NY Times
 
The Day  After  
By BILL  KELLER
Published: April 29, 2012 

 
THE one thing everyone knows about _North  Korea_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/northkorea/index.html?inline
=nyt-geo)  is that we know very little about North Korea, except that it is 
 miserable, totalitarian, nuclear and erratic. It is the hermit kingdom, 
the dark  side of the moon. 
 
But thanks to many thousands of refugees who have  reached freedom by way 
of a long underground railroad through China, we know a  lot more now about 
the grim reality. We understand better how the government  sustains its 
dreadful power, and where that power could be faltering. Among  people who 
follow 
the country closely, there is fresh discussion of whether this  most 
durable of monster-states could be nearing its end days, and what we should  do 
about it.  
In recent weeks the news spotlight has focused on the  29-year-old novice 
tyrant _Kim  Jong-un_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/kim_jongun/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 , performing his family’s 
time-tested repertoire of bellicose  bluster. Like a lunatic waving an assault 
rifle as he dances on a high window  ledge, Kim galvanizes our attention. 
 
But the more interesting story is down below.  
I’ve just read Blaine Harden’s “_Escape  from Camp 14_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/12/books/escape-from-camp-14-by-blaine-harden.html?pagewanted=al
l) ,” the harrowing story of a young man’s flight from one of the  slave 
labor camps where as many as 200,000 political unreliables — a category  that 
includes not just those who run afoul of authority but their relatives for  
three generations — are sent to be starved, tortured and ultimately worked 
to  death. The political camps are just part of a larger network of 
detention sites  designed to crush any spark of free will. Harden’s story of 
Shin 
Dong-hyuk  differs from the best previous refugee narratives — “_The  
Aquariums of Pyongyang_ 
(http://books.google.com/books/about/The_Aquariums_of_Pyongyang.html?id=8XzbKfI2-GUC)
 ” by Kang Chol-hwan, Barbara Demick’s “_Nothing 
to Envy_ (http://nothingtoenvy.com/) ” — because Shin was in  every sense a 
product of Camp 14. Born in captivity to a pair of inmates picked  by camp 
commanders for a loveless bit of procreation, Shin grew up with no  
awareness of anything beyond the electrified fences. He is like the 
boy-narrator  of 
Emma Donoghue’s novel “Room,” whose entire world is the backyard shed 
where  he and his kidnapped mother are held captive. Except that the boy in 
“Room
”  knows love.  
Harden’s book, besides being a gripping story,  unsparingly told, carries a 
freight of intelligence about this black hole of a  country. It explains 
how the regime has endured longer than any of its bestial  prototypes: longer 
than Hitler, longer than Stalin, longer than Mao, longer than  Pol Pot. The 
tools are enforced isolation, debilitating fear, dehumanizing  hunger and 
utter dependence on the state. By the time he was a teenager, Shin  had 
watched a teacher beat a 6-year-old girl to death for hoarding five kernels  of 
corn; worse, he had betrayed his own mother and brother, and had witnessed  
their public execution without remorse.  
Yet Shin, who is not exactly a master escape artist,  manages to evade the 
state’s controls, and along his stumble to freedom he  encounters many 
others who — not in words, certainly, but in practice — are  defying the 
system. 
What strikes you is how the shackles of totalitarianism are  being corroded 
by bribery, barter and black-marketeering, including a thriving  
cross-border trade with China. It’s still a crushingly oppressive regime,  
arbitrary 
and brutal. But more often than you would imagine, need trumps fear.  
Harden’s narrative is reinforced by more systematic  studies. When David 
Hawk of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea  researched the first 
edition of his camp exposé “The Hidden Gulag” in 2003, some  3,000 North 
Koreans had found asylum in the South, including several score of  former 
political prisoners. When he returned for the second edition, just  published, 
the 
pool of refugees was 23,000, and included hundreds who had  endured 
detention. The updated report is a vivid chronicle of horrors,  illustrated by 
crisp Google Earth photos that make the slave camps as palpable  as suburban 
real estate on Zillow.  
And yet, Hawk told me, “The numbers who want reform  and opening, and the 
numbers of people outside the state system, are growing.”  
Fifteen years ago, when many Korea scholars were  predicting that — with 
the end of life support from the former Soviet Union —  the Pyongyang regime 
could not survive, _Marcus Noland_ 
(http://www.iie.com/staff/author_bio.cfm?author_id=26)  of  the Peterson 
Institute for International Economics wrote a 
contrarian piece in  Foreign Affairs explaining “_Why  North Korea Will 
Muddle Through_ 
(http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/53230/marcus-noland/why-north-korea-will-muddle-through)
 .” He was right at the time, so he is 
worth  listening to when he says that these days he suspects the regime is as 
fragile  as it has ever been. Many of the most watchful experts agree. The 
obvious reason  for doubt about the regime’s stability is the new leader, who 
seems even less  qualified than his father and grandfather to manage his 
threadbare police state.  His first attempt to prove his manhood by _firing  
off 
a long-range rocket_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/14/world/asia/international-condemnation-follows-north-koreas-failed-rocket-launch.html?ref=northko
rea)  ended in an emasculating misfire.  
More important, Kim Jong-un inherits a system whose  legitimacy, such as it 
ever was, is being rotted away from below. Korea-watchers  have an 
expression to describe what seems to be happening, as a lawless commerce  
undermines 
central control. They say “the market is eating the state.”  
Along with food, clothing and tools, the border trade  has brought the 
North Korean populace information about the world outside. North  Korea has 
almost no Internet, but smuggled radios, TVs, DVDs and cellphones have  become 
more common, circumventing the propaganda monopoly.  
“North Korea has not discussed the Arab Spring,”  Noland told me. “But in 
the marketplaces, people were talking about Egypt.” 
 
