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12/19/2020 News & Commentary – Korea

Sat, 12/19/2020 - 1:15pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. North Korea's Economy Hit Harder Than It Has Been in Decades

2. South Korea's Zombie Companies Are Scarier Than the Movies

3.  Japan-South Korea: The Limits of Outreach Without Trust

4. Does North Korea Have a Social-Distancing Problem?

5. South Korea's hiking culture reflects its social pressures

6. Report: North Korea's top diplomat 'out' at Pyongyang's politburo

7. Biegun conveyed Washington's concern over Seoul's anti-leaflet law

8. Daily virus cases above 1,000 for 4th day, concerns rise over hospital capacity

9. USFK ups antivirus scheme for all areas in S. Korea amid resurgent pandemic

10. Mystery Structure Appears in Kim Il Sung Square

11. New Evidence Suggests Kangson Is Not A Uranium Enrichment Plant

12. Ex-presidential candidate to announce bid for Seoul mayoral by-election

13. 'Corresponding measures desirable to complete NK denuclearization'

14. Anti-leafleting law runs risk of branding South Korea as human rights violator

 

1. North Korea's Economy Hit Harder Than It Has Been in Decades

WSJ · by Andrew Jeong · December 19, 2020

What has "saved" north Korea in the past has been the Sunshine Policy (Kim Dae Jung) and the Peace and Prosperity Policy (Roh Moo Hyun) 1997-2007 which allowed large amounts of financial aid to be transferred from South to north (to include some $5000 million just to hold the north-South Summit in 2000 resulting in. Nobel Peace Prize for Kim Dae Jung.  The second thing that has helped to "save" north Korea was the failure of the Public Distribution System (PDS) and the rise of market activity that has led to the Dongju class (the "moneyed" class) and now some 400 plus markets throughout the north and flourishing black market and smuggling activities as well as a foreign currency trade. (as well as an unprecedented inflow of information and growth of intra-north Korean communications with the 6.5 million smartphones which is a key capability for market activity).

However, the conditions today are much different and the deliberate policy decisions are working hard to undo and destroy the societal resilience that has grown since the Arduous March of the great famine of 1994-1996.

The Kim family regime's response to COVID has been to implement draconian population and resources control measures.  These measures have shut down all legal trade with China as well as close the border to smuggling activities.  The regime is trying to force an end to the use of foreign currency and is attempting to regain control not only control over currency but of market activity.  And of course the regime is cracking down on information flow.  Combined with the natural disasters of this summer. The reduced harvest due to the disasters resulting in severe food shortages.  The regime's deliberate policy decisions and priorities were demonstrated in the October 10th military parade which the invest the regime has made in advanced weaponry to include a possible new ICBM and SLBM and a wide array of conventional military equipment.  The regime allocated scarce resources to military procurement rather than the welfare of the people.

The regime has taken away the "safety valves" for the population and if there is a COVID outbreak the suffering will be on a scale greater than the Arduous March.  And as I have emphasized repeatedly if there is a widespread outbreak within the military it could lead to catastrophic instability and potential regime collapse.  The bottom line is the conditions today are potentially far worse than what we saw in 1994-1996 when we really were worried about regime collapse.  I am Not predicting if or when the regime will collapse.  My admonition is we must be observed for the indicators of potential collapse (Robert Collins' 7 Phases of Collapse and his indications and warnings that have long served the command in Korea as the foundation for observing the conditions). But I will make this prediction: If there is regime collapse it WILL be catastrophic and it would behoove us to be prepared for the possibility even while we must maintain the capability to "fight tonight" because the conditions that lead to regime collapse could lead to the rational decision by Kim Jong-un to execute his campaign plan to unify the peninsula by force as his only path to regime survival.

 

2. South Korea's Zombie Companies Are Scarier Than the Movies

WSJ · by Mike Bird· December 17, 2020

I worry about another IMF crisis as happened in 1997 in Korea (and SE Asia as well).  The crisis then was double edged. It led to a lot of failed business and economic distress and suffering by the people.  But it also demonstrated South Korea resilience and how a Korean national spirit led to a rapid recovery (South Korea was the first country to pay back 100% of its IMF loans).  I recall South Korean citizens selling valuables to raise money to contribute to paying off the debt.  It showed the spirit of the Han. (Han River not Han Chinese).

But is South Korea in for a harder time than the IMF crisis?

 

3. Japan-South Korea: The Limits of Outreach Without Trust

thediplomat.com · by Kimura Kan · December 18, 2020

Yes, trust is required. Along with leadership on both sides.  Both Moon and Suga must agree to prioritize national security and national prosperity while they work to solve the historical issues.

Conclusion: If the Moon administration does want to improve relations with Japan, what should it do? First, it should demonstrate that it places more importance on Japan-Korea relations than on other issues and that it is working sincerely on settling the wartime labor issue, which has become the greatest obstacle to positive ties. To do this, instead of dispatching the head of the intelligence agency or members of parliament to conduct behind-the-scenes negotiations, senior officials from the South Korean government, including government leaders such as the president himself, should publicly share this position. The issue of historical awareness, a major stumbling block in relations between Japan and Korea, is one that concerns the Korean public, which is why past administrations have repeatedly chosen to nullify agreements that they had made, fearing public opinion. Can Moon ever take the risk of expressing to the Korean people the importance of relations with Japan and the need to settle the wartime labor issue? What is needed is not proposals but the exercising of leadership.

 

4. Does North Korea Have a Social-Distancing Problem?

The National Interest · by Stephen Silver · December 19, 2020

north Korea is after all a gulag state and we know that prisons are breeding grounds for COVID transmissions due to the inability to implement proper mitigation measures. (okay that was a snarky comment about the gulag state).

The buried lede may be this statement form the CDC: The Centers for Disease Control says, in its most recent guidance, that North Korea has a "level 4," meaning "Very High Level of COVID-19 in North Korea." Travelers are cautioned to "avoid all travel to North Korea," and that "travel may increase your chance of getting and spreading COVID-19."

 

5. South Korea's hiking culture reflects its social pressures

The Economist· December 19, 2020

It is often hard to social distance on some mountain trails that are packed with hikers (yes, somewhat of an exaggeration but I was always amazed at the numbers of hikers on trails - and of all ages!)

 

6. Report: North Korea's top diplomat 'out' at Pyongyang's politburo

upi.com · by Elizabeth Shim

He certainly fits the bill as representative of the evil nature of the Kim family regime:

“Ri made headlines in the South when he made incendiary remarks to a visiting South Korean delegation in 2018. Ri asked the South's business executives, including Samsung Electronics chairman Lee Jae-yong, whether the food served at a restaurant in Pyongyang was "making it down" their throats, using disrespectful language to refer to their anatomy.”

According to the Chosun, South Korean officials said they have determined Ri has been "eliminated" from the party committee, but the development still is being analyzed.

 

7. Biegun conveyed Washington's concern over Seoul's anti-leaflet law

donga.com· December 19, 2020

Yes, we are concerned.  This is not an internal South Korea issue.  It is a human rights issue and it is an issue affecting maximum pressure on the Kim family regime.  It is an issue that will cause the regime to double down on blackmail diplomacy due to its perceived successful extortion act by Kim Yo-jong.

 

8. Daily virus cases above 1,000 for 4th day, concerns rise over hospital capacity

en.yna.co.kr · by 오석민 · December 19, 2020

Hospital capacity is a concern everywhere.

 

9. USFK ups antivirus scheme for all areas in S. Korea amid resurgent pandemic

en.yna.co.kr · by 오석민 · December 19, 2020

Thank you Yonhap.  I assume this is in the Korean language press as well.  It is important to inform the Korean people in the South about how USFK is responding to COVID, in solidarity with the ROK.

 

10. Mystery Structure Appears in Kim Il Sung Square

38north.org · by Martyn Williams · December 18, 2020

Parade prep for the 8th Party Congress that is expected next month?  I leave it to the "squints" to assess and analyze.

 

11. New Evidence Suggests Kangson Is Not A Uranium Enrichment Plant

38north.org · by Olli Heinonen · December 18, 2020

Interesting.  Olli knows his stuff. He spent a lot of time in north Korea.

