions > CFE Viewpoint
CFE Viewpoint
The fact that prosperity exists where liberalism and free market principles are
firmly in place has been confirmed through an abundance of historical evidence.
242 

`Common Sense" on North Korea (Korea Times) by Casey Lartigue Jr.

• Casey Lartigue Jr. | 2012-04-02 | Hits : 1,236
As interesting as Kookmin University professor Andrei Lankov's writings are, there is nothing quite like attending one of his lectures. He can barely restrain himself behind the podium, often pointing and waving his arms. I also enjoy his unscripted speeches, but his answers in Q&A sessions are like the difference between watching Michael Jordan shoot baskets in warm-ups and an actual game.

I have finally discovered the secret behind Lankov's consistently solid analysis about North Korea: Use common sense.

At an Asan Institute conference last summer, he argued that North Korea watchers should try to understand North Korea from its perspective. Don't most people know that you must understand the mindset of others you are dealing with? Yet, common sense in theory gets ignored politically. From the North Korean perspective, nuclear weapons are the best thing they've got going. They will NOT give them up easily, even if President Obama asks nicely.

Lankov also argues strongly for increasing exchanges with North Koreans. At a roundtable discussion I hosted at the Center for Free Enterprise last Sept. 28, Prof. Lankov went into detail about the development of markets in North Korea. North Korean leaders recognize the danger of allowing North Korean citizens to become more independent by engaging in trade. A common sense approach would encourage more of that. (video of Lankov`s talk)


One of my favorite quotes is from philosopher Eric Hoffer: ``It is not actual suffering but a taste of better things which excites people to revolt." You don't hurt a hermit by locking him in his room or threatening to starve a man who has lived with starvation for years or decades. It is the taste of the good life or knowledge about alternatives that motivates people.

At the March 20 opening conference of the E.U.-Korea Human Rights and Democratic Transition Dialogue Program, Prof. Lankov insisted that a key strategy in dealing with North Korea: ``Introduce information about the outside world!!!"

But policymakers ``fight fire with fire." Stephen Linton of the Eugene Bell Foundation pointed out at a Cato Institute event in 2010 that countries tend to adopt North Korea's tactics. ``South Korea tries to approach North Korea the way North Korea approaches South Korea, by funneling everything through government ministries, by strangling in a sense or denying its private sector full participation," Linton said. The result is too much government, not enough private sector activity in dealing with North Korea.

So what would be common sense from countries like the United States and South Korea? For one, scrap non-military sanctions and encourage market activity in legal products. Lankov argues that North Korea's leaders regret allowing the Gaesong Industrial Complex because it `infected' North Korean workers. He encourages more exposure.

Two, not blocking private organizations or discouraging them from sending leaflets, radios, computers, music videos, movies, books, setting up businesses, and other activities that will increase the flow of information to North Korean citizens.

Three, South Korea and the United States opening their doors to North Koreans. America and South Korea should welcome the "huddled masses" from North Korea yearning to breathe free, regardless of international agreements on refugees and asylum seekers.

Politicians looking to the next election don't always use common sense. During World War II, author H. L. Mencken called for the resettlement of Jews who were being terrorized by the Nazis. It was a sensible policy that would have saved many people, but the Franklin Delano Roosevelt administration dragged its feet (Mencken blasted FDR for that).

Today, the world is faced with another humanitarian crisis, despite promises of "never again." It will be a tragedy if politicians continue engaging in chess matches with North Korea rather than remaining focused on common sense policies.

The writer is director for international relations at the Center for Free Enterprise. He blogs at www.cfekorea.com.

This article originally appeared in the Korea Times on April 2, 2012.

Linked by NK News, Rational Review News Digest,

  List
• Replies (0 )
Password : [OK]
Full name : Password :
OK ( 0 / 1,000 characters )
Total : 241 ( 1 / 17pages)
No. Title Writer Date Hits
241 `Common Sense" on North Korea (Korea Times) by Casey La.. Casey Lartigue Jr. 2012-04-02 1,237
240 Helping North Koreans `strike the blow` (Korea Times) Casey Lartigue Jr. 2012-03-22 1,360
239 Reckless lawmakers [1]kim In-Young 2012-03-19 825
238 Unionized teachers Kim Jung-rae 2012-03-16 796
237 Buffett Tax and Grand National Party [3]Kim Young-yong 2012-03-16 778
236 What is ISD? Song Won-keun 2012-03-16 948
235 Mything the Point on Sweden (Korea Times) Casey Lartigue Jr. 2012-03-14 966
234 Freedmen from North Korea (Korea Times) Casey Lartigue Jr. 2012-03-04 1,235
233 Nurturing SMEs & Fostering a Welfare State: How Much Can.. Aaron McKenzie 2012-02-15 862
232 Love vs. economics on Valentine's Day (Korea Times) [2]Casey Lartigue Jr. 2012-02-13 1,282
231 Steve Jobs on benefits of competition in education (Korea He.. [4]Casey Lartigue Jr. 2012-01-30 1,148
230 `Intellectual Shock` in Seoul (Korea Times) [2]Casey Lartigue Jr. 2012-01-20 852
229 No reason to delay the ratification of the Korea-U.S. FTA Cho Dong-keun 2012-01-10 569
228 Liberal democracy versus democracy: Can we live in a democra..   Min Kyung-kuk 2012-01-03 720
227 Is Hanjin Heavy a state-run company?   Park Dong Un 2012-01-03 670
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next
list
Mail to Webmaster