Small Wars Journal

12/25/2020 News & Commentary – National Security

Fri, 12/25/2020 - 12:29pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. Has Navalny's Prank Shattered the FSB Myth Once and For All?

2. Split Up NSA and CYBERCOM

3. No, China Did Not 'Expel' a US Warship from its Territory, Navy Says

4. A pandemic atlas: How COVID-19 took over the world in 2020

5. 5 Places You'll Most Likely Catch COVID, According to Dr. Gupta

6. COVID Symptoms Normally Appear in This Order, Study Finds

7.  Hey, soldiers and spies - think twice about that home genetic ancestry test

8. How to solve logistical challenges during a South China Sea conflict

9. Why Americans Are Turning Inwards

10. Covid-19 Caused Chaos for Investors in 2020. These Hedge Funds Earned Billions.

11. Trump thanks military, healthcare workers in Christmas message: "Our gatherings might look different'

12. Another successful Christmas Eve for NORAD crews tracking and escorting Santa Claus

13. Culture Eats Strategy: Personal Incentives Set the Menu

14. Teaching Technology, Innovation, and Modern War at Stanford, Part 9: A Conversation with James Mattis

15. Clash of globalization and nationalism

16. Apologise, Afghanistan tells China after busting its espionage cell in Kabul

 

1. Has Navalny's Prank Shattered the FSB Myth Once and For All?

The Moscow Times · by Sergey Radchenko · December 23, 2020

You have to admit that it was a damn good "prank."

 

2. Split Up NSA and CYBERCOM

defenseone.com · by Javed Ali and Adam Maruyama · December 24, 2020

Some radical proposals:

“We would also advocate for moving the NSA from its organizational home in the Defense Department. It should be led by a Presidentially-appointed, Senate-confirmed civilian who reports to the DNI. Such a move would improve NSA's existing authorities and capabilities, place it under the intelligence umbrella for which it's best suited, and improve its ability to serve national-level and military-specific intelligence requirements.”

 

3. No, China Did Not 'Expel' a US Warship from its Territory, Navy Says

military.com · by Gina Harkins · December 23, 2020


4. A pandemic atlas: How COVID-19 took over the world in 2020

It has been a year unlike any probably in all our lifetimes.

At least when we get to 2021 we can say Hindsight is truly 2020.

A pandemic atlas: How COVID-19 took over the world in 2020

https://apnews.com/article/pandemics-brazil-israel-india-coronavirus-pandemic-c1ba685119fd12108dd6d89f2fb89702

 

5. 5 Places You'll Most Likely Catch COVID, According to Dr. Gupta

eatthis.com · December 24, 2020

A public service announcement.  Follow the science.

 

6. COVID Symptoms Normally Appear in This Order, Study Finds

eatthis.com · December 25, 2020

Another public service announcement.

 

7. Hey, soldiers and spies - think twice about that home genetic ancestry test

rollcall.com · by Gopal Ratnam · December 24, 2020

When you think about it this could be one of the most creative espionage operations in history.  Just imagine the data that people are willingly providing.  We work so hard to protect our liberty from our own government's over reach yet we willingly provide critical private and personal information to corporations that have links to hostile governments.  But at least we will be able to fill out our family tree.

I can see a future question on the security clearance form SF 86  assess your security risk.  

"Have you ever submitted your DNA to a genealogical tracking company?  Is so, when, and to what company(s)?"

While it might not necessarily be disqualifying it may limit the type of work you may do and may require some mitigation measures.

 

8. How to solve logistical challenges during a South China Sea conflict

Defense News · by Scott Trail · December 24, 2020

The tyranny of distance and the missile threat are two key conditions that must be overcome or at least dealt with as effectively as possible.

 

9. Why Americans Are Turning Inwards

The National Interest · by Nikolas K. Gvosdev · December 24, 2020

This is probably the key point: "but also be linked to concrete benefits that Americans will receive."  The ability to describe those benefits and make them meaningful to the broad electorate will be key to the future.

Sober conclusion:  "A new administration must recognize, as the Munich Security Conference has, that the American public is "now both less able to be a guarantor of the international order and less willing to make over proportionate contributions" to sustain it. Rather than seeing this as a problem to be ignored, the Biden team should build on the campaign focus of strengthening the overt linkages of American foreign and security policy to the doorstep concerns of the voters. If Americans embrace U.S. global engagement as vital to their personal health, their paychecks, and even the security of their smartphones, the foundations for a new and enduring political consensus for U.S. foreign policy can be laid."

 

10. Covid-19 Caused Chaos for Investors in 2020. These Hedge Funds Earned Billions.

WSJ · by Juliet Chung· December 25, 2020

 

11. Trump thanks military, healthcare workers in Christmas message: "Our gatherings might look different'

Newsweek · by Janice Williams · December 25, 2020

Video at the link.  

 

12. Another successful Christmas Eve for NORAD crews tracking and escorting Santa Claus

baytoday.ca 

Whew.  I was worried about this. :-)

 

13. Culture Eats Strategy: Personal Incentives Set the Menu

wavellroom.com · by Scottie Mac · December 15, 2020

You can listen to the 10 minute podcast at the link

Interesting conclusion: "Critically, the current system forces junior and mid-level commanders to advocate, rather than act, and focus on delivering today over adapting for tomorrow. This limits innovation, adaptation and agility. This research indicates that military personnel are motivated by making a difference and supporting the staff they lead. Empowering them to act rather than advocate is an incentive in itself. Part 3 of our series explores how the MOD might position itself to empower individuals and harness a self-adaptive network. It would require a bold strategy and change in the culture of what it means to be in command. Individual incentives hold the key. Peter Drucker famously said that "culture eats strategy for breakfast"; economists show us that when faced with complexity, individual incentives set the menu."

 

14. Teaching Technology, Innovation, and Modern War at Stanford, Part 9: A Conversation with James Mattis

mwi.usma.edu · by Steve Blank · December 24, 2020

Video at the link.

I recommend reading his final story with this conclusion: "Think about that my fine young friends. On your worst day. I want you to remember that story. Think about that. That he would give anything right now to be sitting where I'm sitting and his daughter sitting where you're sitting, right now. As imperfect as we are, as angry as we are at each other in this country right now-and it seems angrier than I was even at terrorists when I'm shooting them. Think of how great this country is on its worst day, and then roll your sleeves up and make it better. It's that simple-make it stronger. Keep faith with each other, help each other. And remember three words: put others first. And you won't be going to some shrink when you're forty-five years old wondering what you did with your life. Have a good night, young folks. And thanks for having me here."

 

15. Clash of globalization and nationalism

dailyasianage.com · by Brigadier General (Retd) AF Jaglul Ahmed · December 25, 2020

A view from Bangladesh.  The general covers a lot of ground in this short essay.

Conclusion:

“Under this challenging environment, champion of globalization are confounded as to how to grab the benefit of global economy, enjoy the cultural imperialism, while keep extremism at bay without looking at the source of it and seal off. Ultra-nationalists, at the same time, believe that uniqueness of culture must be maintained for racial supremacy and allow narrower space to other cultural minorities to live as subjugated class only.

Imperial vision of globalization doesn't like boundaries to establish economic and cultural supremacy, while the champions of religion denies national boundaries to spread in unstoppable pace against the secular vision of globalization. The big question is - how the process of globalization could be reversed and concept of nation state changed to new social, economic and political identity for peaceful and harmonious life for all race under any colour and creed.”

 

16. Apologise, Afghanistan tells China after busting its espionage cell in Kabul

hindustantimes.com · by Shishir Gupta · December 25, 2020

 

-----------------

 

"Every strike brings me closer to the next home run." 

- Babe Ruth

 

"I think the two things most opposed to good counsel are haste and passion; haste usually goes hand in hand with folly, passion with coarseness and narrowness of mind."

- Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War

 

"My idea was that the role of the special forces were to train Vietnamese to behave as guerrillas, harassing the supply lines down through the mountains of the, ah, the Viet Cong. And the special American special forces were to train their special forces to do that."

- Roger Hilsman

12/25/2020 News & Commentary – Korea

Fri, 12/25/2020 - 11:17am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. Best Christmas present ever (Korea)

2. Canada endorses free speech amid South Korea leaflet ban

3.  S. Korea's virus cases hit all-time high despite tougher distancing rules

4.  First shipment of COVID-19 vaccine arrives for U.S. troops in S. Korea

5.  Kim Jong-un 2nd-most searched figure on Google in 2020

6.  Leaflet wars

7. Defense minister to expedite 2nd stage FOC for OPCON transfer

8. U.S. spy plane flies near North Korea ahead of Party Congress

9. North Korea construction stalled in pandemic year, analysts say

10. South Korea conducted Dokdo defense drill earlier this month

11. Central Anti-epidemic Committee inspects quarantine efforts ahead of the Eighth Party Congress

12. U.S. stresses importance of free flow of information to N. Korea

13. This Book Turns Everything You Thought You Knew About North Korea Upside Down

 

1. Best Christmas present ever (Korea)

The Korea Times· by Ned Forney · December 24, 2020

This is what Americans do.

 

2.  Canada endorses free speech amid South Korea leaflet ban

upi.com· by Elizabeth Shim · December 24, 2020

A lot of international opposition to the "Kim Yo-jong law."  Does South Korean want to remain part of the like minded democracies of the world?

 

3. S. Korea's virus cases hit all-time high despite tougher distancing rules

en.yna.co.kr · by 이민지 · December 25, 2020

COVID is keeping most of the world from having a Merry Christmas.

 

4. First shipment of COVID-19 vaccine arrives for U.S. troops in S. Korea

en.yna.co.kr · by 김광태 · December 25, 2020

 

5. Kim Jong-un 2nd-most searched figure on Google in 2020

The Korea Times · December 25, 2020

This should make Kim feel good. After all he craves attention and wants to be in the spotlight.

 

6. Leaflet wars

The Korea Times· by Donald Kirk · December 24, 2020

You can always count on Don Kirk for scathing criticism and pithy writing.


7. Defense minister to expedite 2nd stage FOC for OPCON transfer

donga.com· December 25, 2020

Transition.

We have to get this done but get it done right.  I am sure the Defense Minister has to support President Moon's position but these kinds of public statements are not helpful for the alliance.  The ROK and US military leadership must be fully committed to getting this done, but as I said, getting it done right.

 

8. U.S. spy plane flies near North Korea ahead of Party Congress

We must sustain ISR operations around Korea.

upi.com · by Elizabeth Shim · December 24, 2020

 

9. North Korea construction stalled in pandemic year, analysts say

upi.com By Elizabeth Shim· December 24, 2020

A BFO (blinding flash of the obvious). But we should also remember that more important than construction and mitigating the effects of COVID is the regime's priority for the people is ideological training versus construction work.

 

10. South Korea conducted Dokdo defense drill earlier this month

The Korea Times · December 25, 2020

There should be no question DokDo belongs to Korea.  However, these kinds of exercises do not help the Korea-Japan relationship.

 

11. Central Anti-epidemic Committee inspects quarantine efforts ahead of the Eighth Party Congress

dailynk.com · by Lee Chae Un · December 25, 2020

Excerpts:

“The heads of inminban, North Korea's lowest administrative unit, are keeping close tabs on hygiene among the households they watch over. In practice, this means that inminban heads are checking that people are abiding by quarantine rules and sanitizing their houses and hands four times a day.

Locals have reportedly been ordered to make their antiseptic solution from the extract provided by their inminban. One source said that the head of a local inminban told residents under her charge to boil water with half a spoon of salt for two hours if they are running low on antiseptic solution.”

 

12. U.S. stresses importance of free flow of information to N. Korea

en.yna.co.kr · by 송상호 · December 22, 2020

We need an alliance information and influence activities campaign.