 

12. Ex-presidential candidate to announce bid for Seoul mayoral by-election

en.yna.co.kr · by 주경돈 · December 19, 2020

 

13.  'Corresponding measures desirable to complete NK denuclearization'

The Korea Times · December 19, 2020

This is an unfair and mischaracterized misrepresentation of the US position:  "The United States has demanded that North Korea dismantle its nuclear weapons program before expecting economic - or other - rewards, with Pyongyang rejecting what it called immediate and unilateral demands"

The US demands substantive working level talks and substantive action toward denuclearization before concessions are offered. The US is not going to give concessions simply for words from the regime.  We have been Charlie Brown kicking and missing the football for decades.  We do not want to get played again (cue The Who).  north Korea must demonstrate a true commitment to denuclearization which requires substantive action.   And we should never forget the words of President Moon Jae-in who sad in October of 2018 that sanctions should not be lifted until the north Korean nuclear program is dismantled past the point of no return.

The problem with the corresponding measures proposal is that the north never provides the corresponding measures.  We give concessions and the regime walks away or doubles down on blackmail diplomacy.

 

14. Anti-leafleting law runs risk of branding South Korea as human rights violator

koreaherald.com · by The Korea Herald · December 16, 2020

Yes it does.

And worse.  It runs the risk of being called an appeaser of the existential threat to the Korean people in the South. It runs the risk of being accused of giving into Kim Yo-jong's extortion and blackmail diplomacy.

 

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"All politics is based on the indifference of the majority."

- James "Scotty" Reston
 


"No man has the right to be ignorant. In a country like this, ignorance is a crime.If a man is going to vote, if he's going to take part in his country and his government, then it's up to him to understand."

- Louis L'Amour 


"Respect for ourselves guides our morals; respect for others guides our manners"

 - Laurence Sterne

USIP Publication: From COVID to the Caliphate: A Look at Violent Extremism Heading into 2021

Fri, 12/18/2020 - 2:51pm

This piece originally appeared on USIP.org.

Full Article: https://www.usip.org/publications/2020/12/covid-caliphate-look-violent-extremism-heading-2021

By Colin P. Clarke

It is more important than ever that policy to counter violent extremism be driven by informed decision-making.

Heading into 2021, the violent extremist landscape is more diverse than at any previous point in the last two decades since the start of the U.S.-led Global War on Terrorism. While that effort was almost exclusively focused on combating violent extremist organizations motivated by Salafi-jihadism, there has been a universal recognition that other forms of extremism have proliferated. Many governments and states feel completely unprepared and underequipped to deal with these new forms of extremism, which include, but are not limited to, racially and ethnically motivated terrorism, terrorism inspired by extreme misogyny, left-wing terrorism, and the rapid spread of conspiracy theories.

At the 2020 RESOLVE Network Global Forum, we focused on looking beyond the horizon to identify new forms of violent extremism and how those will manifest in the future. Several themes in particular are worth highlighting when considering the complex nature of the violent extremism landscape: the continued threat posed by remnants of the Islamic State, the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic will have on violent extremism and terrorist groups, and concepts like cultural loss and other so-called grievance narratives that violent extremist organizations leverage for recruitment and propaganda.

12/18/20 News & Commentary - National Security

Fri, 12/18/2020 - 11:58am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Duncan Moore.

1. Hack of federal networks broader than SolarWinds vulnerabilities: cybersecurity officials

2. Breaking the boom-bust cycle of irregular warfare

3. Has China's economy already gone bust?

4. Russia hasn’t just hacked our computer systems. It’s hacked our minds.

5. Competition with China could be short and sharp

6. Amid massive hack, lawmakers urge Trump to sign defense bill with new cybersecurity legislation

7. Exposed: Chinese psyops against America - one hell of a success

8. A new normal for Wuhan as Chinese authorities float new theory on Covid-19 origins

9. The Chinese Communist Party’s human hack of western companies

10. 'Boogaloo Bois' member pleads guilty to conspiracy to provide material support to al-Qassam Brigades

11. No, the Chinese are not on the border of Maine - and the dangers of misinformation

12. Bellingcat can say what U.S. intelligence can’t

13. Space Force leader to become 8th member of joint chiefs

14. New ‘tri-maritime strategy’ released, but leaders struggle to explain certain key points

15. The world in a state of cyber warfare

16. CISA: SolarWinds not the only initial attack vector in massive breach

17. From COVID to the caliphate: a look at violent extremism heading into 2021

18. Michael Pack fiercely defends overhaul of Voice Of America, other U.S. broadcast outlets

19. SolarWinds isn't the only way hackers entered networks, CISA Says

 

1. Hack of federal networks broader than SolarWinds vulnerabilities: cybersecurity officials

Washington Times · Ryan Lovelace · December 17, 2020

 

2. Breaking the boom-bust cycle of irregular warfare

Modern War Institute · Shawna Sinnott & Andrew Milburn · December 18, 2020

Deak Roh, DASD for SOCT in ASD SO/LIC, and I discussed irregular warfare with Shawna Sinnott and Andrew Milburn in this podcast.

 

3. Has China's economy already gone bust?

1945 · Salvatore Babones · December 16, 2020

 

4. Russia hasn’t just hacked our computer systems. It’s hacked our minds.

Washington Post · Fareed Zakaria · December 17, 2020

 

5. Competition with China could be short and sharp

Foreign Affairs · Michael Beckley & Hal Brands · December 17, 2020

I am hearing one of the Top Gun theme songs in the background ("Danger zone").

 

6. Amid massive hack, lawmakers urge Trump to sign defense bill with new cybersecurity legislation

Defense One · Patrick Tucker · December 17, 2020

 

7. Exposed: Chinese psyops against America - one hell of a success

Center for Security Policy · Grant Newsham · December 15, 2020

Grant Newsham throws shade on everyone (and I mean everyone - on both sides of the aisle going back to Nixon).

Oh and it is PSYOP, not Psyops. Just saying. Perhaps the editor at the Center for Security Policy or And Magazine did not know.

 

8. A new normal for Wuhan as Chinese authorities float new theory on Covid-19 origins

France 24 · Charles Pellegrin · December 18, 2020

What do revisionist powers do? They revise history and theory.

 

9. The Chinese Communist Party’s human hack of western companies

FDD · Thomas Joscelyn · December 16, 2020

 

10. 'Boogaloo Bois' member pleads guilty to conspiracy to provide material support to al-Qassam Brigades

Long War Journal (FDD) · Joe Truzman · December 17, 2020

 

11. No, the Chinese are not on the border of Maine – and the dangers of misinformation

Navy Times · Howard Altman · December 16, 2020

Sigh...

 

12. Bellingcat can say what U.S. intelligence can’t

Foreign Policy · Amy Mackinnon · December 17, 2020

This is why our intelligence community must use "all source" information that includes open source reporting from journalists and organizations such as Bellingcat.

 

13. Space Force leader to become 8th member of joint chiefs

US Department of Defense · Jim Garamone · December 18, 2020

But not the Chief of Special Operations. Oh, but we do not have one of those. I would be satisfied if we made the Commander of USSOCOM a member of the Joint Chiefs. My thoughts are here.

I was hoping because the Chairman wore his Green Beret to the Army Navy game this weekend that he would push to make the Commander of USSOCOM a member of the Joint Chiefs (note tongue in cheek with this comment - but I believe it is the first time we have seen the CJCS wear a Green Beret).

 

14. New ‘tri-maritime strategy’ released, but leaders struggle to explain certain key points

Navy Times · Geoff Ziezulewicz · December 17, 2020

 

15. The World in a State of Cyber Warfare

NATO Association of Canada · Sarah Nebbal · December 17, 2020

 

16. CISA: SolarWinds not the only initial attack vector in massive breach

Dark Reading · Kelly Jackson Higgins · December 17, 2020

 

17. From COVID to the caliphate: a look at violent extremism heading into 2021

United States Institute of Peace · Colin P. Clarke · December 15, 2020

 

18. Michael Pack fiercely defends overhaul of Voice Of America, other U.S. broadcast outlets

Washington Times · Bill Gertz · December 14, 2020

Foreign nationals (the majority of the employees of VOA, RFA, etc.) do not receive security clearances.  You must be a US citizen to hold a security clearance.

But the article smacks of using a rule by law argument to control the reporting of news. Sure, fix the organization, correct the errors, but do not use that as an excuse to shape the message so that it is only friendly to the administration, which is the underlying intent of the actions. I know an excellent journalist who is now leaving the US because his visa is not being renewed, not because he did anything wrong but only because of the decision not to renew visas, which sounds like mass punishment.

The first two paragraphs are spot on. The second two paragraphs illustrate the real issue and either a lack of understanding of our values or a lack of respect for how journalism and journalists work (and, I think, a low self-esteem). This is all about eliminating criticism of the administration, which should go against everything that makes America "exceptional." As an aside, I spend about 90% of the time that I work with the Korea service of VOA and RFA explaining and advocating US policies (and the rest of the time explaining the evil nature of the Kim family regime.

