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View Full Version : North Korean spy coup upsets Red Army


Surf n Turf
10-20-2006, 15:11
Maybe China really didn't not know about the North Korean "bomb test"

SnT

North's spy coup upsets Red Army
Rowan Callick
21oct06
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,20618639-601,00.html

CHINA'S People's Liberation Army is pushing the Government to get tough with North Korea after a Chinese spy sold information to Pyongyang that led to the collapse of Beijing's main intelligence network in the Stalinist state.

A well-informed Hong Kong-based Chinese language publication, Asia Week, reported that the co-ordinator of one of China's intelligence networks in North Korea, who was based in the Chinese border city of Yanji, sold key information to the North Koreans for about $400,000.
"As a result, the network was dissolved. Since then, China's intelligence on North Korea has been weak," the report said. This accounts for Chinese intelligence continuing to downplay as unlikely a North Korean nuclear test, even on the eve of this month's underground blast.
The October 9 nuclear test, in defiance of Chinese urging, coupled with the bribery and the shooting of a 19-year-old Chinese border guard by North Korean soldiers a year ago, has helped drive the PLA, the most powerful institution in China after the Communist Party, into pushing the Government to get tough with Pyongyang.
Asia Week said yesterday that elements within the PLA were seeking the amendment of the alliance between China and North Korea formally agreed in 1961.
On Monday, the PLA held a memorial ceremony for Li Liang, who was killed by fire from five North Korean soldiers when he shot at them after they had crossed the border. Border guard Li, in the army's Second Regiment, was attempting to prevent the kidnapping of Chinese intelligence officers at Guangping, a small town on the 1300km frontier.
An officer at Yanbian PLA base later said: "We have designated him as a model soldier." A series of 30 articles about him is being published in the army newspaper.
The officer said the kidnappers eventually escaped without their targets: "North Koreans crossing the border to smuggle, rob or beg are quite common here."
Li Jiehua, the father of the dead soldier, said that he had been told the North Koreans were intending "to kidnap Chinese intelligence agents responsible for North Korean information, who were based in a villa in Guangping".
The Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy, in Hong Kong, said that China had protested to the North Korean ambassador in Beijing and insisted that Pyongyang hand over those responsible for the shooting.
But North Korea failed to respond and, the centre said, "the relationship between the two armies has deteriorated rapidly".
Incursions and kidnappings by North Korean soldiers have become so common that in the main Chinese border-crossing city of Dandong, people joke: "Don't say anything against North Korea, or you'll find yourself there tomorrow."
Early this year, eight North Korean soldiers attempted to rob the Liangshui coalmine in the Yanbian border area. One was shot dead, three were captured and four escaped. China is building a substantial barbed-wire fence along sections of the border, including a road giving easy access for military vehicles.
Asia Week cited a senior PLA official in Beijing as saying: "North Korea will turn out to be a running dog, and will sell China off at any time, as soon as the US agrees to talk directly with them.' It would instead place a higher priority on deals with the US, Russia and Japan.
The Beijing-aligned Hong Kong newspaper Wen Wei Po reported that after the nuclear test, all leave was cancelled for PLA troops in the Jilin province, which borders North Korea, and anti-chemical warfare training had been stepped up.
After North Korea conducted missile tests in July, the PLA deployed an extra 2000 troops along the border, boosting the force to 7000. Despite the tensions, the official China Daily newspaper reported on Thursday that "life seems to be going on as normal" at Dandong, less than 150km from the nuclear test site.

Radar Rider
10-20-2006, 15:49
While the civilized world may believe that China is a North Korea backer and its lone benefactor in the post Cold War world, the reality is that China is just as befuddled as the rest of the world. China supports North Korea for two simple reasons: The DPRK continues to exist as a buffer against Japan and South Korea, and if the Pyongyang Regime falls, China will be inundated with refugees. A pro-western united Korea on her border worries China. Additionally, as long as Japan butts heads with the NK, they have less energy to expend on China.

I'm not defending China at all here, but just trying to explain that her support of North Korea is purely self-serving.

aricbcool
10-20-2006, 17:07
I'm not defending China at all here, but just trying to explain that her support of North Korea is purely self-serving.

I agree. One more point to ponder is that should NK fall, China will turn into the next biggest communist threat. Where right now the bulk of our diplomatic pressure is on NK, I think we'd see an increase in pressure on China (on issues such as human rights, Taiwan, etc.) once the NK threat is gone.

--Aric

Radar Rider
10-20-2006, 20:15
I agree. One more point to ponder is that should NK fall, China will turn into the next biggest communist threat. Where right now the bulk of our diplomatic pressure is on NK, I think we'd see an increase in pressure on China (on issues such as human rights, Taiwan, etc.) once the NK threat is gone.

--Aric
You are spot on. North Korea continues to be the "boogey man" about whom we worry. Their piddly ass "nuclear test" and failed ICBM launches prove that they are only a little country that is trying to be big; the degree of their threat compared to the degree of their actual threat is about zero. The DPRK is about to die.