 

13. This Book Turns Everything You Thought You Knew About North Korea Upside Down

covertactionmagazine.com · December 17, 2020

This is quite the revisionist or even alternative history.  I will probably order and read this book but based on this review it will go into the sub-genre of Korean security books that could be called "blame America for all that is wrong in Korea."

 

----------------

 

"Every strike brings me closer to the next home run." 

- Babe Ruth

 

"I think the two things most opposed to good counsel are haste and passion; haste usually goes hand in hand with folly, passion with coarseness and narrowness of mind."

- Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War

 

"My idea was that the role of the special forces were to train Vietnamese to behave as guerrillas, harassing the supply lines down through the mountains of the, ah, the Viet Cong. And the special American special forces were to train their special forces to do that."

- Roger Hilsman

 

12/24/2020 News & Commentary – Korea

Thu, 12/24/2020 - 10:33am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. Unification ministry drafting guidelines on leafleting ban to clarify 'scope of application': official

2. N. Korea's newspaper calls for powerful defense capabilities

3.  Gov't Excuse for Crackdown on Free Speech Is Absurd (South Korea)

4.  Public disapproval rating of Moon soars to record high 59.1 pct: Realmeter

5. How South Korea’s early coronavirus success left it struggling to contain latest wave

6. At War Online: South Korea and China

7. S. Korea signs deals to purchase vaccines from Janssen, Pfizer

8. Tide turns on Kim Jong-un's plan for North Korean 'Ibiza' beach resort

9.  North Korea intensifies inspections of personnel in China

10. USFK to Start Coronavirus Vaccinations Next Week

11. How Operation Christmas, leaflets in North Korea and CIA pop put a creative twist on propaganda

12. Red Cross delivered $700K of COVID-19 aid to North Korea, report says

13. Biden’s Approach to North Korea and the NPT Option

14. North Korea Uses Dead Bodies of Prisoners as 'Human Fertilizer' on Flower Hill

15. Report: N. Korea hackers linked to site targeting COVID-19 vaccine developer

16. Golden Globes Under Fire for Shutting ‘Minari’ Out of Best Picture: ‘Racist,’ ‘Complete Bullsh*t’

17. North Korean media paint a dark picture of South's virus fight

18. N. Korean hacker opens phishing website for Severance Hospital

 

1. Unification ministry drafting guidelines on leafleting ban to clarify 'scope of application': official

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · December 24, 2020

I respectfully disagree with the Ministry of Unification view and attempt to clarify the law.  I strongly recommend the Moon Administration reconsider what both our countries believe are inalienable and universal human rights.  The government must be strictly restrained from limiting freedom of expression.

Let me reprise some of my previous comments.  

The rationale for this Kim Yo-jong law is flawed. You must not appease north Korea.  This will not protect Korean citizens nor will it cause north Korea to reciprocate in a positive way.  And even more than appeasement, this law is directly contributing to the survival of the Kim family regime and assisting the regime in denying the human rights of the Korean people in the north (access to information) because the regime must deny the human rights of the Korean people in order to remain in power.  The regime fears the Korean people more than it fears the US.  We should never forget that.

In addition this law is based on erroneous assumptions about the nature and objectives of the mafia-like crime family cult known as the Kim family regime.  I urge the Moon and incoming Biden administration to reassess alliance assumptions about the regime and revise combined alliance policies and strategies based on better assumptions. The most flawed assumption is that Kim Jong-un shares President Moon's vision of peace and reconciliation.  This flawed assumption is what is leading to failed policy and strategy.

The Moon administration should realize it is going against the shared values of the community of democracies,  It risks making South Korea an outlier and if it continues to enact laws that restrict basic human freedoms then it risks becoming pariah.  And after the rights issue which should be paramount, the practical reason for overturning this "gag law" as Lord Alton terms it (or Kim Jo-jong law as others call it) is that it will not accomplish anything positive with regard to north Korea.  Instead the regime will double down on its blackmail diplomacy because So9uth Korean appeasement shows the regime its political warfare strategy is achieving positive effects.

The ROK government has made an egregious mistake and we cannot sit idly by and not call it out.  We are allies with shared values. This law goes against those shared values.  

The ROKG cannot put a positive spin on this with its argument that this is about defending Korean citizens in the South from north Korean hostile action.  

Unfortunately the real rationale is simply the misguided belief that appeasing the regime will change its behavior.

I am reminded of Benjamin Franklin's quote: "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."

 

But the very best statement comes from US Congressman MCCaul:  “Freedom of expression is a core democratic value,” McCaul said. “A bright future for the Korean Peninsula rests on North Korea becoming more like South Korea — not the other way around.”


The real issue that should be discussed is how should the ROK/US alliance conduct effective information and influence activities to target the three target audiences in the north: the regime elite, the 2d tier leadership, and the population.  What the assemblymen is really describing is the ROK and the ROK/US alliance have too long neglected the information instrument of national power.  Because of this the escapees (defectors) have been left to their own devices and as outlined in this excerpt have conducted some activities that are counter productive to effective messaging. 

 

Excerpts:

“South Korea and the US have repeatedly said that they have no intention of invading North Korea and causing a regime change so that the North would give up the willingness to develop nuclear weapons. However, allowing anti-North Korea propaganda broadcasts and sending leaflets with photoshopped naked pictures of Kim Jong Un’s wife, Ri Sol Ju, from the near-border area are considered psychological warfare, which would be viewed as an act of war.

The Korean Peninsula is legally in a state of war. The end of the war has not been declared. It is quite difficult to persuade North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons program while neglecting such psychological warfare. The core content of the several inter-Korean agreements is the prohibition of mutual slander and mutual recognition of each other’s governmental system. North Korea does not distribute propaganda leaflets to South Korea. On the other hand, it is difficult to force North Korea to abide by inter-Korean agreements while South Korea does not.

We really need to develop a comprehensive and effective Alliance information and influence activities campaign.

Our recommendations:

The United States and South Korea should implement a comprehensive and aggressive IIA campaign in North Korea. The focus should be three-fold: create internal threats against the regime from among the elite, provide the second-tier leadership with alternative paths to survival, and prepare the Korean people for eventual unification under a United Republic of Korea. To do so, we recommend the following steps:

Develop organizational infrastructure to facilitate IIA: The United States and South Korea lack a single organization to direct IIA against North Korea. Washington and Seoul should establish institutions that would work together to plan and shape combined IIA. Fortunately, as discussed earlier, the United States already has numerous tools at its disposal, such as the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor; Voice of America; and Radio Free Asia. The United States should centralize these activities under an oversight organization. This organization would coordinate all agencies and departments and work with non-government organizations.

Under the Moon administration, there will likely be concerns that IIA could upset diplomatic conditions. Admittedly, an IIA campaign targeting Pyongyang could risk stirring additional short-term tensions with Pyongyang. But U.S. diplomats should remind their ROK counterparts that those tensions may ultimately forge a path to the peaceful denuclearization of North Korea. U.S. diplomats also need to remind their South Korean allies that Seoul’s persistent use of concessions has not elicited progress with Pyongyang.

Encourage Moon’s government to increase intra-Korean people-to-people exchanges: Washington should encourage intra-Korean engagement by sponsoring people-to-people educational and cultural exchanges. Such exchanges could expose North Korea’s intelligentsia and emerging elites to democratic concepts as well as personal relationships with South Koreans.241

Implement aggressive IIA targeting the North Korea regime: After building a baseline consensus, the United States and South Korea should implement increasingly aggressive IIA targeting the North Korean regime. These activities should inform North Koreans of their universal human rights and civil liberties that the regime is failing to respect. This will undermine the legitimacy of the Kim family regime and give hope to the people living in the North. Alternate sources of information can put regime propaganda in perspective.

This campaign could also help lay the initial groundwork for emergent leaders who could replace Kim and who might seek to unify with the South as equal partners under the values of individual liberty and freedom, liberal democracy, and a free market economy. At a minimum, this campaign could help persuade Kim that the status quo poses a greater threat than good faith negotiations with the United States and South Korea. The ultimate goal is to create internal divisions and threats that will influence Kim to denuclearize.

Increase exposure of North Koreans to the outside world: IIA must exploit North Koreans’ growing access to DVDs, USB drives, and smart phones from outside the country.242 These media devices can carry content popular among North Koreans, such as South Korean dramas, which can implicitly help Koreans in the North better understand the difference between the regime they have and the government they deserve.243

Establish a Korea Defector Information Institute (KDII): There is no single organization in the United States or South Korea that harnesses the information of defectors to support IIA. If both nations worked together to establish a KDII, it could serve as a repository for defector information to inform policymakers, strategists, and those responsible for developing IIA themes and messages. This institute should utilize defector knowledge and advice in devising appropriate messages and communications techniques. It could also encourage North Koreans to defect, particularly members of Office 39 (also known as Department 39), who are knowledgeable of the Kim family regime’s finances.

Provide military support to ROK-U.S. government programs for IIA: S. Psychological Operations (PSYOP) forces should be deployed on a permanent basis to support ROK PSYOP forces as part of a national-level alliance IIA campaign. ROK and U.S. PSYOP forces should advise and assist defector organizations to synchronize themes, messages, and dissemination methods to ensure unity of effort.

 

2. N. Korea's newspaper calls for powerful defense capabilities

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · December 24, 2020

We can laugh off what is often seemingly over the top rhetoric all we want, but the  Propaganda and Agitation department often tells us what is the real regime policy and intent.  This is one of those cases.  Singun is military first politics not just policy.   It permeates every aspect of the party and ruling functions.

I recommend reading the work of Robert Collins: 

What South Korea And The US Need To Understand About North Korea

Kim Jong-un’s Hats: the Concept of Authority in North Korea

North Korea’s ORGANIZATION AND GUIDANCE DEPARTMENT" The Control Tower of Human Rights Denial

Pyongyang Republic: North Korea’s Capital of Human Rights Denial

 

3. Gov't Excuse for Crackdown on Free Speech Is Absurd (South Korea)

english.chosun.com

From the Chosun Ilbo editorial board.  I fear the Moon administration is tone deaf to such criticism.

 

4. Public disapproval rating of Moon soars to record high 59.1 pct: Realmeter

en.yna.co.kr · by 김나영 · December 24, 2020

And I will bet these statistics do not yet factor in the new "Kim Yo-jong law."

 

5. How South Korea’s early coronavirus success left it struggling to contain latest wave

scmp.com

Excerpts:

“Stung by criticism his government’s plan to begin providing vaccines in February or March – months after some other countries – was too relaxed, Moon on Tuesday promised a public vaccination programme would “not begin too late” and his office emphasised the country would eventually buy enough doses to cover more than 85 per cent of the population. Lim said the government should have prepared for worst case scenarios but failed to scale up efforts it had made in earlier waves, such as quickly securing enough beds in private hospitals.

“We came to believe that everything was going to be OK if we wear masks well and stick to what we had been doing,” he said. “But that belief held authorities back from looking at why they were slow to act, and whether there were lessons to learn, from both successes and failures.”

 

6. At War Online: South Korea and China

thediplomat.com · by Troy Stangarone · December 24, 2020

Conclusion: "Despite being self-defeating, China’s embrace of a more assertive public diplomacy stance suggests that the use of social media controversies to drive narratives might also be reflective of the future of relations between South Korea and China."

 

7. S. Korea signs deals to purchase vaccines from Janssen, Pfizer

en.yna.co.kr · by 김은정 · December 24, 2020

Will this stem the criticism of the Moon administration?

 

8. Tide turns on Kim Jong-un's plan for North Korean 'Ibiza' beach resort

nzherald.co.nz

Vanity project.

 

9. North Korea intensifies inspections of personnel in China

dailynk.com· by Jang Seul Gi · December 24, 2020

China is complicit in north Korea human rights abuses.

Excerpts:

“Daily NK previously reported that in mid-November, the authorities ordered the North Korean embassy in China to carry out inspections of the heads of trading companies, labor managers, managers of North Korean restaurants, and other personnel in the country.