 

19. SolarWinds isn't the only way hackers entered networks, CISA says

Defense One · Aaron Boyd · December 17, 2020

 

“There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.”

- John Adams, The Works Of John Adams, Second President Of The United States

“The man who is deserving the name is the one whose thoughts and exertions are for others rather than for himself.”

- Walter Scott

“Always do sober what you said you'd do drunk. That will teach you to keep your mouth shut.”

- Ernest Hemingway

12/18/20 News & Commentary - Korea

Fri, 12/18/2020 - 11:15am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Duncan Moore.

1. After year of dormancy, S. Korea looks to 2021 for reignited N.K. diplomacy

2. South Korea’s new anti-leaflet law sparks backlash in Washington

3. US lawmakers to hold hearing on Seoul’s leaflet ban in Jan.

4. Civic groups decry criticism from U.S. of leafleting ban as 'interference in internal affairs'

5. North Korea executes fishing fleet captain for listening to RFA

6. Daily virus cases above 1,000 for 3rd day, toughest curbs still under review

7. S. Korea keeping close eye on N. Korean FM amid report he lost key party position

8. U.S. should send dialogue message to N.K. at Blinken's confirmation hearing: expert

9. N. Korea's production of crops down 5.2 pct in 2020

10. USFK commander calls for 'immediate, aggressive' antivirus scheme

11. N. Korean authorities issue order calling for strict compliance to social distancing rules

12. VOA interview series: “KDVA will pave forward to become a pivotal bridge to dissolve misunderstanding between two nations”

13. Anti-leaflet law poses threat to freedom in North and South Korea

14. North marks anniversary of Kim Jong-Il's death, but with less fanfare than past years

15. South Korea ban on balloon drops: a slippery slope

16. Former U.S. nuclear negotiator says N. Korea's ultimate goal is to secure regime

17. UN passes North Korean human rights resolution for 16th consecutive year

 

1. After year of dormancy, S. Korea looks to 2021 for reignited N.K. diplomacy

Yonhap News Agency · 송상호 · December 18, 2020

A relatively optimistic assessment of potential South Korean diplomacy for 2021. 

But I think the Moon administration may be disappointed here.

I think the first thing the ROK/US alliance must do is re-examine and re-assess the assumptions upon which strategy and policy must be based. I think the Moon administration may find the Biden administration does not agree with the fundamental assumptions of the Moon administration regarding both the nature and objectives of the Kim family regime.

 

2. South Korea’s new anti-leaflet law sparks backlash in Washington

Washington Post · Josh Rogin · December 17, 2020

This may be the first major Alliance issue for the Biden Administration. And there are those in South Korea who are upset with the US response.

 

3. US lawmakers to hold hearing on Seoul’s leaflet ban in Jan.

Korea Herald · Ahn Sung-mi · December 18, 2020

We should think about subversion by the Kim family regime against South Korea and the ROK/US alliance and we need to think about the ideological war between the Kim family regime, South Korea and the free world.

Subversion: the undermining of the power and authority of an established system or institution.

As in: "the ruthless subversion of democracy"

Ideological War – a choice between:

Shared ROK/US Values

Freedom and individual liberty, liberal democracy,  rule of law, free market economy, and human rights

Kim family regime (KFR) “values”

Juche/Kimilsungism, Socialist Workers Paradise, Songun, Songbun, Byungjin, rule BY law, and denial of human rights to sustain KFR power

NK engages in active subversion of the ROK as well as the ROK/US Alliance

 

4. Civic groups decry criticism from U.S. of leafleting ban as ‘interference in internal affairs’

Yonhap News Agency · 송상호 · December 18, 2020

I am sorry to my Korean friends. But friends and especially allies do not shy away from advising their friends and allies about the strategic mistake they are making. And frankly this is not an internal South Korean issue. One, it is a human rights issue to get information to the Korean people living in the North (see the 2014 UN Commission of Inquiry Report). Second, North Korea poses a threat beyond South Korea to the region and the US. Appeasing the regime with this law harms the execution of policy and strategy. The law reinforces the regime's belief its political warfare strategy is working. We will see a doubling down of the regime’s blackmail diplomacy which uses provocations and increased tensions and threats to gain political and economic concessions. 

So, again, I apologize to my Korean friends, but this is not interference in internal affairs. You are making a huge strategic mistake and now we must prepare for how the Kim family regime will exploit it.

 

5. North Korea executes fishing fleet captain for listening to RFA

Radio Free Asia · Sewon Kim, Leejin Jun, & Eugene Whong · December 17, 2020

I am reminded of the story in the Orphan Master's Son (awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction). The protagonist would listen to foreign radio broadcasts while he was working on a fishing boat (that also conducted kidnap operations). And he was influenced by them.

The buried lede is the captain picked up the "habit" of listening to foreign broadcasts in the military.

Of course, this also is an example of the brutal nature of the Kim family regime as well as how Korean society functions under the Songbun system. 

 

6. Daily virus cases above 1,000 for 3rd day, toughest curbs still under review

Yonhap News Agency · 송상호 · December 18, 2020

 

7. S. Korea keeping close eye on N. Korean FM amid report he lost key party position

Yonhap News Agency · 이원주 · December 18, 2020

The game of thrones continues. The leadership watchers are never bored.

 

8. U.S. should send dialogue message to N.K. at Blinken’s confirmation hearing: expert

Yonhap News Agency · 이원주 · December 18, 2020

I expect Joel Wit and Frank Januzzi to have roles in the Biden Administration (though some would argue since they are speaking in public that they are not yet on tap for positions - perhaps later on they will be and now they are part of the strategic personnel bench).

 

9. N. Korea’s production of crops down 5.2 pct in 2020

Yonhap News Agency · 강윤승 · December 18, 2020

I guess the only surprising thing is that it is only 5.2%

 

10. USFK commander calls for ‘immediate, aggressive’ antivirus scheme

Yonhap News Agency · 오석민 · December 18, 2020

 

11. N. Korean authorities issue order calling for strict compliance to social distancing rules

Daily NK · Kim Yoo Jin · December 18, 2020

I know I am beating the drum on this and that I may sound like Chicken Little or the boy who cried wolf:  we need to be ready for the effects of a major coronavirus outbreak in North Korea, especially within the military. A widespread outbreak within the military could destabilize the regime and such effects could be catastrophic.

On the other hand, if the regime is successful in mitigating the effects of COVID and preventing an outbreak, it will be solely because of the nature of the Kim family regime and its ability to implement and enforce the strictest and most hard population and resources control measures.

 

12. VOA interview series: “KDVA will pave forward to become a pivotal bridge to dissolve misunderstanding between two nations”

Korea Defense Veterans Association · Dong-hyun Kim · December 17, 2020

 

13. Anti-leaflet law poses threat to freedom in North and South Korea

Forbes · Olivia Enos · December 17, 2020

 

14. North marks anniversary of Kim Jong-il's death, but with less fanfare than past years

Korea Joong Ang Daily · Shim Kyu-Seok · December 17, 2020

???? An Iran-like deal for North Korea

 

15.  South Korea ban on balloon drops: a slippery slope

Asia Times · Bradley K. Martin · December 17, 2020

Slippery slope? More like an avalanche of ice.

 

16. Former U.S. nuclear negotiator says N. Korea's ultimate goal is to secure regime

Yonhap News Agency · 고병준 · December 17, 2020

Yes, but...

Yes, Ambassador DeTrani is exactly right. It is all about survival of the regime. But we must understand how the regime thinks about its survival and what it believes it must do to survive.

In order to survive, the regime believes it is in a zero-sum, existential conflict with the South and the regime must therefore eliminate the South and dominate the entire peninsula. 

Second, we must not misunderstand this and think that providing security guarantees to the regime will somehow satisfy it and will lead to the end of the nuclear and missile programs and the threat against the South. The only security "guarantee" the regime will "accept'' is the end of the ROK/US alliance, removal of US troops, and the end of extended deterrence and the nuclear umbrella over the ROK and Japan. But if we concede to those demands we will only see a future of conflict in which the regime will continue to execute its political warfare strategy and ultimately execute its campaign plan to unify the peninsula by force.

 

17. UN passes North Korean human rights resolution for 16th consecutive year

Korea Times · December 17, 2020

Note that South Korea did not sign on to the resolution. Disappointing. Appeasing North Korea does not work.

 

“There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.”

- John Adams, The Works Of John Adams, Second President Of The United States

“The man who is deserving the name is the one whose thoughts and exertions are for others rather than for himself.”