Don’t expect a popular uprising of that kind in North Korea. There is no  
Twitter-equipped youth brigade, no Muslim Brotherhood. As one Korea hand told 
 me, “People surviving on 800 calories a day literally don’t have the 
energy to  confront the regime.” The more likely scenarios involve some kind of 
collapse,  sparked by Borgia-style infighting, an army coup or a military 
exchange with one  of the neighbors.
 
If the regime is truly tottering, we may have been  focused on the wrong 
questions about North Korea.  
The engagement camp asks: How can we lure them back to  the table so that 
we can persuade them to disarm? I’m all for diplomacy, and  would be 
overjoyed by a verifiable peace deal. But the North Korean leaders have  
established 
to all but the most wishful thinkers that they have no intention of  
shedding their weapons programs, and that they cannot be trusted to keep a  
bargain.  
The regime-change camp asks: Where can we squeeze to  hasten the collapse? 
We can tighten sanctions aimed at the elite and amplify the  honest 
information we broadcast to the populace. And let’s stop soft-pedaling  the 
truth 
about the slave camps. But there’s no strangling the Kim regime  without the 
help of China; and China has legitimate fears that a bursting North  Korea 
would spill over its borders.  
The big question we should be asking is: What about  the Day After? If the 
regime’s days are numbered, the end is likely to be  messier than anything we
’ve seen in the Arab Spring. Why aren’t we sitting down  with the Chinese, 
South Koreans, Japanese and Russians and making a plan to  prevent nuclear 
material from being sold to the Russian mafia or the Chinese  triads; to 
keep some panicky general from incinerating Seoul (minutes away as  the 
artillery shell flies); to dissuade China or Russia from sending in troops  to 
take 
advantage; to prevent Nuremberg-minded prison commandants from  bulldozing 
the evidence into mass graves; to fend off an even more monumental  human 
calamity than the famine of the mid-90s? Then, how do we reunify Korea  
without bankrupting the South? These are the questions we and North Korea’s  
neighbors should be asking, together and urgently.  
Because when North Korea goes, the Day After is likely  to last 20 years.

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