Cadres from the embassy and local consulates reportedly inspected individuals’ mobile phones and other personal items during one-on-one interviews.

They are also looking to see if homes have books from other countries or Bibles, and are asking if occupants have come into contact with such things.”

 

10. USFK to Start Coronavirus Vaccinations Next Week

english.chosun.com· December 24, 2020

Excerpt: "That includes KATUSA soldiers and civilian Korean workers in the military," a military source here said."

 

11. How Operation Christmas, leaflets in North Korea and CIA pop put a creative twist on propaganda

PSYOP.

ABC.net.au · December 23, 2020

Who would have thought of linkage of Korea, Colombia, Germany and the USSR?

I bet Soo Kim could take both Kim Yo-jong and north Korean YouTuber Un A in two out of three falls.  See photos below.

Seriously, Soo Kim offers some important views on PSYOP.

 

12. Red Cross delivered $700K of COVID-19 aid to North Korea, report says

upi.com · by Elizabeth Shim · December 23, 2020

A miniscule number but if there are no COVID cases in north Korea perhaps they do not need much help.

 

13. Biden’s Approach to North Korea and the NPT Option

fpif.org · by John Feffer · December 23, 2020

Note the subtitle.

With a twist -  part of the "NPT proposal" been tried - the 1994 Agreed Framework.  But do we really think we are going to offer to reduce our nuclear weapons and would any reduction or promise of such really have a positive impact on north Korea negotiations?

I guess we will know when we start seeing nuclear weapons as solar panels.

Excerpt:

“If the Biden administration maintains this approach once it takes power, the United States will concede that North Korea is a de facto nuclear power that is willing to consider arms control but not, at least in the near term, complete verifiable and irreversible dismantlement (CVID) of its nuclear weapons program. In the interim, the administration will pursue arms control—the limiting of North Korea’s nuclear weapons program rather than its elimination—in exchange for sanctions relief.

Let’s call this the NPT option. In the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, non-nuclear countries agreed to give up their potential nuclear weapons programs in exchange for two things. First, they would receive assistance to develop civilian nuclear programs (“atoms for peace”). Second, the nuclear powers pledged to begin the process of global nuclear disarmament. The “atoms for peace” programs proliferated, but the nuclear powers embraced only modest arms control measures, not serious steps toward disarmament.

If the United States approaches North Korea with a similar bargain, engagement can proceed with North Korea agreeing to eventual disarmament while adopting interim arms control measures in exchange for a reduction in economic sanctions and a new package of clean energy alternatives.”

 

14. North Korea Uses Dead Bodies of Prisoners as 'Human Fertilizer' on Flower Hill

ibtimes.sg · by Parwinder Sandhu · December 22, 2020

Yes, we have been reading about this quite a bit of late.  But we cannot overemphasize how absolutely evil is the Kim family regime.  We must never forget what the regime is doing to the Korean people living in the north.

 

15. Report: N. Korea hackers linked to site targeting COVID-19 vaccine developer

upi.com· by Elizabeth Shim · December 23, 2020

But there are no COVID cases in north Korea. (or so the regime says)

 

16. Golden Globes Under Fire for Shutting ‘Minari’ Out of Best Picture: ‘Racist,’ ‘Complete Bullsh*t’

Indiewire · by Zack Sharf · December 23, 2020

Is this in retaliation for Parasite winning the best picture Oscar?

Excerpt: “Just for the record, ‘Minari’ is an American movie written and directed by an American filmmaker set in America with an American lead actor and produced by an American production company,” Simu Liu wrote. “What could be more American than that?”

 

17.  North Korean media paint a dark picture of South's virus fight

koreajoongangdaily.joins.com ·  by Shim Kyu-Seok

Not unexpected.  north Korean propaganda toward the South has not subsided.


18.  N. Korean hacker opens phishing website for Severance Hospital

donga.com· December 24, 2020

Kim Jong-un's all purpose sword is sharp and being wielded on a daily basis.

 

------------------------

 

"You must not only aim right, but draw the bow with all your might." 

- Henry David Thoreau

 

“In a democracy, someone who fails to get elected to office can always console himself with the thought that there was something not quite fair about it.”

- Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War

 

“The absence of romance in my history will, I fear, detract somewhat from its interest, but if it is judged worthy by those inquirers who desire an exact knowledge of the past as an aid to the understanding of the future, which in the course of human things must resemble if it does not reflect it, I shall be content.

In fine I have written my work not as an essay with which to win the applause of the moment but as a possession for all time.”

 - Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War

 

12/24/2020 News & Commentary – National Security

Thu, 12/24/2020 - 10:31am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. New cracks emerge among Democrats over Biden’s Pentagon pick

2. The World China Wants: How Power Will—and Won’t—Reshape Chinese Ambitions

3. Trump vetoes defense bill, but Congress appears poised to override him

4. Miller says last US troops in Afghanistan will be special operations forces

5. Army Rangers have been deployed to combat for 7,000 days straight

6. How to Deter China: Enter the Democratic Armada - 19FortyFive

7. General Washington's Christmas Gifts

8. How the U.S. Misread China’s Xi: Hoping for a Globalist, It Got an Autocrat

9. The Lesson of 2020? Security Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Does

10. Biden Declares Political Center Alive and Well

11. Ideologies, Cults of Personality, and the Center of Gravity

12. The (Coming) Wave of Vaccine Disinformation

13. The Toll Of Conspiracy Theories: A Voting Security Expert Lives In Hiding

14. Snowden and Assange Deserve Pardons. So Do the Whistleblowers Trump Imprisoned.

15. CFIUS Won’t Be ‘Weaponized’ Under the Biden Administration

 

1. New cracks emerge among Democrats over Biden’s Pentagon pick

Politico

As we knew, the choice of General Austin requires the Biden Administration. to expend a lot of political capital.  Will it be worth it?

 

2. The World China Wants: How Power Will—and Won’t—Reshape Chinese Ambitions

Foreign Affairs· by  Rana Mitter ·  January/February 2021

Excerpt: "Chinese power today is a protean, dynamic force formed by the nexus of authoritarianism, consumerism, global ambitions, and technology. Call it the ACGT model: with the same initials as the nucleotides in DNA, these strands of Chinese power combine and recombine to form China’s modern political identity and approach to the rest of the world. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) wants to firm up its grip on Chinese society, encourage consumerism at home and abroad, expand its global influence, and develop and export China’s own advanced technology. China’s current standing and future prospects cannot be understood without seeing all four of those goals together."

Conclusion:

“An ACGT-based bid to reshape the international order demands a more concerted Chinese diplomatic effort overall. Chinese officials now often invoke saccharine platitudes before veering at breakneck speed toward more coercive and confrontational broadsides. Instead, China needs to better understand that global leadership requires concessions, generosity, and a willingness to entertain criticism: a hard realization to achieve in a country where the domestic political culture encourages the suppression, rather than the celebration, of dissent. The major obstacle to China’s rise on the international stage is not U.S. hostility or internal foes. Rather, it is the authoritarian strand of the CCP’s core identity. That authoritarianism and at times confrontational expansionism has the effect of tarnishing the other components of China’s model—the emphasis on consumerism and improvements in material lifestyles, the flawed but sincere commitment to global development and poverty reduction, and China’s truly astonishing capacity for technological innovation. 

The key elements of China’s ideological mixture—Marxism-Leninism, traditional thought, historical analogy, and economic success—have largely eclipsed the always limited power of Western liberalism to influence how the CCP sees the world. But China’s global future depends on how it can successfully recombine the other aspects of its ACGT model. At the moment, Chinese authoritarianism threatens to limit Beijing’s ability to create a plausible new form of global order.”

3. Trump vetoes defense bill, but Congress appears poised to override him

militarytimes.com · by Leo Shane III and Joe Gould · December 23, 2020

I wonder what are the odds the Vegas bookmakers are giving for a possible veto override?

 

4. Miller says last US troops in Afghanistan will be special operations forces

Stars and Stripes · by Caitlin M. Kenney · December 22, 2020

Everyone likes to claim first in, last out.

 

5. Army Rangers have been deployed to combat for 7,000 days straight

sandboxx.us · by Stavros Atlamazoglou · December 23, 2020

Only one or two other military organizations (and an "other government agency") can claim similar numbers. 

 

6. How to Deter China: Enter the Democratic Armada - 19FortyFive

19fortyfive.com · by ByJames Holmes · December 23, 2020

Excerpts:

“On the strategic side, the map conveys much about the Pacific balance of power. U.S. and allied strategy is converging on an approach that seeks to confine the People’s Liberation Army, the navy in particular, to the China seas. Allied forces will make the first island chain a barrier to Chinese maritime movement by plugging up the straits with mines, submarines, warplanes, surface craft, and marines operating on the islands. If successful they will make the Western Pacific into a relatively secure maneuver space for allied naval and air forces.

Such a strategy demands that allied navies practice scouring the Western Pacific of hostile subs. Otherwise Chinese or Russian subs could put a kink in operations off Taiwan, the Senkakus, or wherever the scene of combat happened to be. So the ability to work with allies to accomplish common tasks holds military as well as diplomatic value. It shows they can do what policy and strategy require them to do. The more impressive the show of political solidarity and naval prowess, the more likely hostile great powers are to be deterred. After all, no one picks an unwinnable fight.”

 

7.  General Washington's Christmas Gifts

lawliberty.org · by Richard Samuelson · December 24, 2016

This was published four years ago but is worth reading again.

Excerpts:

“Washington was ambitious, and he craved glory, but it was glory of a higher sort. He wished to be remembered not merely as powerful, but also as a servant of a cause greater than himself.

Upon hearing that General Washington would resign his commission, George III said “if he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.” General Washington’s Christmas gift to the American republic.”

 

8. How the U.S. Misread China’s Xi: Hoping for a Globalist, It Got an Autocrat

WSJ · by Jeremy Page · December 23, 2020

Relatively long read for the WSJ.

Funny how our assumptions affect strategic outcomes.

Key point:

“The U.S. officials’ conclusion: Although Mr. Xi was far more confident and forthright than Hu Jintao, the stiff and scripted leader he would succeed, he likely shared his commitment to stable ties with Washington and closer integration with the U.S-led global order. Some even hoped Mr. Xi would kick-start stalled economic reforms.

It was one of the biggest strategic miscalculations of the post-Cold War era.

In the eight subsequent years, Mr. Xi has pursued an expansive, hypernationalistic vision of China’s future, displaying a desire for control and a talent for political maneuvering. Drawing comparisons to Mao Zedong, he has crushed critics and potential rivals, revitalized the Communist Party and even scrapped presidential term limits so he can, if he chooses, rule for life.”

 

9. The Lesson of 2020? Security Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Does

thediplomat.com · by Jacob Parakilas · December 23, 2020

Excerpts:

“So how, in a word, can we do better in 2021?

One approach is to broaden the definition of “security threat” to include more than just conventional attack or terrorism. The appeal of this solution is that it might in the short term allow the reprogramming of some of the enormous sums spent on conventional security to address the issues that are actually manifestly damaging the lives and livelihoods of people now, rather than hedging against future threat.

But there is reason to be cautious about this approach. First, complex challenges are not necessarily responsive to the kinds of solutions that securitization has to offer: militaries should be aware of climate change and take actions within their remits to limit their emissions and be prepared for disaster-response operations, for example, but there is little role for an air force or a naval formation in changing incentives for carbon-intensive commercial energy generation or long-haul trucking. Nor is it helpful for managing conventional security threats - which will not go away as unconventional challenges mutate and multiply - to dilute the concept of “threat” to include the full panoply of structural and environmental challenges along with human actors. Analytical precision is important; so is keeping institutions focused on core and achievable goals.”

 

10. Biden Declares Political Center Alive and Well

WSJ · by Gerald F. Seib· December 24, 2020

All hail the center.  We must marginalize the extremists on both sides.