- Walter Scott

“Always do sober what you said you'd do drunk. That will teach you to keep your mouth shut.”

- Ernest Hemingway

USIP Publication: Gridlocked Afghan Peace Talks Overcome Another Hurdle

Tue, 12/15/2020 - 9:28pm

This piece originally appeared at USIP.org.

Full Article: https://www.usip.org/publications/2020/12/gridlocked-afghan-peace-talks-overcome-another-hurdle

By Scott Worden

With procedural rules finally settled, both sides are waiting to see how a change in the U.S. administration could affect talks.

Afghan peace negotiations began in mid-September, bringing together the Afghan government and Taliban for the first time to negotiate an end to four decades of war. But, since then, the talks have been mired in squabbles over basic procedures. Last week the sides made a breakthrough and agreed on the rules that will govern future talks, opening the door to the more substantive issue of the agenda for talks—including how and when to talk about a reduction in violence and future political arrangements. Senior U.S. officials praised the agreement and urged the parties to move quickly to a discussion about ways to reduce record-high violence levels.

USIP’s Scott Worden looks at the significance of this breakthrough, why it took so long to get here, and if the incoming Biden administration could shake up the peace process.

[Continued on USIP.org]

12/15/20 News & Commentary - National Security

Tue, 12/15/2020 - 2:55pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Duncan Moore.

1. China's combative nationalists see a world turning their way

2. Revealed: China suspected of spying on Americans via Caribbean phone networks

3. With Americans stuck at home, trade with China roars back

4. Japan's ability and willingness to assist U.S. forces in the East China Sea

5. Measuring soft power

6. What a Biden presidency means for defense

7. 88-day opening of the Northeast Passage sets new Arctic record

8. Hackers have vaulted into the heart of America's government

9. China seems ready for a fight over Taiwan

10. DHS, State and NIH join list of federal agencies - now five - hacked in major Russian cyberespionage campaign

11. 2020 saw the Guard used the most since World War II. Is a retention crisis looming?

12. Our alarming silence on China's violations of rights

13. Getting the VA secretary nominee right for veterans

14. Moderna's Covid-19 vaccine is next in line for authorization

15. 'Massively disruptive' cyber crisis engulfs multiple agencies

16. Xi's China is preparing for a new world order

17. Hong Kong's worst case scenario is happening

18. Trump 2022 DoD budget would kill OCO account; huge Navy boost

19. Boost Coast Guard fleet for Pacific partnerships

20. China and Russia plan to 'deepen' cooperation against US

21. Our bases in US will be attacked: Army

22. Cruel truths behind China's killer fentanyl exports

23. Are U.S. marines actually in Taiwan?

24. End of a terror era in Indonesia

25. Covid-19 shakes South Philippine peace deal

 

1. China's combative nationalists see a world turning their way

New York Times · Chris Buckley · December 14, 2020

Funny how terms and meanings change. We used to call Chiang Kai Shek's forces the nationalist Chinese who escaped to Taiwan.

 

2. Revealed: China suspected of spying on Americans via Caribbean phone networks

Guardian · Stephanie Kirchgaessner · December 15, 2020

We focus on the Russian's revelations yesterday while the Chinese do something else. To borrow from a past president: "it's information warfare, stupid."

 

3. With Americans stuck at home, trade with China roars back

New York Times · Ana Swanson · December 14, 2020

It is not just opium or fentanyl that we are addicted to. It is Chinese goods in general. The second and third order effects of COVID?

 

4. Japan's ability and willingness to assist U.S. forces in the East China Sea

RAND · Jeffrey W. Hornung · December 14, 2020

The 162 page report can be accessed here.

 

5. Measuring Soft Power

Foreign Policy Research Institute · Margaret Seymour · December 14, 2020

Great opening question that is difficult to answer. But the author provides some useful analysis and insights.

 

6. What a Biden presidency means for defense

National Defense · Jon Harper · December 14, 2020

 

7. 88-day opening of the Northeast Passage sets new Arctic record

Splash 247 · Sam Chambers · December 15, 2020

Ah, so there is a Northwest Passage?

 

8. Hackers have vaulted into the heart of America's government

Economist · December 14, 2020

 

9. China seems ready for a fight over Taiwan

1945 · James Holmes · December 9, 2020

I missed this a few days ago. This 19FortyFive website seems to be a new addition to the internet.

 

10. DHS, State and NIH join list of federal agencies - now five - hacked in major Russian cyberespionage campaign

Washington Post · Ellen Nakashima & Craigh Timberg · December 14, 2020

Will this be shown to be the biggest Russian hack in history?

 

11. 2020 saw the Guard used the most since World War II. Is a retention crisis looming?

Army Times · Davis Winkie · December 13, 2020

I did not know this. I would have thought the National Guard deployment numbers would have been higher in earlier years of the GWOT, especially during the surges.

 

12. Our alarming silence on China's violations of rights

Real Clear World · Robert Spalding · December 14, 2020

 

13. Getting the VA secretary nominee right for veterans

Military Times · David Shulkin · December 13, 2020

 

14. Moderna's Covid-19 vaccine is next in line for authorization

Wall Street Journal · Thomas M. Burton & Peter Loftus · December 15, 2020

More good news. One of the biggest and most important legacies of the Trump administration will be how it showed that we can break through the bureaucratic inertia in a crisis.

 

15. ‘Massively disruptive’ cyber crisis engulfs multiple agencies

Politico · Eric Geller · December 14, 2020

What will be our response? I doubt it will be to form a joint Russian/US cyber task force as someone once proposed.

 

16. Xi's China is preparing for a new world order

Washington Post · Ishaan Tharoor · December 15, 2020

I think I preferred President George H.W. Bush's vision of a new world order (that was to result from the post-Cold War world).

 

17. Hong Kong’s worst case scenario is happening

Axios · Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian · December 15, 2020

 

18. Trump 2022 DoD budget would kill OCO account; huge Navy boost

Breaking Defense · Paul McLeary · December 11, 2020

I doubt Congress will pass a law removing OCO funding. I am sure this budget is DOA.

 

19. Boost Coast Guard fleet For Pacific partnerships

Breaking Defense · Ben Bordelon · December 14, 2020

Can we afford this? And what will be the cost to Coast Guard operations around our homeland? I think this makes sense to be able to engage with other Coast Guards as part of great power competition. But can we afford the cost?

 

20. China and Russia plan to 'deepen' cooperation against US

Washington Examiner · Joel Gehrke · December 11, 2020

The enemy of my enemy…

 

21. Our bases in US will be attacked: Army

Breaking Defense · Sydney J. Freedberg Jr. · December 14, 2020

Resilience. Can we develop sufficient resilience?

 

22. Cruel truths behind China’s killer fentanyl exports

Asia Times · Grant Newsham · December 11, 2020

Fentanyl equals subversion. Could be part of unrestricted warfare.

What is subversion? The undermining of the power and authority of an established system or institution—as in "the ruthless subversion of democracy."

 

23. Are U.S. marines actually in Taiwan?

National Interest · Caleb Larson · December 14, 2020

Enquiring minds want to know. Is Taiwan conducting information warfare against China?

 

24. End of a terror era in Indonesia

Asia Times · John McBeth · December 14, 2020

Sounds like some good news. But I fear a Mark Twain ending.

 

25. Covid-19 shakes South Philippine peace deal

Asia Times · Georgi Engelbrecht · December 14, 2020

We will be seeing various second and third order effects of COVID for a long time to come.

 

"In Korea, the Government forces, which were armed to prevent border raids and to preserve internal security, were attacked by invading forces from North Korea....The attack upon Korea makes it plain beyond all doubt that communism has passed beyond the use of subversion to conquer independent nations and will now use armed invasion and war."

- President Harry Truman

“You must never be fearful about what you are doing when it is right.”

-Rosa Parks

"To the wrongs that need resistance,

To the right that needs assistance,

To the future in the distance,

Give yourselves."

- Carrie Chapman Catt

12/15/20 News & Commentary - Korea

Tue, 12/15/2020 - 2:05pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Duncan Moore.

