Badger52
06-13-2012, 05:39
About the author Robert Collins
Robert Collins, who has lived and worked in South Korea for over three decades, has met with and interviewed North Korean defectors and refugees since the 1970’s. Mr. Collins received his Master’s Degree from a Korean-language program in international politics from Dankook University in Seoul in 1988. He is a 37-year-veteran of the U.S. Department of Defense. His professional focus during that period was political analysis of North Korea and Northeast Asian security issues. After retiring from the Department of Defense, Mr. Collins continued conducting research on the Kim regime’s political structure using Korean language sources at major Korean libraries
and think tanks, as well as through interviews with over 75 North Korean refugees. This report is based on that research. The author dedicates it to those refugees.
EXSUM (from source David Maxwell, Assoc. Director at Georgetown Security Studies Program):
The North Korean government assigns a “songbun” status to every citizen at birth based on the perceived political loyalty of his or her family going back generations. While a small, politically loyal class in North Korea is entitled to extensive privileges, the vast majority of citizens are relegated to a permanent lower status and then discriminated against for reasons they cannot control or change.
Mr. Maxwell goes on to say of Mr. Collins' report:
I will make one very bold statement about this report. For all those who deal with north Korea planning and policies, if you have not read this report you do not have the basic foundation for understanding the Human Domain in North Korea and if you want to be effective in military, intelligence, psychological, civil affairs, as well as policy and strategic planning for North Korean issues you must have a thorough and detailed understanding of this report.
There are tremendous operational implications from this report from the PSYOP/MISO and strategic communications perspective to how to deal with the security apparatus to determining how local areas should be administered during a post-conflict or post-regime collapse situation. It provides us with information for anticipating the complex problems the alliance will face in North Korea.
LINK to 4.2MB PDF (http://hrnk.org/wp-content/uploads/HRNK_Songbun_FINALFINAL.pdf)
Robert Collins, who has lived and worked in South Korea for over three decades, has met with and interviewed North Korean defectors and refugees since the 1970’s. Mr. Collins received his Master’s Degree from a Korean-language program in international politics from Dankook University in Seoul in 1988. He is a 37-year-veteran of the U.S. Department of Defense. His professional focus during that period was political analysis of North Korea and Northeast Asian security issues. After retiring from the Department of Defense, Mr. Collins continued conducting research on the Kim regime’s political structure using Korean language sources at major Korean libraries
and think tanks, as well as through interviews with over 75 North Korean refugees. This report is based on that research. The author dedicates it to those refugees.
EXSUM (from source David Maxwell, Assoc. Director at Georgetown Security Studies Program):
The North Korean government assigns a “songbun” status to every citizen at birth based on the perceived political loyalty of his or her family going back generations. While a small, politically loyal class in North Korea is entitled to extensive privileges, the vast majority of citizens are relegated to a permanent lower status and then discriminated against for reasons they cannot control or change.
Mr. Maxwell goes on to say of Mr. Collins' report:
I will make one very bold statement about this report. For all those who deal with north Korea planning and policies, if you have not read this report you do not have the basic foundation for understanding the Human Domain in North Korea and if you want to be effective in military, intelligence, psychological, civil affairs, as well as policy and strategic planning for North Korean issues you must have a thorough and detailed understanding of this report.
There are tremendous operational implications from this report from the PSYOP/MISO and strategic communications perspective to how to deal with the security apparatus to determining how local areas should be administered during a post-conflict or post-regime collapse situation. It provides us with information for anticipating the complex problems the alliance will face in North Korea.
LINK to 4.2MB PDF (http://hrnk.org/wp-content/uploads/HRNK_Songbun_FINALFINAL.pdf)