 

11. Ideologies, Cults of Personality, and the Center of Gravity

othjournal.com · by Daniel Riggs · December 21, 2020

Excerpts:

“The COG can illuminate and improve analysis and targeting, but planners must understand strengths and limitations. As Eikmeier notes, “what planners need are tools that help them to make sense of a complex OE and develop an acceptable level of understanding [and use COG] to improve understanding, focus planning, improve efficiency, and is not a disaster”. The current definition tolerates anything to occupy planning efforts instead of focusing on changing conditions and behaviors by targeting entities that animate adversarial ideologies. It should be assumed that adversaries of the U.S. develop strategies to alter the information and operational environment by changing physical conditions and institutions, not operating as a beleaguered press secretary or a debater.

COG, for any of its criticisms, can help us in ambiguous environments as long as we don’t couple the problem by targeting ambiguity. Military planners are intellectually astute, but to compete in the information environment, they will need to be like Fast Eddie Felson playing three-cushion billiard, not pool, against Fendley: remember the principles of what they do right and apply them to dominate the game, after a brief period of confusion.”

 

12. The (Coming) Wave of Vaccine Disinformation

The (Coming) Wave of Vaccine Disinformation · by Jim Ludes ·  December 23, 2020

Buckle up.

Conclusion: "America’s adversaries will seek to divide us on every issue they can find to exploit.  The coronavirus pandemic is no different.  

But we can defeat lies and disinformation with an ironclad commitment to the truth, to science, and to a renewed conviction to work together, 

as Americans, to serve our common good."

 

13. The Toll Of Conspiracy Theories: A Voting Security Expert Lives In Hiding

NPR · by Bente Birkeland · December 23, 2020

It will be interesting to see if anyone can be held criminally or civilly liable for the effects of some of these conspiracy theories.

As an aside, Zignal Labs does some cutting edge analysis.

Excerpt:

“The media intelligence platform Zignal Labs, in an analysis performed at NPR's request, found that misinformation narratives related to vote-by-mail systems alone were mentioned across the media spectrum more than 40 million times since Election Day.

That flood reached Dominion the week after the election, according to Zignal, and misinformation related to the company's machines has been mentioned more than 10 million times since then.”

 

14. Snowden and Assange Deserve Pardons. So Do the Whistleblowers Trump Imprisoned.

The Intercept · by James Risen · December 23, 2020

The Blackwater war criminals were bad enough but Snowden and Assange would be very bad for different reasons.

I am all for press freedom but I think neither Snowden or Assange are journalists and neither should be afforded the respect or protections that we should provide to all real journalists. 

 

15. CFIUS Won’t Be ‘Weaponized’ Under the Biden Administration

Bloomberg  December 24, 2020

 

------------------

 

"You must not only aim right, but draw the bow with all your might." 

- Henry David Thoreau

 

“In a democracy, someone who fails to get elected to office can always console himself with the thought that there was something not quite fair about it.”

- Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War

 

“The absence of romance in my history will, I fear, detract somewhat from its interest, but if it is judged worthy by those inquirers who desire an exact knowledge of the past as an aid to the understanding of the future, which in the course of human things must resemble if it does not reflect it, I shall be content.

In fine I have written my work not as an essay with which to win the applause of the moment but as a possession for all time.”

 - Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War

The Indigenous Approch Podcast: Special Forces Identity Series

Wed, 12/23/2020 - 10:23pm

The Indigenous Approach is the official podcast of 1st Special Forces Command.

 

This series discusses the question of who Special Forces are, an especially relevant question during the current organizational flux in DoD and SOCOM.

 

Episode 5: SF Identity Part 1 –

Seven well-respected Sergeants Major from across the SF Regiment discuss whether there is an “Identity Crisis”

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/special-forces-identity-part-1/id1534621849?i=1000500244771

Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5idXp6c3Byb3V0LmNvbS8xMzg5MTc1LnJzcw/episode/QnV6enNwcm91dC02NTQ2ODc3?sa=X&ved=0CAQQkfYCahcKEwj4hd3nyuXtAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sR7Bsh_UUnw

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0HC4cv2dOPpZOuxBqEKLMU?si=62kGMDuRQ9aBNpoDFP7H7w 

 

Episode 6: SF Identity Part 2 –

The same Sergeants Major discuss how the uncertainty surrounding the SF Identity is affecting the force

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/special-forces-identity-part-2/id1534621849?i=1000501940033

Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5idXp6c3Byb3V0LmNvbS8xMzg5MTc1LnJzcw/episode/QnV6enNwcm91dC02NzczMjYz?sa=X&ved=0CAQQkfYCahcKEwj4hd3nyuXtAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1nb-E0JswE

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2GLKysF8zuo6rgXiKHczhu?si=9jcw5qTWSyuZNFrOjMDJYg

 

Episode 7: SF Identity Part 3 –

The Sergeants Major discuss some steps we can take to address the uncertainty of identity

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-indigenous-approach/id1534621849#episodeGuid=Buzzsprout-6982006

Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5idXp6c3Byb3V0LmNvbS8xMzg5MTc1LnJzcw/episode/QnV6enNwcm91dC02OTgyMDA2?sa=X&ved=0CAQQkfYCahcKEwj4hd3nyuXtAhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFInBQksye8

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6Rqz82ptzPhA9QOmLqUhnX?si=OEJhcPKXRH-fNgAB4_IF1Q

 

 

 

The other episodes of the podcast are available at the below links:

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-indigenous-approach/id1534621849

Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5idXp6c3Byb3V0LmNvbS8xMzg5MTc1LnJzcw==

YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCn2vn240LXa2pMvOuDFBpUw

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3n3I7g9LSmd143GYCy7pPA?si=xRAYlJY2Q_-ZJXpHZ3vthg 

CSIS Podcast with AFSOC Commander Lt. Gen. Slife

Wed, 12/23/2020 - 6:22pm

https://www.csis.org/events/online-event-conversation-afsoc-commander-lt-gen-jim-slife

Dr. Seth Jones from CSIS interviews Lt. Gen. James Slife, the Commander of Air Force Special Operations Command.

 

Topics include:

"The AFSOC that we will need" versus "The AFSOC we needed"

Diversity in Special Operations

Interagency and Congressional relationships

Adjusting to shrinking and/or flatlining budgets

SOCOM service component alignment with parent services

Moving AFSOC from a "supported force" to a "supporting force"

Shifting to competition with state adversaries

Assisting partner militaries 

SOF operational tempo

12/23/2020 News & Commentary – Korea

Wed, 12/23/2020 - 12:06pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. North Korean Party Congress Primer

2. S. Korea's new top nuclear envoy holds phone talks with Biegun

3. How Did Korea Lose Its Lead in Coronavirus Battle?

4.  Plane used by Kim Jong Un seen leaving Pyongyang

5. Something Is Odd in North Korea's Foreign Exchange Markets

6. Japan-South Korea Relations and the Biden Factor

7. Coronavirus Crisis Pushes More Young Men into Military (South Korea)

8. S. Korea begins second round of production for Army's new command and control system

9. 73 percent of S. Koreans positive about Biden-Kim summit: poll

10. Tokyo urges revisiting N. Korea leaflets prohibition law

11. Seoul calls criticism over its leaflet ban 'interference'

12. Recent murders in Pyongyang may be tied to growing economic troubles

13. N. Korea tightens antivirus measures as deadline for '80-day campaign' nears

14. U.S. accuses China, Russia of trying to 'destabilize' region with Kadiz violations (South Korea)

15. It is inevitable that producing countries get vaccines first, says Moon

16. North Korea's military begins preliminary work for participation in Eighth Party Congress

17. BTS hit Dynamite on the radio in Beijing brings hope of further thaw in China-South Korea relations after 2016 missile row

18. Why North Korea's Mount Kumgang resort will be 'envied by the world'

19. South Korea Bans Balloons Carrying Leaflets to the North. Foreign Policy Problems Will Follow

20. Washington Post follows NYT in picking Seoul for Asia hub

 

1. North Korean Party Congress Primer

38 NORTH  · December 22, 2020

Keep this handy as we approach the 8th Party Congress next month.

Key points:

“The WPK Charter stipulates that the Party Congress is convened to 1) review the work of the WPK Central Committee and the WPK Central Auditing Commission; 2) adopt, revise or supplement party programs and the Party Charter; 3) discuss and decide basic issues on party policies, strategies, and tactics; 4) elect the chairman of the WPK; and 5) elect the WPK Central Committee and the WPK Central Auditing Commission.

 This sounds very dry, and much of it is uninteresting or at least terrifically opaque to outside observers. In the years of the Soviet bloc, with lively intra-bloc debates over ideology and policies, and especially in the thick of the Sino-Soviet split, the North's Congresses were fascinating to watch for the delicate dance North Korea felt forced to perform, not only in terms of external and domestic policies, but also protocol-who from the other communist countries was seated where, in what order of precedence. Those days are gone, and the upcoming Congress will not have to worry about fraternal party relations.”

In some ways, the most telling evidence on Pyongyang's thinking about foreign policy may actually emerge in what tack it takes on economic policy. If Kim lays out a strictly go-it-alone path, accompanied by a retreat from his new economic approaches of the past several years, it would likely suggest little interest or willingness to engage the US. Emphasis on the North's new "war deterrent" strength is likely to be a theme Kim sounds, but won't in itself mean a return to a more provocative stance.

 

2.  S. Korea's new top nuclear envoy holds phone talks with Biegun

en.yna.co.kr · by 김승연 · December 22, 2020

 

3. How Did Korea Lose Its Lead in Coronavirus Battle?

english.chosun.com

 

4. Plane used by Kim Jong Un seen leaving Pyongyang

upi.com· December 22, 2020

If we are seeing this, what is it the regime does not want us to see?  The north is masterful at denial and deception.

 

5. Something Is Odd in North Korea's Foreign Exchange Markets

38 North  · by William Brown · December 22, 2020

Few know as much about the north Korean economy as Bill Brown.

We need to pay attention to Bill's conclusion and ask if there is a repeat of 2009 how will it turn out for the regime?

Conclusion: "Kim may be getting ready for major currency changes in the upcoming Party Congress and a new five-year plan and wishes to create more trust in the won. He might even want to try to end the dollarization, a big headache for regime finances. The problem is the opposite could occur: As soon as the border opens or exchange restrictions ease, panic buying of foreign exchange might ensue, as it did in 2009, collapsing the won and bringing on hyperinflation. Kim's government has exerted much effort in stabilizing the monetary system, even pegging won to the dollar for a few years, to build trust and ward off speculation. With these uncertain movements, however, that success may suddenly be all undone."

 

6. Japan-South Korea Relations and the Biden Factor

cfr.org · by Yasuyo Sakata

The author proposes six ways to get the relationship back on track.  I completely agree with this conclusion: "The U.S.-Japan and U.S.-ROK bilateral alliances, along with U.S.-Japan-ROK trilateral cooperation, are the anchor in Northeast Asia security and should be so beyond. But the downturn in Japan-South Korea diplomatic relations has weakened inter-alliance cooperation. The Biden administration can play a critical role at this juncture to restore Japan-South Korea strategic cooperation."

 

7.Coronavirus Crisis Pushes More Young Men into Military (South Korea)

english.chosun.com  · December 22, 2020

Interesting 2d and 3d order effects of the pandemic.  But this will not fix the demographic problem the ROK faces with the future pool of military ages makes for military service.

 

8. S. Korea begins second round of production for Army's new command and control system

en.yna.co.kr · by 최수향 · December 23, 2020

This should be contributing to the capabilities and conditions necessary for OPCON transition.  But what about the other 25% of the ROK ground forces?

 

9.  73 percent of S. Koreans positive about Biden-Kim summit: poll

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · December 23, 2020

This might seem like a shaping operation focused on the incoming Biden administration.   I guess there are those who think a leader level summit is the silver bullet.

