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March 30, 2004

Turmoil in Taiwan

The Post's Philip Pan and David Hoffman report:

President Chen Shui-bian declared Monday that his narrow reelection victory was a mandate from voters to press ahead with an aggressive agenda to develop Taiwan as an "independent, sovereign country" despite the risk of war with China.

And washingtonpost.com, in relentless pursuit of online journalistic excellence, has the entire transcript of the interview with Chen posted on the site. Nice.

Here's a piece from the new Foreign Affairs that says (and I paraphrase) "Hell no Taiwan does not need to be all declaring independence right now."

Also, I don't know if you remember, but Chen is the guy who got shot a day before the election.

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Posted March 30, 2004 at 10:33 | Comments (0) | Permasnark
File under: Lake of Fire

November 19, 2003

Anybody Got $1.4 Trillion?

From James Brooke's story about North Korea in today's New York Times:

"In our view, it's only a question of time when North Korea collapses because its current economic model is not sustainable," John Chambers, managing director for sovereign ratings at Standard & Poor's, told reporters here recently. An S.& P. statement added: "Although some other Asian nations that used to have centrally planned economies have successfully moved to a market-based system, the North Korean leadership probably lacks the flexibility and the vision to undertake such a change."

Citing North Korea's nuclear bomb program and its economic backwardness as justification for not raising South Korea's bond rating, Mr. Chambers said that rebuilding the North could cost the South up to $1.4 trillion, roughly twice the cost of unifying the two Germanies.

Read: "We're afraid that Kim Jong Il, like Danny the Squirrel, loves the nuts."

Clearly, the North Korean status quo is not acceptable. I mean, this is a country so oppressive it makes "1984" seem like "Star Trek: The Next Generation."

But there's a big question on the other side of a North Korean collapse, which I, er, hadn't really thought about before I read this article: Who pays?

So I can understand why South Korea is keen to see Kim Jong Il's regime go out with a soft sigh, like a deflating balloon, and not with a crash, or a bang.

This is one of those situations where the utilitarian calculus is far from clear.

Related: Peter Maass profiled Kim Jong Il recently. And I profiled his profile!

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Posted November 19, 2003 at 12:34 | Comments (0) | Permasnark
File under: Lake of Fire, Snarkpolitik
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