1. Legislation banning anti-North Korea leaflets new thorny issue between South Korea, US

2.  A deep dive into N. Korea's new "anti-reactionary thought" law

3. North Korea's nuclear coercion as diplomatic statecraft - analysis

4. Defector Thae Yong-ho: Seoul's parliament 'capitulating' to North Korea

5. South Korea: promote human rights in North Korea

6. Defector activist mulls constitutional complaint over ban on anti-Pyongyang leafleting

7. N. Korea begins regular wintertime drills, no unusual signs detected yet: JCS

8. US military reports 33 new coronavirus patients in Japan and South Korea

9. Time to prepare for the post-Biegun era

10. Korea losing faith in Moon as Covid cases surge

11. Photo studios in Chongjin raided by the authorities

12. JoongAng-CSIS forum warns that North may provoke Biden

13. Anti-North Korea leaflet law faces backlash from within and outside South Korea

14. With year-end parties canceled, alcohol industry targets home drinkers

15. S. Korea to buy MH-60R Seahawk to boost Navy's anti-submarine capabilities

16. Train derailment in mid-November leads to hundreds of casualties

17. North Korea halts all public transportation outside of Pyongyang to stop coronavirus

18. North Korea vows merciless punishment for smugglers to stop COVID-19

 

1. Legislation banning anti-North Korea leaflets new thorny issue between South Korea, US

Korea Times · Kang Seung-woo · December 14, 2020

The first crisis for the Biden administration in Korea may have to do with values and human rights differences between South Korea and the US. The fundamental question for the alliance is whether we going to return to an interest-based and values-based alliance—the shared values of freedom and individual liberty, liberal democracy, free market economics, rule OF law, and human rights. This new law is in contravention to a number of these shared values.

Appeasing North Korea does not work. It has never worked. This is aptly called the "KIm Yo-Jong law," since it is a direct result of her threats in June. 

But doesn't the ROK government see how this looks to its citizens and to the outside world? This is a major mistake and one that could do irreparable damage to the Moon administration (but hopefully South Korea and the alliance can recover from it).

 

2. A deep dive into N. Korea’s new “anti-reactionary thought” law

Daily NK · Jang Seul Gi · December 15, 2020

What is the best action in support of the North's "anti-reactionary thought law?"  South Korea's Kim Yo-Jong law outlawing leaflets sent to North Korea by escapees.

We should never forget the greatest threat to the Kim family regime is the Korean people in the North, armed with information and the truth about their plight and the outside world.

The timing of the South's anti-information law is very coincidental and appears to be in full support of the North's law.

The threat that information poses to the regime is why we recommended these efforts (via the 2019 FDD monograph, Maximum Pressure 2.0) in support of information and influence activities. Unfortunately, current ROK domestic politics prevents many of them.

The United States and South Korea should implement a comprehensive and aggressive IIA campaign in North Korea. The focus should be three-fold: create internal threats against the regime from among the elite, provide the second-tier leadership with alternative paths to survival, and prepare the Korean people for eventual unification under a United Republic of Korea. To do so, we recommend the following steps:

  • Develop organizational infrastructure to facilitate IIA: The United States and South Korea lack a single organization to direct IIA against North Korea. Washington and Seoul should establish institutions that would work together to plan and shape combined IIA. Fortunately, as discussed earlier, the United States already has numerous tools at its disposal, such as the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor; Voice of America; and Radio Free Asia. The United States should centralize these activities under an oversight organization. This organization would coordinate all agencies and departments and work with non-government organizations. Under the Moon administration, there will likely be concerns that IIA could upset diplomatic conditions. Admittedly, an IIA campaign targeting Pyongyang could risk stirring additional short-term tensions with Pyongyang. But U.S. diplomats should remind their ROK counterparts that those tensions may ultimately forge a path to the peaceful denuclearization of North Korea. U.S. diplomats also need to remind their South Korean allies that Seoul’s persistent use of concessions has not elicited progress with Pyongyang.
  • Encourage Moon’s government to increase intra-Korean people-to-people exchanges: Washington should encourage intra-Korean engagement by sponsoring people-to-people educational and cultural exchanges. Such exchanges could expose North Korea’s intelligentsia and emerging elites to democratic concepts as well as personal relationships with South Koreans.
  • Implement aggressive IIA targeting the North Korea regime: After building a baseline consensus, the United States and South Korea should implement increasingly aggressive IIA targeting the North Korean regime. These activities should inform North Koreans of their universal human rights and civil liberties that the regime is failing to respect. This will undermine the legitimacy of the Kim family regime and give hope to the people living in the North. Alternate sources of information can put regime propaganda in perspective. This campaign could also help lay the initial groundwork for emergent leaders who could replace Kim and who might seek to unify with the South as equal partners under the values of individual liberty and freedom, liberal democracy, and a free market economy. At a minimum, this campaign could help persuade Kim that the status quo poses a greater threat than good faith negotiations with the United States and South Korea. The ultimate goal is to create internal divisions and threats that will influence Kim to denuclearize.
  • Increase exposure of North Koreans to the outside world: IIA must exploit North Koreans’ growing access to DVDs, USB drives, and smart phones from outside the country. These media devices can carry content popular among North Koreans, such as South Korean dramas, which can implicitly help Koreans in the North better understand the difference between the regime they have and the government they deserve.
  • Establish a Korea Defector Information Institute (KDII): There is no single organization in the United States or South Korea that harnesses the information of defectors to support IIA. If both nations worked together to establish a KDII, it could serve as a repository for defector information to inform policymakers, strategists, and those responsible for developing IIA themes and messages. This institute should utilize defector knowledge and advice in devising appropriate messages and communications techniques. It could also encourage North Koreans to defect, particularly members of Office 39 (also known as Department 39), who are knowledgeable of the Kim family regime’s finances.
  • Provide military support to ROK-U.S. government programs for IIA: S. Psychological Operations (PSYOP) forces should be deployed on a permanent basis to support ROK PSYOP forces as part of a national-level alliance IIA campaign. ROK and U.S. PSYOP forces should advise and assist defector organizations to synchronize themes, messages, and dissemination methods to ensure unity of effort.

 

3. North Korea's nuclear coercion as diplomatic statecraft - analysis

Eurasia Review · Geopolitical Monitor · December 15, 2020

A very good and important essay. Note the discussion of the North Korean objective of unification. There should be no doubt about this objective and how the regime is using all means at hand to pursue this strategic aim. This essay describes in another way how I view the regime's strategy: it is a seven decades old strategy of subversion, coercion-extortion (blackmail diplomacy), and use of force to achieve unification dominated by the Guerrilla Dynasty and Gulag State in order to ensure the survival of the mafia like crime family cult known as Kim family regime.

Another name for coercion as diplomatic statecraft: blackmail diplomacy. 

 

4. Defector Thae Yong-ho: Seoul's parliament 'capitulating' to North Korea

UPI · Elizabeth Shim · December 14, 2020

Note that the Institute of Corean American Studies (ICAS) will be hosting Thae Young-ho this Thursday evening at 7pm for a virtual seminar. You may register at this link.

These are my submitted questions for him:

  • Can you provide recommendations to the ROK/US alliance and the international community about information and influence activities targeting the regime elite, the 2d tier leadership (those leaders outside the core elite but who possess military power and political influence when the regime becomes unstable) and the general populace of the North Korea?
  • Specifically, what kinds of themes and messages will resonate with the elite, the 2d tier leadership, and the population and influence their behavior in a positive way to achieve ROK/US Alliance desired effects and objectives?
  • What are the most effective means to transmit information?
  • If you were to design an information and influence activities campaign, who would you target and what kind of influence objectives would you seek to achieve?

In my previous meetings with Thae, he has provided very important insights and information on influence operations and human rights in North Korea. I hope he will share some of those insights publicly.

 

5. South Korea: promote human rights in North Korea

Human Rights Watch · December 15, 2020

Yes, he should. But sadly, the suffering of the Korean people in the North is not part of his agenda. As a human rights lawyer, I would think President Moon would have taken a strong human rights approach toward North Korea. Unfortunately, his focus on "human rights" has been on developing the and supporting the narrative surrounding the democracy movement of the 1980s and specifically the Kawngju episode. I do not think he has ever done anything is his career concerning human rights in North Korea.

 

6. Defector activist mulls constitutional complaint over ban on anti-Pyongyang leafleting

Yonhap News Agency · 김승연 · December 15, 2020

Maybe this will be a wake-up call for the Moon administration. But based on past actions, I expect it to only double down on its mistakes.

 

7. N. Korea begins regular wintertime drills, no unusual signs detected yet: JCS

Yonhap News Agency · 오석민 · December 15, 2020

Please remember that for the past 2 plus years we have been tailoring ROK/US military training to support diplomacy. But North Korea has never reciprocated and continues to conduct its winter and summer training cycles. We should not sacrifice ROK/US combined military readiness in pursuit of the impossible objective of "appeasing" North Korea with reduced exercises and training in the hopes that it will positively affect North Korean decision making.