 

10. Tokyo urges revisiting N. Korea leaflets prohibition law

donga.com· December 22, 2020

This will not sway the Moon administration as it will not like being lectured by Japan.  But the administration should realize it is going against the shared values of the community of democracies.  It risks making South Korea an outlier and if it continues to enact laws that restrict basic human freedoms then it risks becoming pariah.  And after the rights issue which should be paramount, the practical reason for overturning this "gag law" as Lord Alton terms it (or Kim Jo-jong law as others call it) is that it will not accomplish anything positive with regard to north Korea.  Instead, the regime will double down on its blackmail diplomacy because South Korean appeasement shows the regime its political warfare strategy is achieving positive effects.

 

11. Seoul calls criticism over its leaflet ban 'interference'

donga.com· December 22, 2020

"lame and dishonorable."

A brutal critique from the Donga Ilbo editorial board:  "The ruling party's response to the international criticism, which called it "interference of internal affairs," is not only lame but dishonorable. There is no need to separate internal from external affairs when it comes to protecting the universal value of mankind and the freedom of expression guaranteed by the Constitution. It is no different from dictatorships, such as North Korea and China, which have disregarded international criticism over its human rights abuse as "infringement on sovereignty," and the logic used by the past military regime of South Korea. It is such a contradictory response considering that today's democracy in South Korea was possible thanks to those "interference in internal affairs." No wonder why a diplomatic expert, who had served as a high-ranking official under the Kim Dae-jung and Roh Moo-hyun administrations, criticized the government for making a "poor and flimsy" argument."

 

12. Recent murders in Pyongyang may be tied to growing economic troubles

dailynk.com ·  by Lee Chae Un · December 23, 2020

I think this could be a significant indicator. 

Excerpt: "There's rumors that there's no difference between dying because of COVID-19 or dying of hunger," the source said. "Give we're right before the start of the new year, [the recent incidents] may have been perpetrated by people prepared to do anything not to starve in the new year."

 

13. N. Korea tightens antivirus measures as deadline for '80-day campaign' nears

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · December 23, 2020

What will the 80 day campaign accomplish?  And when will the real extent of the COVID pandemic inside north Korea be revealed?

 

14. U.S. accuses China, Russia of trying to 'destabilize' region with Kadiz violations (South Korea)

koreajoongangdaily.joins.com· by Shim Kyu-Seok

As we should: "The U.S. State Department on Tuesday publicly voiced support for its ally South Korea after more than a dozen Chinese and Russian aircraft violated the country's air defense identification zone, known as Kadiz, prompting Seoul to scramble its own jets in response."

Excerpts:

“In July 2019, three Russian planes entered Kadiz, and one of the planes veered into Korean sovereign airspace for almost 30 minutes - the first time Seoul's territorial airspace was violated since the 1950-53 Korean War.

Moscow denied any trespassing had occurred, though one of its military officials in Seoul - perhaps in an unauthorized move from his government - expressed regret over the incident which he attributed to mechanical error.

Military analysts say the repeated violations of Kadiz are closely linked to China's strategic efforts to exert its influence beyond its proximate waters in cooperation with Russia, in a quasi-alliance aimed at countering American influence in the region.”

 

15. It is inevitable that producing countries get vaccines first, says Moon

donga.com· December 23, 2020

I do not think this will placate the Korean people in the South.

 

16. North Korea's military begins preliminary work for participation in Eighth Party Congress

dailynk.com· by Jeong Tae Joo· December 23, 2020

This is one of the most important points to understand about the north Korean People's Army (and the north Korean system in general): "That is to say, each unit is being carefully evaluated on not only whether it improved its fighting power, but also on its level of ideological commitment. Units that scored well reportedly received more slots to send participants to the Eighth Party Congress."

 

17. BTS hit Dynamite on the radio in Beijing brings hope of further thaw in China-South Korea relations after 2016 missile row

scmp.com · by Tamar Herman

 

18. Why North Korea's Mount Kumgang resort will be 'envied by the world'

scmp.com· by Mercedes Hutton

Or more correctly: the propaganda about the resort will be the envy of the world.  No one does it better than the regime's Propaganda and Agitation Department.

I wonder if we will soon see destruction of South Korean facilities at Kumgangsan just as we saw the South Korean liaison building partially destroyed at the Kaesong Industrial Complex.  The regime may be setting the conditions for another demand as it did with the "Kim Yo-jong law."

 

19.  South Korea Bans Balloons Carrying Leaflets to the North. Foreign Policy Problems Will Follow

csis.org · by Robert R. King · December 22, 2020

Excerpts:

“Critics of the balloon ban legislation, in addition to Justice Michael Kirby of Australia, include Lord David Alton, an important human rights voice who is a member of the British House of Lords. Alton in a letter to the British foreign secretary said that "The purpose of this bill is to silence North Korean human rights and religious activities and voices from South Korean soil, in pursuit of the development of improved inter-Korean relations."

Unfortunately, the balloon legislation has become a partisan political issue in South Korea rather than a serious effort to deal with North Korean human rights abuses or the inter-Korean relationship. There is no assurance that even with the silencing of freedom of expression in banning balloons that the North Koreans will take any action to improve inter-Korean relations. The consequence, however, could be erosion of the South Korean relationship with the United States, which is important for the people of both countries. If previous experience gives us any expectation for the future, the North is more likely to blow up another building, even if balloon-carried information is halted, than it is to make a significant positive gesture toward reconciliation with the South.”

 

20. Washington Post follows NYT in picking Seoul for Asia hub

asia.nikkei.com · by Alex Fang · December 23, 2020

Seoul is a great city to live in.  The buried lede is the Washington Post to develop a global 24 hour newsroom (or it is not so buried as it is mentioned in the first paragraph).

 

---------------

 

"Waste no more time arguing about what a good man should be. Be one." 

- Marcus Aurelius

 

  "Keep your face to the sunshine and you can never see the shadow." 

- Helen Keller

 

"No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."

- James Madison

12/23/2020 News & Commentary – National Security

Wed, 12/23/2020 - 12:03pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. How Biden will deal with the Pentagon's generals

2. The fading light of liberal democracy

3. A Chinese Communist Party think tank staffer offered to pay for sources

4.  Scoop: DHS to issue China data security warning to U.S. businesses

5. WeChat Becomes a Powerful Surveillance Tool Everywhere in China

6. A Dinner, a Deal and Moonshine: How the Stimulus Came Together

7. FBI links Iran to online hit list targeting top officials who've refuted Trump's election fraud claims

8. After Fort Hood, the U.S. Army Will Succeed or Fail on Trust

9. The Big Hack Is Damaging. That Doesn't Make Russia 10 Feet Tall.

10. Europe rediscovers the Indo-Pacific

11. Members Send Letter to Secretary of Defense-designee Lloyd Austin

12. We can help the Chinese people change their communist regime

13. Beijing Ransacked Data as U.S. Sources Went Dark in China

14. Tech Giants Are Giving China A Vital Edge in Espionage

15. "Unreliable" news sources got more traction in 2020

16. Prepare to Fight Upcoming Cyber-Threat Innovations

17. Why the Russian hack is so significant, and why it's close to a worst-case scenario

18. What Every Vaccine Skeptic Should Know About The New Coronavirus Vaccines

19. Is the ICC corrupted by China?

20. Deep State Strike Force

21. It's Time for a U.S. Special Representative on Women, Peace and Security

22. Three Articles Signal New Cold War

 

1. How Biden will deal with the Pentagon's generals

news.yahoo.com by Sean D. Nayor December 22, 2020

I hope Sean's analysis holds true. This bodes well for civil-military relations at the top.

Some key excerpts that describe a good leader:

Biden ultimately lost that debate. Nonetheless, his engagement typified what Petraeus and other former government officials described as Biden's approach with senior military leaders: highly respectful of their sacrifice and professionalism, but neither cowed by their rank nor afraid to question their judgment.

“We did disagree on some pretty significant policy issues - as was to be expected to a degree, perhaps, given our different responsibilities and perspectives - but he always heard me out, welcomed and considered my views, and engaged in constructive back-and-forth," Petraeus said. "He was not necessarily one to leave something unsaid - but then neither was I."

...

Panetta, who attended many meetings in the White House with Biden and senior military officers, said that although the vice president did not shrink from asking hard questions regarding military assumptions, he always did so respectfully. "I never heard him shout at anybody," Panetta said.

...

Biden isn't just drawing on close associates, however. When NBC News reported last month that national security experts from outside the government had begun briefing the president-elect to prepare him to take office, among the experts listed was none other than Gen. Stanley McChrystal.

The retired general did not respond to a request for comment, but Panetta attributed McChrystal's role to the lessons Biden had acquired during his long political career. "One thing senators learn early on is you don't carry a grudge if somebody has abilities that you may need in making a decision," Panetta said. "You get beyond that."

 

2. The fading light of liberal democracy

Financial Times · by Martin Wolf · December 22, 2020

The buried lede?  South Korea is at the top of most of the charts with apparently relatively favorable views toward the US.

So the enemy is the "pluto-populists?"  

 

3. A Chinese Communist Party think tank staffer offered to pay for sources

Axios · by Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian

Everyone should watch "Game of Pawns: The Glenn Duffie Shriver Story". It may be a "B movie "(28 minutes) by the FBI but it illustrates the threat from China.

 

4. Scoop: DHS to issue China data security warning to U.S. businesses

Axios · by Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian

Excerpt: "The advisory specifically cautions U.S. businesses with regards to data centers owned or operated by Chinese firms, foreign data centers built with Chinese equipment, joint ventures with Chinese firms, software and mobile device applications, and fitness trackers and other wearables, according to a copy of the advisory reviewed by Axios."

 

5. WeChat Becomes a Powerful Surveillance Tool Everywhere in China

WSJ · by Jing Yang· December 22, 2020

This is not surprising.

Excerpts:  

“The Chinese government also tapped Tencent and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. to design health-rating systems that make up one of the main contact-tracing tools to contain the spread of the coronavirus. The health codes embedded within WeChat and Alipay, operated by Alibaba affiliate Ant Group Co., have become essential passes in China for entering residences, office buildings and accessing public transportation.

...

The Trump administration has cited WeChat's access to user information and censorship as reasons to ban it from the U.S., along with short-video app TikTok. Both bans have been challenged in American courts and haven't taken effect.

Censorship during the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak became so strict that even content from Chinese state-owned media was occasionally taken down, a phenomenon that researchers attributed to internet companies overcompensating to avoid running afoul of rules governing speech that are often unclear.

"The primary mechanism here is not the law, but rather fear," said David Bandurski, co-director of The University of Hong Kong's China Media Project. "Companies must abide by regulations and propaganda guidelines imposed by the leadership in order to protect their business interests."

 

6. A Dinner, a Deal and Moonshine: How the Stimulus Came Together

The New York Times · by Nicholas Fandos, Luke Broadwater and Emily Cochrane · December 22, 2020

This is political.  Many are unhappy with the outcome of the bill or with many provisions within it.

But this story gives us hope that the center can hold and get some work done for our country, however imperfect.  But of course compromise by definition means will not get a perfect result.

 

7. FBI links Iran to online hit list targeting top officials who've refuted Trump's election fraud claims

The Washington Post·  by Ellen Nakashima, Amy Gardner and  Aaron C. Davis · December 23, 2020

Excerpts:

“One state official, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly, said the FBI has been placing calls to those targeted on the web page to inform them that Iran was behind the effort. The agency plans to make an announcement Wednesday.

Several of those targeted received the following statement from the bureau: "The FBI is in possession of highly credible information indicating Iranian advanced persistent threat actors were almost certainly responsible for the creation of a website, called 'Enemies of the People' containing death threats aimed at U.S. election officials in mid-December 2020."

