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http://www.latimes.com/la-fg-norkor5jan05001500,0,2150768.story

NEWS ANALYSIS

N. Korea Sees Itself as Land of Righteousness

The nation views its nuclear program as a countermeasure to U.S. domination.

By Mark Magnier
Times Staff Writer

January 5 2003

SEOUL -- A dictator madly threatens the rest of the world with his nuclear arsenal, 
thumbing
his nose at international agreements and selling nuclear and biological weapons to 
fellow
rogue states as he lords it over a nation of starving people.

This -- give or take a detail or two -- is the perception many outsiders have of North 
Korea
these days as they try to make sense of the isolated state.

The North has rattled global nerves in recent weeks by admitting to an atomic weapons
program, expelling nuclear inspectors, disabling surveillance cameras and threatening 
to
pull out of a global pact designed to limit the spread of nuclear arms.

It ratcheted up the pressure Saturday by issuing a vaguely worded threat that it would 
take
necessary countermeasures to perceived U.S. hostility. The Vienna-based International
Atomic Energy Agency, meanwhile, is expected to issue a strong condemnation soon of the
regime in Pyongyang, although agency officials hold out hope that the North will allow
inspectors back in before the IAEA takes the issue to the U.N. Security Council.

Turn the tables, however, and you see a very different picture of North Korea, say 
experts
who have spent much of their life watching every twist and turn of the hermit kingdom.

While the West views North Korea as a global laggard in bringing democracy, better 
living
standards and even food to its people, analysts say North Korea looks abroad and sees
decadence, soft thinking and moral depravity in the so-called new world order.

And while many in the United States believe that the world's only superpower is doing
mankind a great service by ensuring global stability and preventing weapons from 
falling into
the wrong hands, North Korea sees a bully bent on global domination.

A prevalent view in North Korea is that, with no one to check U.S. power, there's 
little
standing in Washington's way as it shapes the post-Cold War world in its own image and
makes new rules to strengthen its own control. Anyone who threatens that order -- and 
North
Korea feels it is in the cross hairs -- faces being crushed, Pyongyang believes.

"The present situation is very serious and unpredictable," North Korea's official KCNA 
news
agency said Saturday. North Korea "cannot but take a strong countermeasure by itself in
defense of the sovereignty of the country and the right to existence."

Outside North Korea, many see a regime that's used what little economic strength it 
has to
manufacture weapons of mass destruction rather than grow food, make clothing or build
houses for its people.

For North Korea, however, these weapons are synonymous with national sovereignty,
analysts say. They entitle North Korea to play what it feels is a deserved role on the 
world
stage. How else could a country with a GDP the size of some U.S. counties' be taken
seriously?

"The nuclear card is very valuable to them," said Song Young Sun, a researcher at the
Korea Institute of Defense Analyses. "Without it, they're just another poor, ignored 
country, a
... Rwanda, Somalia -- even maybe less valuable than Somalia."

Outsiders see a rogue state not content to create trouble at home but intent on 
spreading
weapons to questionable states such as Yemen.

What others call weapons proliferation, however, Pyongyang sees as both an essential
source of cash -- the arms trade is a huge and legal global business after all -- and 
as part of
a struggle to oppose the bullying of the United States.

While most of the world deplores the mismatch between North Korea's relatively enormous
military sector and its impoverished people, who have died of starvation by the 
thousands
over the last decade, North Korea sees a situation that involves more than comfort,
consumer niceties or even food in its people's bellies. According to this view, it 
involves the
highest of ideals -- the willingness to sacrifice and struggle for self-reliance, or 
juche.

"They don't buy into the prevalent capitalist view," said Lee Hang Koo, an analyst 
with the
South Korean military intelligence service. "South Korea feels superior because its 
economy
is 27 times greater than North Korea's. But that doesn't mean they're 27 times better 
or
happier."

A recurring question around the world is how North Korea, or at least its leadership, 
can
ignore the rapid advance of democracy as communism shrivels. The Soviet Union's
implosion led the way, while China is now beating the capitalists at their own game.

For many North Koreans, however, who were weaned on a home-grown ideology, theirs is
the last pure state. Certainly there are problems, but the first order for any state 
is survival,
particularly a communist state in such an epic fight. Prosperity can wait for another 
day.

President Bush has made no secret of his personal dislike for North Korean leader Kim 
Jong
Il and the "axis of evil" state he heads. Three days ago, Bush told reporters near 
Crawford,
Texas, "I have no heart for someone who starves his folks."

But while the homespun personal approach is a Bush hallmark, it may be 
counterproductive
if the president is trying to separate the leadership from its people, analysts say. 
Kim Jong Il
and the state are one to many North Koreans, and Bush may only strengthen North Korean
resolve and prevent internal contradictions from becoming manifest.

For many in the West, North Korea is a country that continues to break its word and
disregard international treaties as its people appear to swallow the propaganda 
they're fed.
These observers point to North Korea's disregard for the 1994 Agreed Framework signed 
in
Geneva, under which it pledged to abandon its nuclear ambitions, and to its admission 
of a
uranium-based weapons program.

>From North Korea's perspective, however, uranium research was never covered under the
1994 deal, which was limited to the nation's plutonium program. Atomic activities were
covered in general terms under an earlier joint Korean declaration, but most of that 
pact's
terms weren't implemented by either side. Nor, in North Korea's view, are inter-Korean
issues much of Washington's business anyway.

Washington intimated even before the current standoff that it was reluctant to 
complete two
promised nuclear reactors in the North, amid suggestions that it sealed the 1994 deal 
to do
so on the expectation that the country would soon collapse.

Furthermore, the U.S. never allowed an exchange of representative offices in the two
nations' capitals, as it had agreed. And it recently cut off promised fuel oil 
shipments to the
North in the middle of the winter as the deal unraveled.

>From Pyongyang's perspectives, these are more than enough broken promises to go
around.

"The Bush administration is now talking about dialogue, that they have no intention of
attacking" us, said Choe Jin Su, North Korea's ambassador to China, during a rare news
conference Friday. "But who can believe these words?"

The threatened next step for North Korea is to withdraw from the Nuclear 
Nonproliferation
Treaty. This, many outsiders believe, would only confirm the regime's deceitfulness 
and ill
intentions. Morality aside, however, experts say North Korea is within its rights. 
States are
free to pull out of international treaties if those pacts no longer serve their 
national interests.

When the United States debated entering the World Trade Organization, many reluctant
members of Congress took comfort in the knowledge that the country could withdraw at 
any
time if Americans, on balance, were getting a raw deal.

"I'm not going to argue with people who say North Korea is bad," said Scott Snyder, the
Seoul representative of the San Francisco-based Asia Foundation. "But there it is a bit
hypocritical, when other countries do exactly the same thing."
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives. 
For
information about reprinting this article, go to www.lats.com/rights.





Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times
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