My PIR (priority information requirements) for the WTC: how much of the modern military equipment that we observed in the October 10th parade has been fielded to operational units? What units received the equipment? How is it being employed?

 

8. US military reports 33 new coronavirus patients in Japan and South Korea

Stars & Stripes · Joseph Ditzler · December 14, 2020

 

9. Time to prepare for the post-Biegun era

Dong-A Ilbo · Gi-Jae Han · December 15, 2020

There should be no doubt that Steve Biegun and his Korea time worked tirelessly to maintain the ROK/US alliance in the face of nearly impossible conditions posed by both the Kim family regime and the Moon administration's "world view" toward North Korea. This op-ed rightly recognizes those contributions and also that the professional diplomats in South Korea recognize and appreciate those contributions as well. But it also notes that the Moon administration and political leaders need to make changes in their policies.

 

10. Korea losing faith in Moon as Covid cases surge

Asia Times · Andrew Salmon · December 14, 2020

In President Moon's "defense," it is "normal" for Korean presidents to have significantly declining approval ratings in the latter years of their mandatory five-year, one-term presidency.

 

11. Photo studios in Chongjin raided by the authorities

Daily NK · Jong So Yong · December 14, 2020

Do not be misled by the title. This is about cracking down on information flow inside North Korea. The biggest threat to the regime is the Korean people in the North armed with information.

 

12. JoongAng-CSIS forum warns that North may provoke Biden

Korea Joong Ang Daily · Sarah Kim · December 15, 2020

You can view the entire forum at this link.

 

13. Anti-North Korea leaflet law faces backlash from within and outside South Korea

Korea Times · Do Je-hae · December 15, 2020

Resistance to this terrible law both inside and outside Korea. It is too bad the Moon administration will not heed this criticism and likely will double down on it. The Korea Times strategically used the photo of Kim Yo-Jong with Moon and Kim and in the background to emphasize this is the "Kim Yo-Jong command law."

 

14. With year-end parties canceled, alcohol industry targets home drinkers

Korea Herald · Yim Hyun-su · December 15, 2020

This should not be a problem if you are like me and only drink on two occasions: alone or with someone.

But maybe home drinking will produce more moderate drinkers.

 

15. S. Korea to buy MH-60R Seahawk to boost Navy's anti-submarine capabilities

Yonhap News Agency · 최수향 · December 15, 2020

This is more important for South Korea's defense against North Korea's submarine capabilities than building a nuclear powered submarine.

 

16. Train derailment in mid-November leads to hundreds of casualties

Daily NK · Ha Yoon Ah · December 15, 2020

Interesting that half the dead and injured were military personnel. Was this an accident or sabotage? If so, by whom? An indication of nascent resistance inside North Korea?

 

17. North Korea halts all public transportation outside of Pyongyang to stop coronavirus

Radio Free Asia · Jieun Kim, Leejin Jun, & Eugene Whong · December 14, 2020

Another indicator of the effects of COVID inside north Korea.

 

18. North Korea vows merciless punishment for smugglers to stop COVID-19

RFA · Jieun Kim, Leejin Jun, & Eugene Whong · December 14, 2020

Again, we should acknowledge the great work of RFA and VOA and their ability to bring us news about what is happening inside North Korea and, of course, provide this information to the Korean people in the North. The regime's Propaganda and Agitation department does not allow the North Korean "media" to report on what is happening inside North Korea, especially the effects of the draconian population and resources control measures that are ostensibly designed to mitigate the effects of COVID but which are really designed to the tighten the shackles that are oppressing the Korean people in the North.

 

"In Korea, the Government forces, which were armed to prevent border raids and to preserve internal security, were attacked by invading forces from North Korea....The attack upon Korea makes it plain beyond all doubt that communism has passed beyond the use of subversion to conquer independent nations and will now use armed invasion and war."

- President Harry Truman

“You must never be fearful about what you are doing when it is right.”

-Rosa Parks

"To the wrongs that need resistance,

To the right that needs assistance,

To the future in the distance,

Give yourselves."

- Carrie Chapman Catt

12/14/20 News & Commentary - National Security

Mon, 12/14/2020 - 7:26pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Duncan Moore.

1. Trump delays plan to hasten coronavirus vaccines for White House staff

2. John le Carré, best-selling author of Cold War thrillers, is dead at 89

3. Asian-American man who was Navy Seal & doctor will join 2024 NASA moon mission

4. Russian government spies are behind a hacking campaign that has breached U.S. agencies and a top cyber firm

5. Army suspends battalion command team in South Korea amid racism investigation

6. DOD leaders brief Women, Peace, Security Program to Congressional caucus

7. Biden considers Samantha Power for USAID: report

8. China's policy banks are lending differently, not less

9. How to prepare for a national security crisis

10. Rebuilding, reaching out, and other lessons from Ronald Reagan

11. Five things to know about Lloyd Austin, Biden's Pentagon pick

12. 'Race matters': Austin advocates tout his historic candidacy in the face of other concerns

13. She stalked her daughter's killers across Mexico, one by one

14. Joseph Francescon named as Deputy Chief of Staff to Defense Secretary

15. Dutch intelligence says it's uncovered two Russian spies

16. Outsourcing disinformation

17. 18,000 organizations possibly compromised in massive supply-chain cyberattack

18. Russian hack was 'classic espionage' with stealthy, targeted tactics

19. U.S. Treasury, Commerce Depts. hacked through SolarWinds compromise

20. How to turn General Austin into Secretary Austin

 

1. Trump delays plan to hasten coronavirus vaccines for White House staff

New York Times · December 11, 2020

 

2. John le Carré, best-selling author of Cold War thrillers, is dead at 89

New York Times · Sarah Lyall · December 13, 2020

A sad day for all those who grew up reading his novels.

 

3. Asian-American man who was Navy Seal & doctor will join 2024 NASA moon mission

Mothership · Matthias Ang · December 10, 2020

An overachiever is understatement when describing Jonny Kim. What a great American, who should be an inspiration to all students growing up. I think the only thing left for him to accomplish after going to the moon will be to run for President.

 

4. Russian government spies are behind a hacking campaign that has breached U.S. agencies and a top cyber firm

Washington Post · Ellen Nakashima & Craig Timberg · December 13, 2020

Those pesky Russians.

 

5. Army suspends battalion command team in South Korea amid racism investigation

Army Times · Davis Winkie · December 13, 2020

The Korea team is exercising good leadership. However, if these allegations are substantiated, why do we still have relatively senior people (apparently a battalion command team) in our formations who think and act like this and think they can get away with this kind of behavior?

 

6. DOD leaders brief Women, Peace, Security Program to Congressional caucus

US Department of Defense · Jim Garamone · December 14, 2020

 

7. Biden considers Samantha Power for USAID: report

Fox News · Julia Musto · December 14, 2020

 

8. China's policy banks are lending differently, not less

Diplomat · Tristan Kenderdine · December 12, 2020

This is in response to the recent Financial Times article that assessed "a sharp drop-off in China policy bank lending to Belt and Road economies based on a Boston University Global Development Policy Center dataset on China's Overseas Development Finance."

One thing I have learned from listening to Chinese experts is that is hard to get reliable data out of China, which accounts for the varied assessments.

 

9. How to prepare for a national security crisis

Foreign Affairs · Paul B. Stares · December 11, 2020

Of course, the ideal is to prevent crises altogether. But, of course, our adversaries have a vote.

 

10. Rebuilding, reaching out, and other lessons from Ronald Reagan

War On the Rocks · Simon Miles · December 14, 2020

I always like to review President Reagan's top secret 8-page NSDD 32 U.S. National Security Strategy (of which there were only 36 original copies).

One of the important lessons I take from President Reagan is that he simultaneously addressed human rights while he conducted arms control negotiations with the USSR.

 

11. Five things to know about Lloyd Austin, Biden's Pentagon pick

Hill · Rebecca Kheel · December 13, 2020

The 5:

He and Biden formed a close bond.

He has had a trailblazing career.

His time at CENTCOM came with controversies.

He has ties to defense contractors.

He is media-shy.

 

12. 'Race matters': Austin advocates tout his historic candidacy in the face of other concerns

Defense News · Joe Gould · December 14, 2020

 

13. She stalked her daughter's killers across Mexico, one by one

New York Times · Azam Ahmed · December 13, 2020

What an incredible story.

 

14. Joseph Francescon named as Deputy Chief of Staff to Defense Secretary

Homeland Security Today · December 12, 2020

Hmm... we are fellow alums from the real Miami, though I think I graduated before he was even born!