 

8. After Fort Hood, the U.S. Army Will Succeed or Fail on Trust

warontherocks.com · by Carter F. Ham · December 23, 2020

Sober conclusion:  "My old soldier sense is that this is a watershed moment for the Army I love. I think it is also a last, best chance for the Army to demonstrate that it can police itself, learn from serious mistakes, and right itself as the profession of arms demands. Should Army leaders at all levels fail to do this, outsiders will inevitably impose changes that may well address some of the specific issues raised in the Fort Hood report, but also weaken the bonds of trust that are essential in our society. By failing to act now, the Army will have failed in its obligation to the nation. The Army leaders I know understand this, and they have the character and commitment to rebuild trust across the force and build the Army America needs. The time is now.

 

9. The Big Hack Is Damaging. That Doesn't Make Russia 10 Feet Tall.

defenseone.com · by Daniel DePetris

But perhaps only 9.5 feet all in the cyber world.  But cyber is such a great asymmetric capability for an inherently weak country.

 

10. Europe rediscovers the Indo-Pacific

eastasiaforum.org · by David Camroux · December 23, 2020

Excerpts:

“Embracing the Indo-Pacific idea has four interrelated goals for the European Union. First, the term captures its wider Asia policy and partly compensates for the lacuna in its existing patchwork of arrangements. Second, it is a political statement on the salience of Europe's regulatory power in the region. Third, it provides a foundation for a shared European and American understanding of how to respond to China.

Finally, embracing the Indo-Pacific idea has allowed Europe to add a trans-Atlantic dimension to its bilateral relations in the region. By expressing their willingness to participate in Biden's planned 'Summit for Democracy', Europeans have indicated the ideological dimension to their objectives in the region.

Europe rediscovers the Indo-Pacific | East Asia Forum

 

11. Members Send Letter to Secretary of Defense-designee Lloyd Austin

slotkin.house.gov · December 22, 2020

"A commitment to ensuring that senior policy-making positions across the office of the Secretary of Defense are filled by qualified civilians, reflecting the need for civilian expertise and oversight in developing national security policy up and down the chain of command;"

It is the "up and down" the chain of command that concerns me and smacks of the political officer system.  I hope they meant within the Pentagon's chain of command as in within the building only.  We cannot have civilians injected into the chain of command at the combatant commands and operational units (e.g., "down the chain of command.")

I have to call out one of these six "commitments" being demanded of the SECDEF designee.

 

12. We can help the Chinese people change their communist regime

The Hill · by Joseph Bosco, opinion contributor · December 22, 2020

Interesting argument sand I agree with much of the comments on VOA and RFA but I will raise the flag on one issue regarding public advocacy for US policies.  One simple fix would be for US government officials to grant the interview request they receive from VOA and RFA.  US government officials making statements on US policy is news.  It is not “propaganda.”  I know many journalists from VOA and RFA who have requested interviews with US government officials only to be ignored or denied.  And I will tell you the Korean service of VOA does a great job of interviewing experts to explain US policies. The Korean news I watch every night has experts explaining US policy.  And shows such as the weekly Washington Talk are designed with the sole intent of explaining what is happening in Washington regarding US policies.  But as far as I know no US government official has ever accepted an invitation to participate in the program.  VOA, RFA. RFE should have routine access to the highest government officials.

Excerpts:

“The Chinese people clearly hunger for honest information and friendly communication with the American people, including U.S. officials. Messages from Pottinger, Miles Yu at the State Department Office of Policy Planning, and other Mandarin speakers in the government would find receptive audiences in China.

The natural conduit for such direct communications would be an expanded and invigorated effort by Radio Free Asia (RFA) and Voice of America (VOA), but some at VOA fear a conflict between reporting the news and disseminating "propaganda."

VOA and its sister communications agencies have earned global legitimacy and respect for their journalistic integrity and truthfulness. It would not jeopardize that reputation if news reports about administration speeches or policy statements, with a few quotations, provided links to the complete texts. Funding should be provided for more translators if needed.

A fuller presentation of U.S. policies would be perfectly consistent with the three missions set forth in VOA's charter: 1) a consistently reliable and authoritative source of news; 2) a balanced and comprehensive projection of significant American thought and institutions; and 3) statements of U.S. policies and responsible discussions and opinion on these policies.

Some at VOA have chafed at going beyond the first mission - pure news. Experts close to the organization recently addressed that concern:

"This third mission is often called public diplomacy but ... a better term is 'policy advocacy,' defined as efforts by U.S. officials and diplomats to explain and defend U.S. interests, intentions and ideals to overseas audiences. Some critics within [the agency] argue for eliminating policy advocacy, calling it inimical to the norms of professional journalism. But this is unrealistic. Policy advocacy is an inescapable part of any government's communication with the world. The challenge is to keep policy advocacy separate from news reporting - and to do it in ways that are truthful, not propagandistic."

 

13.  Beijing Ransacked Data as U.S. Sources Went Dark in China

Foreign Policy · by Zach Dorfman · December 22, 2020

Excerpts:

“Still, some China hawks remained frustrated over what they perceived of as a lack of focus on Beijing, and especially its industrial policies. "I was fighting people to get this done, more collection on China," said Robert Spalding, who served as the top China strategist for the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the late Obama administration. At Spalding's request, in 2015 the Joint Chiefs organized meetings with a suite of top intelligence officials, as well as representatives from the Commerce, Treasury, and State departments around these issues. "The [intelligence community] refused to engage," said Spalding, who subsequently served on the National Security Council during the Trump administration.

But other former national security officials, who emphasize the time lag between high-level strategic reprioritizing of different intelligence targets and on-the-ground results, say there was an intensified focus on China around this time-including on developing greater insight into the relationship between Chinese intelligence agencies and private Chinese companies. By 2016, senior U.S. national security officials had "tasked the [intelligence community] to develop answers, setting the wheels in motion" on "the sharing between private [Chinese] companies and the MSS," one former national security official recalled. We "were looking at the forensic trail," they said.

The Obama administration's increased scrutiny of the Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE helped catalyze this process, this source said: "Part of the material that was obtained within that investigation provided a breadcrumb trail to Huawei's practices in Iran and elsewhere. But the picture was still being colored in."

After President Donald Trump took office in early 2017, this increasingly well-developed picture would spur U.S. intelligence officials, and senior Trump administration officials, to zero in on the symbiotic relationship between China's security apparatus and its private sector leviathans.”

 

14. Tech Giants Are Giving China A Vital Edge in Espionage

Foreign Policy · by Zach Dorfman · December 23, 2020

Excerpts:

Key legal restrictions and cultural norms mean American spy agencies cannot induce U.S. firms to sift through the fruits of its own cyberspying; they have had to build these data analysis capabilities for themselves, U.S. officials say. And they cannot, for example, commandeer private U.S. companies' data-processing power to help them create a composite picture of what the Chinese know about, say, U.S. government employees based on Beijing's prior hacks. But synthesizing these parallel databases has been a priority for U.S. officials, who have worked to mirror image at least some of what they believe the Chinese possess, according to three current and former senior officials. This can be a laborious process. "It took us forever to condition" the data from the OPM breach, the current senior intelligence official said.

But when U.S. officials eventually analyzed all this data, the picture that emerged about what, in fact, the Chinese knew was not a pretty one. U.S. intelligence reporting on the subject is "sickening to your stomach," the senior intelligence official said.

Conclusion:

Driven by fears over internal instability and external threats to its rule, the Chinese Communist Party has determined that data security is tantamount to regime security. But this strategy creates some internal tensions for Beijing. "The Chinese cybersecurity system today requires backdoors into every single company and individual in China," said a former senior intelligence analyst. "And they are willing to admit that these [backdoors] could enable attackers and may decrease the cybersecurity of the companies."

This is a trade-off China's leaders seem willing to make, at least for now-even though these policies may catalyze an economic decoupling with China's most important trading partner, and even though this decoupling might itself drive domestic instability. Meanwhile, the bear hug between Chinese intelligence and Chinese industry continues to squeeze together ever more tightly. After all, said the former senior intelligence analyst, "this is a country with omnipresence in its companies."

 

15. "Unreliable" news sources got more traction in 2020

Axios · by Sara Fischer

According to many on the social media feeds I monitor there is no such thing as reliable news.  

 

16. Prepare to Fight Upcoming Cyber-Threat Innovations

darkreading.com

Excerpts:

“2020 has been an unprecedented year for cyber threats. We've seen cyber attackers in full force, taking advantage of every opportunity and every attack vector possible. Unfortunately, 2021 shows no signs of slowing down; the types of threats and the types of vulnerabilities will continue to evolve in step with new technologies.

Threat intelligence is central to defending against these threat vectors, providing vital information in real time. Visibility will also be critical, particularly at this time when a significant amount of traffic is encrypted and many users are outside the typical network scenario. Examining encrypted traffic puts an enormous strain on a security device, and not all systems are up for the challenge at speed and scale. You may miss critical threats entering your network if you're not prepared. Another piece of the security armor is automated threat detection so that your team can address attacks immediately, not months later.

Start preparing now for the emerging new attack methods, using the tools and strategies that will empower your team to defeat the negative aspects of innovations in computing performance.”

 

17. Why the Russian hack is so significant, and why it's close to a worst-case scenario

NBC News · by Kevin Collier · December 22, 2020

Excerpts:

"The issue is, we don't know how big this is, and at the same time it could be the biggest ever," said Sergio Caltagirone, the vice president of threat intelligence at the cybersecurity firm Dragos, which is currently in the process of helping industrial and manufacturing companies deal with the hacking campaign and its fallout.

Only a handful of organizations, including the cybersecurity company FireEye and three U.S. federal agencies - the Departments of CommerceEnergy and Treasury - have so far admitted being seriously affected. But the cybersecurity industry is aware of "a little over 200" compromises, Caltagirone said, with that number all but guaranteed to grow.

"Most organizations still lack the basic visibility to even assess whether they were compromised or not," Caltagirone said. "We know we are undercounting the victims here. We know that for a fact."

Why the Russian hack is so significant, and why it's close to a worst-case scenario

Experts say it's potentially the largest spying operation against the U.S. in history - and it ran without being noticed for nine months.

 

18. What Every Vaccine Skeptic Should Know About The New Coronavirus Vaccines

Forbes · by Ethan Siegel · December 22, 2020

The anti-vaxers will be responsible for the extension of the pandemic.  They will not heed this advice:

“What is concerning about the virus mutating is this: viruses mostly mutate via random chance, through a process known as genetic drift. Each individual mutation is unlikely to cause that worst-case scenario, just as any single lottery ticket is unlikely to win you the Powerball. If you give the virus enough chances to mutate, however, just like if you buy enough lottery tickets, the unlikely could become an inevitability. The things that give the virus more chances to mutate are the number of infected hosts, and the duration of time that the virus remains both in the population and in each host while they're infectious or contagious.

The safest path forward for all of us is one where:

    • everyone who can get vaccinated does get vaccinated,
    • everyone, both vaccinated and unvaccinated, continues to wear a mask, socially distance, wash hands, and stay home/isolated whenever possible,
    • and people stop gathering with those from outside their household until it's safe to do so.

Every time someone goes out to a bar or restaurant, over to a friend or relative's house, or has any type of close, prolonged, or non-essential contact, they run an increased risk of not only contracting or spreading the virus themselves, but of being that unlucky lottery ticket who creates an escape mutant within their own body.

 

19. Is the ICC corrupted by China?

foxnews.com · by Hollie McKay

A rhetorical question?

 

20. Deep State Strike Force

frontpagemag.com · by Lloyd Billingsley

Ah, the deep state is made up of the Senior Executive Service.  Now it is all clear to me (note my sarcasm).

 

21. It's Time for a U.S. Special Representative on Women, Peace and Security

Foreign Policy · By Sahana Dharmapuri, Jolynn Shoemaker, and Erin Cooper of Our Secure Future

Excerpts:

“The Special Representative could leverage these nascent good governance efforts, and bring together stakeholders to support the Women, Peace and Security agenda in these emerging policy areas. An internal advocate for a broader peace and security lens, the Special Representative would expand the range of voices at the table. This would ensure that our security policy discussions and solutions are more inclusive, effective, and forward-thinking.

This is the moment for the incoming Biden Administration to bring the principles of Women, Peace and Security into the full landscape of peace and security challenges, including violent conflict but also new and complex challenges in the digital ecosystem.

We need imagination to bridge our ideals of human rights and democracy into the reality of the new world that we are living in. The Women, Peace and Security Agenda is about norms and principles - human rights, participation, inclusion, justice - that are fundamental to our journey as a nation.

The Special Representative on Women, Peace and Security can bring together many facets of the democracy we seek to build at home and reflect the best of American leadership abroad for the sake of peace and security.”

 

22. Three Articles Signal New Cold War

realcleardefense.com · by Francis P. Sempa

 

---------------

 

"Waste no more time arguing about what a good man should be. Be one." 

- Marcus Aurelius

 

  "Keep your face to the sunshine and you can never see the shadow." 

- Helen Keller

 

"No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."

- James Madison

12/22/2020 News & Commentary – National Security

Tue, 12/22/2020 - 10:55am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. Additional Restrictions on the Issuance of Visas for People’s Republic of China Officials Engaged in Human Rights Abuses

2. How the Army Out-Innovated the Islamic State’s Drones

3. Joe Biden and the Fight for Asia

4. West Point accuses more than 70 cadets of cheating in worst academic scandal in nearly 45 years

5.  Why Americans are numb to the staggering coronavirus death toll

6.  Biden Talks Up Bipartisanship; He Has Three Good Reasons

7. Space Force Poised to See Major Growth, New Uniforms in 2021

8. Calling SolarWinds Hack ‘Act Of War’ Just Makes It Worse

9. How China's state serves the Party

10. Lloyd Austin, Biden’s profoundly private Pentagon pick, joins Twitter

11. USS John S. McCain trains with French and Japanese navies in the Philippine Sea

12.  US warship transits Taiwan Strait, prompting outcry from Beijing

13. My pledge to our nation’s veterans by Denis McDonough

14. Ahead of first anniversary of Soleimani’s death, Iran still eyeing retaliation against the United States

15. [OPINION] The monster will come for you: Why the Tarlac killings threaten us all (Philippines)

16. Biden Must Prioritize Missile Defense

17. Enhance missile defence capability to deal with range of security threats: Yomiuri Shimbun (Japan)

18. The U.S. Marine Corps Wants a Generation of Free Thinkers - 19FortyFive

19. Are U.S. Navy Brass Making Unannounced Visits to Taiwan?

20. Treasury Department’s Senior Leaders Were Targeted by Hacking

 

1. Additional Restrictions on the Issuance of Visas for People’s Republic of China Officials Engaged in Human Rights Abuses

state.gov · by Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State

December 21, 2020

 

2. How the Army Out-Innovated the Islamic State’s Drones

warontherocks.com · by T.S. Allen · December 21, 2020

Sadly, the Army has decided to disband the Asymmetric Warfare Group.

Conclusion: The Asymmetric Warfare Group will case its colors next year and transfer its responsibility for innovating to counter emerging asymmetric threats to other Army organizations. This mission should endure because it will be critical on future battlefields. There is every reason to think that improvised attacks drones will remain a persistent problem, and only become more capable. The daunting task ahead does not diminish the fact that ISIL’s small Group 1 and 2 drones failed to successfully strike U.S. ground forces despite hundreds of attempts. The Army’s rapid fielding of counter-small drone capabilities, which was sparked in part by the proactive threat assessments of the Asymmetric Warfare Group, is a remarkable case study of successful military innovation. The academic literature on military innovation has tended to focus on the high end: the adoption of major new weapons systems, technologies, force structures, or doctrines. Both academics and policymakers should consider the role of experimentation, problem-solving, prototyping, diffusing knowledge and scaling up solutions in warfare. Anticipating and disrupting capabilities, even high-tech ones, is critical to building asymmetric advantages against peer competitors. On future battlefields, the Army will have to not just out-fight, but also out-think and out-innovate its enemies.

 

3. Joe Biden and the Fight for Asia

algemeiner.com · by Alon Levkowitz

This is the choice? 

Conclusion: President Biden will have to make the strategic decision of either tilting back toward Asia to balance China or leaving Asia to China.

 

4. West Point accuses more than 70 cadets of cheating in worst academic scandal in nearly 45 years

USA Today · by Tom Vanden Brook

I find this statement simply unbelievable.  I think the Colonel not only needs a little public affairs training he probably needs a values check.

Army Col. Mark Weathers, West Point's chief of staff, said in an interview Monday that he was "disappointed" in the cadets for cheating, but he did not consider the incident a serious breach of the code. It would not have occurred if the cadets had taken the exam on campus, he said.

 

5. Why Americans are numb to the staggering coronavirus death toll

The Washington Post · December 21, 2020

This is sad and frustrating.  We are putting partisanship, hoxes, and conspiracy theories above the suffering of our fellow Americans.  And for some Americans, this is not a staggering death toll.

 

6. Biden Talks Up Bipartisanship; He Has Three Good Reasons

WSJ · by Gerald F. Seib

I fear the divide is too great but I hope he can do it.  And partisan opponents already say no one gave Trump a chance four years ago.

 

7. Space Force Poised to See Major Growth, New Uniforms in 2021

military.com · by Oriana Pawlyk · December 20, 2020

The new SF (Space Force).

Excerpts:

The military relies heavily on space-based technologies to keep its edge on the battlefield, with some members devoted to supplying satellite communications and others to protect them.

But when Congress mandated that the new service had to use existing personnel -- to limit redundancy and bureaucratic bloat -- the Space Force looked to the Air Force to transfer its space specialties.

To date, roughly 2,200 members in "organic" space careers -- such as space operations and space systems operations -- have transferred from the Air Force.

The Space Force said in September that 2,400 members were slated for transfer; some are waiting for promotion boards and other processes to conclude, according to spokeswoman Lynn Kirby.

In addition, 86 U.S. Air Force Academy graduates were directly commissioned into the service this year; close to another 100 will do so next year.

The service has also selected 3,600 members in common specialties -- jobs that fit both the Air Force and Space Force, including those in intelligence, cyber, acquisition and engineering -- to transfer starting in February. Of those, 1,900 are officers and 1,700 are enlisted. (About 30 enlisted members were part of an early transfer that began Dec. 1.)

 

8. Calling SolarWinds Hack ‘Act Of War’ Just Makes It Worse

breakingdefense.com · by Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.

Excerpts:

The solution isn’t to pull the plug. The Pentagon sees greater connectivity, not less, as essential to everything from digital weapons design to All-Domain Operations in combat. Senior officials like Air Force acquisition chief Will Roper even talk about creating a military “Internet of Things,” despite the tremendous security vulnerabilities in the civilian version.

For example, Roper explained, as the Air Force stands up new “digital factories” to design weapons using computerized design tools such as computerized 3-D models known as ‘digital twins,’ the attack surface potentially accessible to adversaries grows. “This creates a new kind of target,” Roper acknowledged to reporters recently. “They become crown jewels and they’ll have to be protected as such.

“So we are pulling all the stops, and having red teams and cyber experts try to break our system to ensure that it is as tough as it can be,” he said. “But the other thing [is] zero trust technologies and doing continuous monitoring. We don’t do that in the Defense Department,” he admitted. “We certify things are impregnable.”

But in the modern era, what’s impregnable today may be exquisitely vulnerable tomorrow. That’s why you need to keep checking all the time - continuous monitoring — and have a multi-layered defense that assumes the enemy is going to get in - what is known as a ‘zero trust’ strategy.

Traveling around Europe as a student, Roper recalled, he saw plenty of ruined castles. Their history, he said, proves that a single wall is never enough. In those castles Roper saw, the art of fortification included multiple lines of defense with multiple fallback positions, mottes and baileys, curtain walls and inner keeps. “Just having a single perimeter that your adversary is never going to get through - if that’s your plan, there’s a burned castle in your future,” he said.

 

9. How China's state serves the Party

eastasiaforum.org · by Kerry Brown · December 22, 2020

I think sometimes it is difficult for us to grasp the importance of the party.

Conclusion:

The Party is above all a crisis-management entity. It performs best when there are crises. The vast stress of COVID-19 has shown it at its best. While Western governments have largely floundered, the Party has managed to face down the problem, aided by huge voluntary assistance from the public. It seems to already be pulling out of the worst of the economic downturn, with more than 4 per cent growth predicted by some for 2020.

Those in China who need to relate to the state — and that means practically everyone — have to ensure that while they seem to be dealing with a strengthened and more confident state apparatus, they know that behind it is the invisible, but undeniable and irrevocable, hand of the Party. China is a complex place, but in this respect it is as simple as ABC.

 

10. Lloyd Austin, Biden’s profoundly private Pentagon pick, joins Twitter

militarytimes.com · by Lolita Baldor · December 21, 2020

Joe Collins and my response to General Austin's tweet:

Lloyd Austin

@LloydAustin

·

20h

They say you learn something new every day. Well, today I'm learning about Twitter.

Joseph J Collins

@josephcollins77

·

13h

Don't spend too much time here, Mr Secy Designate. Do the right thing and Twitter will come around. Pls have some young people in PA keeping you up on all social media. God bless.

David Maxwell

@DavidMaxwell161

13h

Actually I recommending thinking of Twitter (and social media) like listening to the command net, ops &intel net, and logistics net in the TOC simultaneously.  The key is following the right people and news sources for information.  It can be useful for situational awareness.

 

David Maxwell

@DavidMaxwell161

10h

Replying to

@DavidMaxwell161 @josephcollins77 and @LloydAustin

*recommend (typo) Twitter needs an editing function

 

11. USS John S. McCain trains with French and Japanese navies in the Philippine Sea

Stars and Stripes· by Caitlin Doornbos · December 21, 2020

I wonder if US and Japanese naval officers did a combined "staff ride" studying the WWII Battle of the Philippine Sea.  That would make for some interesting professional development discussions.

 

12. US warship transits Taiwan Strait, prompting outcry from Beijing

navytimes.com · by Geoff Ziezulewicz · December 21, 2020

 

13. My pledge to our nation's veterans by Denis McDonough

militarytimes.com · by Denis McDonough · December 22, 2020

Conclusion:

During my tenure at VA, I hope that my own words, actions, and successes on behalf of the veteran community will earn your trust. I won't rest until I ensure we are giving veterans the high standard of care and service worthy of their service to our country.

And in the coming years, I hope you will count me as one of those who have cared for "those who have borne the battle," and their families, caregivers, and survivors.

 

14. Ahead of first anniversary of Soleimani's death, Iran still eyeing retaliation against the United States

The Washington Post· by Missy Ryan · December 21, 2020

 

15. [OPINION] The monster will come for you: Why the Tarlac killings threaten us all (Philippines)

rappler.com· by John Molo

This is journalism doing its job and trying to hold the government accountable.  It is also why Maria Ressa is facing uncalled for legal action from the Philippine government.  The work of her Rappler.com is a threat to Duterte (but it is only a "threat" because of his actions  and the exposure of his extrajudicial killings and human rights abuses in the name of his war on drugs). 

 

16. Biden Must Prioritize Missile Defense

defenseone.com · by Rebeccah L. Heinrichs

Actually we as a nation must prioritize it.  The President will prioritize it if it has the backing of the American people.  We need to invest in missile defense.

 

17.  Enhance missile defence capability to deal with range of security threats: Yomiuri Shimbun (Japan)

straitstimes.com

We really need integrated missile defense systems with our allies.