 

15. Dutch intelligence says it's uncovered two Russian spies

Stars & Stripes · Mike Corder · December 10, 2020

 

16. Outsourcing disinformation

Lawfare · Shelby Grossman & Khadeja Ramali · December 13, 2020

 

17. 18,000 organizations possibly compromised in massive supply-chain cyberattack

Dark Reading · Jai Vijayan · December 14, 2020

Wow.

 

18. Russian hack was 'classic espionage' with stealthy, targeted tactics

Washington Post · Craig Timberg & Ellen Nakashima · December 14, 2020

 

19. U.S. Treasury, Commerce Depts. hacked through SolarWinds compromise

Krebs on Security · Brian Krebs · December 20, 2020

 

 20. How to Turn General Austin Into Secretary Austin

Defense One · Charles A. Stevenson · December 14, 2020

 

"The arms are fair, when the intent of bearing them is just."

- William Shakespeare

"Three men behind the enemy are worth 50 in front of him."

- Frederick the Great

"Writing is done by writing and the way to begin to write is to begin to write.  Lousy writing is better than no writing because the one can be improved but the other does not exist.  Of course, it is your privilege, if you wish, to become a fourth-rate premature has-been, looking no man in the eye and creeping shame-faced about the academic gutter, ridden by guilt and perfectionism, humiliating your old parents, disappointing your supporters, embarrassing your friends, a once promising scholar now gutless and defeated.  However, do not let me pressure you."

- John King Fairbank in a letter to his doctoral students, 1970s

12/14/20 News & Commentary - Korea

Mon, 12/14/2020 - 6:41pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Duncan Moore.

1. Joint Statement on the Human Rights Situation in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea

2. U.S. human rights commissioner expresses concern about leaflet ban

3. On Otto Warmbier's birthday, his legacy lives on

4. Will Trump continue his bromance with Kim Jong Un?

5. Ministry says ban on anti-Pyongyang leaflets 'least possible measure' to protect people in border regions

6. Pompeo says N. Korea a greater threat than Russia in cyber security

7. Assembly passes bill on banning cross-border launch of anti-Pyongyang leaflets

8. New law cuts NIS out of domestic politics for good

9. Biden administration advised to recognize Singapore statement

10.  New virus infections under 1,000 on fewer tests; efforts extended to find more potential cases

11. Joe Biden can build on Donald Trump's North Korea strategy

12. How US sanctions are pushing Iran, Venezuela, and North Korea closer together

13. What is more important: sending anti-North Korea leaflets or providing food and medical supplies for hungry children?

 

1. Joint Statement on the Human Rights Situation in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea

United States Mission to the United Nations · December 11, 2020

It is very disappointing that South Korea did not sign onto this statement. Everyone, to include especially the ROK, needs to take a human rights up front approach. Avoiding discussion of human rights is not going to change North Korean behavior and cooperate on North-South engagement or conduct substantive  denuclearization negotiations.

 

2. U.S. human rights commissioner expresses concern about leaflet ban

Dong-A Ilbo · [email protected] · December 11, 2020

I think the ROK government is making a huge mistake in trying to pass this law. One of the major human rights abuses identified in the UN Commission of Inquiry in 2014 is the lack of information allowed to reach the Korean people living in the North. But this is wrong on multiple levels. First it is morally outrageous. The escapees from the North risked their lives to escape to a free and democratic country and their right to expression and to help their suffering brothers and sisters will be suppressed if this law is passed. Second the ROK government is succumbing to Kim Yo-Jong's obvious blackmail diplomacy.  This makes the ROK government appear weak and will undermine all future negotiating and engagement efforts

This will not improve relations whatsoever. The regime will interpret this as ROK weakness and an example of successful execution of the regime's political warfare strategy that includes blackmail diplomacy (the use of increased tension and provocations to gain political and economic concessions).  We should keep in mind why the regime wants to prevent outside information from getting to the Korean people in the North. The regime's greatest fear is not a military attack from the ROK/US alliance but resistance from within. The greatest threat to the regime is the Korean people in the North, armed with information—in particular, information about the superiority of the South, economically, politically, culturally, and militarily. The regime must prevent this kind of information from reaching the people and it is has deigned its entire society and system of rule to isolate the Korean people and keep them as ignorant as possible, preventing them from learning the truth not only about the outside world, their plight, and the human rights they are entitled to but are denied by the regime for the sole reason of keeping itself in power.

It is naive to believe that this law will improve relations with the North. It is based on the misguided and erroneous assumption that Kim Jong-Un somehow shares the Moon administration's vision of peace and reconciliation. Nothing could be further from the truth and it is this assumption that actually puts the Korean people of the South and the ROK/US alliance in danger. This action can only be described by one word that has always led to failure in national security and international relations: appeasement.

The Korean people in the South need to raise their voices and tell the Moon administration to stop contributing to the human rights abuses of the Korean people in the North, and the ROK government (and international community) must take all possible actions to get information into North Korea.

 

3. On Otto Warmbier's birthday, his legacy lives on

Fox News · Eric Shawn · December 13, 2020

Never forget the Kim family regime murdered Otto Warmbier.

 

4. Will Trump continue his bromance with Kim Jong Un?

Daily Beast · Donald Kirk · December 14, 2020

 

5. Ministry says ban on anti-Pyongyang leaflets 'least possible measure' to protect people in border regions

Yonhap News Agency · 고병준 · December 14, 2020

This is BS. You do not sacrifice your values or deny the basic rights of your citizens or stop helping the suffering people of the North because of North Korean threats. You institute better defense and protect your people and also make it known to the regime that any attack on South Korea will be met with a decisive response.

Appeasement does not work, and this law is an action of appeasement that will harm the Korean people of both South and North Korea.

 

6. Pompeo says N. Korea a greater threat than Russia in cyber security

Yonhap News Agency · 변덕근 · December 15, 2020

But Russia just conducted one of the largest cyber-attacks against US government agencies…? All our adversaries are significant cyber threats and we minimize or ignore them at our peril.

 

7. Assembly passes bill on banning cross-border launch of anti-Pyongyang leaflets

Yonhap News Agency · 김수연 · December 14, 2020

Very disappointing.

 

8. New law cuts NIS out of domestic politics for good

Korea Joong Ang Daily · Shim Kyu-Seok · December 14, 2020

Yes, the National Intelligence Service should have no role in domestic politics.

 

9. Biden administration advised to recognize Singapore statement

Korea Times · Kang Seung-woo · December 10, 2020

And not just the Singapore statement but also the Panmunjom declaration for peace between North and South, which called for the implementation of all previous agreements, the two most important being the ones from 1991-1992 below.

Here are the four points of the Singapore Statement:

1. The United States and the DPRK commit to establish new U.S.-DPRK relations in accordance with the desire of the peoples of the two countries for peace and prosperity.

2. The United States and the DPRK will join their efforts to build a lasting and stable peace regime on the Korean Peninsula.

3. Reaffirming the April 27, 2018 Panmunjom Declaration, the DPRK commits to work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.

4. The United States and the DPRK commit to recovering POW/MIA remains, including the immediate repatriation of those already identified.

We need to understand how the regime views the Singapore statement and how it has been trying to exploit it to support its political warfare strategy and long con to get sanctions relief and keep the nuclear program in some form.

Key “agreement” (from the perspective of the North): denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula

1. Change relationship - Declaration of the end of the war  (end of hostile US policy - i.e., Peace regime)

2. Sanctions relief (permanent removal)

3. Denuclearization of the South (end of alliance, removal of troops, end of nuclear umbrella over ROK and Japan)

4. Then negotiate dismantlement of the North’s and ICBM programs

In Short:

NK: change relationship, build trust , denuclearize

US: denuclearize, build trust, change relationship

Agreement on Reconciliation, Non-Aggression, and Exchanges and Cooperation between South and North Korea

1992 Joint Declaration of the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula

 

10. New virus infections under 1,000 on fewer tests; efforts extended to find more potential cases

Yonhap News Agency · 강윤승 · December 14, 2020

Ah.. the old reduce the number of cases by reducing the number of tests method.

 

11. Joe Biden can build on Donald Trump's North Korea strategy

National Interest · Doug Bandow · December 13, 2020

The Biden administration is going to move forward, not backward, on North Korea. Trump changed the conditions and the landscape, and the Biden team can build on that.

 

12. How US sanctions are pushing Iran, Venezuela, and North Korea closer together

Diplomat · Jason Bartlett & Emily Jin · December 12, 2020

We have said we would provide COVID aid to North Korea back in March. POTUS and SECSTATE have both made statements offering help.  Kim Jong-un has chosen not to accept it. 

The problem with the proposal in this article is it does not take into account either the nature of these regimes or their political warfare strategies. It also overlooks the fact that we care more about the humanitarian suffering of affected people than these regimes do. Lastly, even if they were to accept COVID aid, it would not lead to better relations or changed behavior by these regimes. It is just not in their nature.

 

13. What is more important: sending anti-North Korea leaflets or providing food and medical supplies for hungry children?

Korea Herald · December 13, 2020

They are not mutually exclusive. This is a false equivalency. With all due respect to Representative Song, this argument does not take into account the nature and objectives of the Kim family regime.

 

"The arms are fair, when the intent of bearing them is just."

- William Shakespeare

"Three men behind the enemy are worth 50 in front of him."

- Frederick the Great

"Writing is done by writing and the way to begin to write is to begin to write.  Lousy writing is better than no writing because the one can be improved but the other does not exist.  Of course, it is your privilege, if you wish, to become a fourth-rate premature has-been, looking no man in the eye and creeping shame-faced about the academic gutter, ridden by guilt and perfectionism, humiliating your old parents, disappointing your supporters, embarrassing your friends, a once promising scholar now gutless and defeated.  However, do not let me pressure you."

- John King Fairbank in a letter to his doctoral students, 1970s

12/13/2020 News & Commentary - National Security

Sun, 12/13/2020 - 10:56am

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and Published by Riley Murray.

 

1. Gen. Mark Milley: The Biggest Security Challenges for the U.S.

2. Stop treating vets as untrustworthy, second-class citizens in the SecDef debate by Charlie Dunlap, J.D.

3. Analysis | What we know about Rep. Eric Swalwell's ties to an alleged Chinese spy

4. HASC Chair Smith Calls For New National Defense Strategy, Nuclear Policy Review 

5. War Powers: What Are They Good For?

6. China's rise exposes the 'myth' of the liberal global order

7. How Hawaii Became A Training Ground For The Indonesian Military

8. Mercenaries on the Battlefield: What Legal Advisors Must Know 

9. Combatting Terrorism Amid The Pandemic

10. 'US still the target': Indonesia's arrest of Jemaah Islamiah terrorist leader reveals thousands of recruits

11. Abu Sayyaf sub-leader falls, 2 more surrender

12. Former Special Forces Officer Warns of Color Revolution Tactics Used Against Trump

 

 

1.Gen. Mark Milley: The Biggest Security Challenges for the U.S.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/gen-mark-milley-the-biggest-security-challenges-for-the-u-s-11607824353? – 13 December 2020

I agree the NDS is a good document and I hope key elements of it are incorporated into a Biden Administration update.  I am glad the CJCS did not talk about bringing forward stationed troops home as he did recently.  I think that idea goes against both our National Security and National Defense Strategies. 

 

2. Stop treating vets as untrustworthy, second-class citizens in the SecDef debate by Charlie Dunlap, J.D.

sites.duke.edu · by Charlie Dunlap, J.D. · December 9, 2020

Conclusion:

I don't think we need statutory bars for persons who must be personally nominated by the President and, further, clear Senate confirmation.

But if we do, let's not start with bans targeting those honorable Americans who put on a uniform to go in harms' way prepared to lay down their lives to defend this country and its Constitution.

 

3. Analysis | What we know about Rep. Eric Swalwell's ties to an alleged Chinese spy

The Washington Post · December 11, 2020

A useful summary of the situation.

I have not seen this widely reported:  

What we know about how Swalwell and Fang interacted on substance: Axios reports that U.S. officials don't think Fang ever got classified information as she cozied up to politicians, including from Swalwell. He is not accused of any wrongdoing. After U.S. intelligence officials briefed him in 2015 on their concerns about Fang, he cut off ties with her. Swalwell said in a statement to Axios this week that he provided information to the FBI about her and that he hasn't interacted with her in six years. Fang has left the country.

We also know that top members of Congress from both parties got briefed by intelligence officials in 2015 about suspected Chinese spies trying to infiltrate Congress.

 

4. HASC Chair Smith Calls For New National Defense Strategy, Nuclear Policy Review 

news.usni.org · by John Grady · December 11, 2020

I do not think we will see a new NDS for at least a year if not more.  I think the current one is sound and when the next strategy is written I hope it retains many of the key and important concepts in the current strategy.

 

5. War Powers: What Are They Good For?

cnas.org - By Richard Fontaine, Loren DeJonge Schulman and Stephen Tankel

The entire paper can be accessed here: https://www.cnas.org/publications/reports/war-powers-what-are-they-good-for

Conclusion: Much of the discourse these days regarding the use of military force focuses on ending the "forever wars," and the need for Congress to undertake AUMF reform. Yet, as this report illustrates, such reform is just one piece of a larger puzzle when it comes to regulating the use of force. Members of Congress and staffers should not consider the legislative options available to them in isolation of one another. They will need to take into account potential tradeoffs, but must also look for opportunities to stitch together different approaches in order to reclaim Article I authority. Perhaps most important, the small number of lawmakers and staff motivated by these issues will need to expand the community of interest that exists for exercising this authority if they have any hope of Congress playing the role envisioned for it in the Constitution.

War Powers: What Are They Good For?

Four Legislative Strategies to Influence the Use of Force

 

6. China's rise exposes the 'myth' of the liberal global order

ABC.net.au · December 12, 2020

Excerpts:

We are in a world with no easy choices, and utopian belief in universal liberalism is not the answer. Despite wishing it so, China has not become like the West. It has grown richer, stronger and more authoritarian.

It has not been on the wrong side of history.

It is one of the liberal fantasies that we can vanquish history. The late historian Eric Hobsbawm wrote of the 20th century that "the historical memory was no longer alive".

Young people, Hobsbawm said, grow up in a "permanent present". But in the late 1980s and early 1990s "an era in world history ended, and a new one began".

China and Russia have long, hard memories. History has never died there.

Hobsbawm concluded his study of the 20th century, The Age of Extremes, with a warning: we may not know where we are going, but history has brought us to this point.

He said we cannot prolong the past: if we do we will fail. We must change, he said, or "the alternative to a changed society is darkness".

 

7. How Hawaii Became A Training Ground For The Indonesian Military

civilbeat.org · by Kevin Knodell · December 11, 2020

I had no idea about this training in Hawaii.

 

8. Mercenaries on the Battlefield: What Legal Advisors Must Know 

lieber.westpoint.edu · by Jeffrey S. Thurnher · December 2, 2020

Conclusion: Mercenaries will play a role in future conflicts as they provide the legal ambiguity America's adversaries seek in conflict. To prepare for future combat, legal professionals must remain attentive to these emerging participants of war. Judge advocates must also be vigilant about identifying the legal implications associated with mercenaries for their commanders.

 

9. Combatting Terrorism Amid The Pandemic

theaseanpost.com – by Muhammad Faizal Abdul Rahman – 12 December 2020

 

10. 'US still the target': Indonesia's arrest of Jemaah Islamiah terrorist leader reveals thousands of recruits

https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/3113648/us-still-target-indonesias-arrest-jemaah-islamiah-terrorist - by Amy Chew – 12 December 2020

We cannot neglect the terrorist threat in Southeast Asia.

 

11. Abu Sayyaf sub-leader falls, 2 more surrender

philstar.com · by Emmanuel Tupas

 

12. Former Special Forces Officer Warns of Color Revolution Tactics Used Against Trump

ntd.com · by GQ Pan and Joshua Philipp · December 11, 2020

These kinds of reports are troubling.  I think this former Special Forces Officer, like many, is ill-informed about the Color revolutions particularly the Orange Revolution in Ukraine.

For those with an interest in understanding "color revolutions" I recommend the Casebook from the Assessment Revolution and Insurgent Strategies project. 

The case study of the Orange Revolution in Ukraine begins on page 801 at this link: https://www.soc.mil/ARIS/books/pdf/CasebookV2S.pdf

Synopsis:
The Orange revolution took place during the 2004 presidential election in Ukraine and involved the mass mobilization of the population and the unification of key leaders and organizations in order to prevent a fraudulent election.  The promotion of nonviolent civil disobedience, as well as embracing constitutional and institutional judicial and legislative structures within Ukraine, ensure the successful completion of a democratic electoral process.

 

 

"When you reach the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on."

- Franklin D. Roosevelt

 

"Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence." 

- John Adams

 

"There is simple ignorance, which is the source of lighter offenses,

and double ignorance, which is accompanied by a conceit of wisdom;

and he who is under the influence of the latter fancies that

he knows all about matters of which he knows nothing.

-Plato