 

18. The U.S. Marine Corps Wants a Generation of Free Thinkers - 19FortyFive

19fortyfive.com · by James Holmes · December 20, 2020

Conclusion:

That the nation needs a Swiss army knife isn't bad as fixed assumptions go. It attenuates the dogma that typifies individual combat domains and helps stimulate needful change. Marine Corps magnates, moreover, insist that every marine is a rifleman. Everything the service does-including in the aerial and saltwater domains-supports the efforts of infantrymen on the surface. That remains true whether marines are trudging through dusty Afghanistan or leaping from island to island in the Western Pacific. Keeping the infantry central concentrates attention on the surface-but it's the hybrid surface environment where joint land/sea operations unspool with air support.

Keeping that cultural anchor firmly moored, paradoxically, permits heterodoxy and thus an experimental ethos that fosters innovation. Fellow armed services can profit from reviewing marine history and culture in their quest to become more freewheeling and adaptable.

They might even try setting up the chessboard.

 

19. Are U.S. Navy Brass Making Unannounced Visits to Taiwan?

The National Interest · by Peter Suciu · December 22, 2020

Hard to keep these kinds of visits off the radar.

 

20. Treasury Department's Senior Leaders Were Targeted by Hacking

The New York Times · by David E. Sanger and Alan Rappeport · December 21, 2020

 

------------------

 

"Nothing in life is as important as you think it is when you are thinking about it." 

- Daniel Kahneman

 

“In foreign policy, a modest acceptance of fate will often lead to discipline rather than indifference. The realization that we cannot always have our way is the basis of a mature outlook that rests on an ancient sensibility, for tragedy is not the triumph of evil over good so much as triumph of one good over another that causes suffering. Awareness of that fact leads to a sturdy morality grounded in fear as well as in hope. The moral benefits of fear bring us to two English philosophers who, like Machiavelli, have for centuries disturbed people of goodwill: Hobbes and Malthus.” 

- Robert D. Kaplan, Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Requires a Pagan Ethos

 

“If you concentrate exclusively on victory, while no thought for the after effect, you may be too exhausted to profit by peace, while it is almost certain that the peace will be a bad one, containing the germs of another war.” 

- B.H. Liddel-Hart

 

12/22/2020 News & Commentary – Korea

Tue, 12/22/2020 - 9:08am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. Don’t Leave North Koreans in the Dark

2. It’s Time to End the Korean War

3. South Korea defends ban on anti-Pyongyang leaflets after ‘inane’ law slammed in US

4. DEATH CAMP North Korean prisoners worked to death rearing pigs to feed Kim Jong-un & then used as human fertiliser on ‘flower hill’

5. US commands in Japan and South Korea report weekend coronavirus count

6. Albright calls for U.S.-S. Korea cooperation on N. Korea's denuclearization

7. South Korean officials defend controversial propaganda law

8. Fresh Virus Wave Is Testing South Korea’s No-Lockdown Strategy

9. Understanding Recent Revisions to the "Inter-Korean Relations Development Act"

10. Chinese, Russian military aircraft violate S. Korea's air defense zone

11. Denuclearizing North Korea: Six Options for Biden

12. Incoming Biden gov't likely to seek N.K. dialogue in 2021 rather than sanctions: think tank

13. China's top legislator calls for enhancing exchanges with ROK

14. Status Quo Ante with a Twist: Biden’s Probable East Asia Policy

15. Assessing the impact of North Korea's border blockade

16. N. Korea claims no confirmed cases of coronavirus: WHO

17. Ruling party chief expresses regret over criticism of new law banning anti-Pyongyang leaflets

18. North Korea first lady Ri Sol Ju leads makeup trends, defector says

19. HBO Max Hit “The Flight Attendant” Has a Surprise North Korea Angle

 

1. Don’t Leave North Koreans in the Dark

Foreign Affairs· Jieun Baek · December 21, 2020

When Jieun Baek speaks we should listen. This latest law will not lead to peace nor improved relations with north Korea. It will only cause Kim Jong-un to double down on his political warfare strategy and blackmail diplomacy.

Excerpt: The legislation is the latest step in Moon’s quest to secure peace on the Korean Peninsula through reconciliation with Pyongyang. Whatever the merits of that goal, Moon’s agenda has led to the suppression of many activities promoting North Korean human rights. In its desperation to placate Kim, Moon’s government has turned its back on basic principles of liberal democracy, and the new law represents a new low. Seoul is now directly aiding and abetting Pyongyang’s repression. The South Korean government should be supporting efforts to supply information to North Koreans, not criminalizing them.

 

2.  It’s Time to End the Korean War

The American Prospect · by Jessica J. Lee · December 21, 2020

Let me say this:

I support peace on the Korean peninsula

I support a diplomatic solution to the north Korean nuclear threat

I support ROK engagement with the north

I do not support a weakening of the ROK and ROK/US defensive capabilities

I  believe there cannot be success for US, ROK, and Japanese interests without strong ROK/US and Japan/US alliances

Despite the above I think we have to accept that north Korea may have a continued hostile strategy and therefore while we prioritize diplomacy we have to remain prepared for the worst cases.  I hope I am wrong here and that Kim Jong-un will dismantle his nuclear weapons and seek peaceful co-existence.

The Moon administration is going to continue to pursue its engagement strategy and peace and reconciliation strategy at any cost.  Some of those bearing the highest cost are the Korean people living in the north, but the Koreans in the South will suffer as well if this strategy leads to the north using force especially if it is successful in driving a wedge in the ROK/US Alliance.

Also, touting the “Vietnam model” is a grave mistake. I think north Korea would love to adopt a "Vietnam model."  Unfortunately, we are all focused on the post 1975 economic "Vietnam Model."  The regime is likely unwilling to adopt that model given the current conditions, to include the regime's assessment of security conditions.

But there is a "Vietnam model" that we overlook but one that the regime is actually pursuing.  Like north Vietnam it would like to broker a peace treaty with the US that would cause the withdrawal of US troops. It would like to see the US become overly focused on domestic issues.  Once troops are fully withdrawn the regime will redouble its efforts to dominate the entire peninsula and if necessary it will use force to do so because it will believe it has created the conditions to be successful.  it will attack the South, assuming the US has lost the will to come to the aid of the South because there is no longer a US force presence, and seek to unify the peninsula under the Guerrilla Dynasty and Gulag State just as north Vietnam did with the South.  That is the "Vietnam model" the Kim family regime would like to copy.  We need to understand the regime's political warfare strategy as well as its military strategy.  They are mutually supporting.

We should keep in mind that the two belligerents are the north and South. The UN recognized the north's aggression against the South and called on member nations to come to its defense ("to assist the Republic of Korea" which I think is an important phrase).   The Chinese Peoples' Volunteers (an unofficial military organization) intervened to assist the north.

Of course if the north and South sign a peace treaty ending their hostilities it is logical to argue that the UN command should be dissolved.  But I do not think there is any international precedent for this.  Also, there is nothing in the Armistice that says the signatories of the Armistice must also sign a peace treaty.  Again international lawyers are going to has this out but now we have two member nations of the UN (north and South) and if they choose to end the war who can stop them.  And of course once they do that all kinds of arguments will be made (like Moon Chung-in) that there is no more rationale for the UN command or US troops.

However, USFK and CFC exist and are present as a result of bi-lateral agreement in the Mutual Defense Treaty of 1953. Note below that the MDT makes no mention of north Korea or the DPRK.  A peace treaty should technically have no impact on the presence of US forces and bilateral ROK/US agreements and US troops are present by mutual agreement but if the South wants them to leave I expect we will immediately leave - we are not a nation that would occupy a sovereign country against its wishes - even if it were for its own good!!. (there is also the ROK/US Terms of Reference and the Strategic Directive from the Military Committee but those are classified ROK/US only).  See the MDT below for details.

If on June 12th, the day after the Singapore Summit the US, nK and ROK say that the war is officially ended I do not think that officially changes anything until there is a peace treaty negotiated between north and South with mechanism put in place to ensure the peace.  I see the US and possibly the Chinese role as mere guarantors of security but I do not think they have to be signatories on a peace treaty since the US was acting for the UN and the Chinese only sent "volunteers."  The treaty obligations of both the US with the ROK and China with nK are separate agreements and do not necessarily impact on the peace treaty.  I also see no way for the US, China, or the UN to "veto" a peace treaty between the north and South.  I also think it would be political suicide for any party to do so.  I think a declaration of the end of the war would be symbolic only but would have tremendous political influence (and popular influence).

Lastly, if there is a declaration of the end of the war we should ask how will that guarantee the security of South Korea and the 50 million Koreans living in the South.  What will prevent north Korea from executing its campaign plan to unify the peninsula by force?  The north Korean People's Army (nKPA) remains postured to attack the South and continues to modernize its military capabilities.  The north has not reciprocated with any substantive confidence building measures from the 2018 Comprehensive Military Agreement.  There can be no end of war declaration or peace treaty unless the threat on the DMZ is sufficiently reduced.  As a minimum the nKPA should be withdrawn to defensive positions in depth much as the South Korea military is arrayed for defense.

The bottom line is we have to deal with north Korea and the Kim family regime as they really are and not as we would wish them to be.

 

3. South Korea defends ban on anti-Pyongyang leaflets after ‘inane’ law slammed in US

SCMP  Park Chan-kyong ·  December 21, 2020

The ROK government has made an egregious mistake and we cannot sit idly by and not call it out.  We are allies with shared values. This law goes against those shared values.  

The ROKG cannot put a positive spin on this with its argument that this is about defending Korean citizens in the South from north Korean hostile action.  

Unfortunately the real rationale is simply the misguided belief that appeasing the regime will change its behavior.

I am reminded of Benjamin Franklin's quote: "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."

 

4. DPRK DEATH CAMP 

We listened to Joe Bermucez brief this report yesterday afternoon.  The full report can be downloaded here.  

 

5. US commands in Japan and South Korea report weekend coronavirus count

Stars and Stripes· by Joseph Ditzler · December 21, 2020

 

6.  Albright calls for U.S.-S. Korea cooperation on N. Korea's denuclearization

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · December 22, 2020

But did the former SECSTATE address the impact of the "Kim Yo-jong law" on the Korean people in the north and South and on the alliance?

 

7. South Korean officials defend controversial propaganda law

washingtontimes.com · by Ben Wolfgang

My comments in the article.

 

8. Fresh Virus Wave Is Testing South Korea’s No-Lockdown Strategy

Bloomberg · by Youkyung Lee · December 21, 2020

The graph in the article makes it appear the 3d wave is the worst so far.

 

9. Understanding Recent Revisions to the "Inter-Korean Relations Development Act"

38north.org · by Young Gil-Song · December 21, 2020

An explanation from a South Korean assembly and the chair of the Foreign Affairs and Unification Committee at the National Assembly responding to his US "counterpart" Rep. McCaul, ranking member of the US House Foreign Affairs Committee.

The real issue that should be discussed is how should the ROK/US alliance conduct effective information and influence activities to target the three target audiences in the north: the regime elite, the 2d tier leadership, and the population.  What the assemblymen is really describing is the ROK and the ROK/US alliance have too long neglected the information instrument of national power.  Because of this the escapees (defectors) have been left to their own devices and as outlined in this excerpt have conducted some activities that are probably counter productive to effective messaging. 

Excerpts:

“South Korea and the US have repeatedly said that they have no intention of invading North Korea and causing a regime change so that the North would give up the willingness to develop nuclear weapons. However, allowing anti-North Korea propaganda broadcasts and sending leaflets with photoshopped naked pictures of Kim Jong Un’s wife, Ri Sol Ju, from the near-border area are considered psychological warfare, which would be viewed as an act of war.

The Korean Peninsula is legally in a state of war. The end of the war has not been declared. It is quite difficult to persuade North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons program while neglecting such psychological warfare. The core content of the several inter-Korean agreements is the prohibition of mutual slander and mutual recognition of each other’s governmental system. North Korea does not distribute propaganda leaflets to South Korea. On the other hand, it is difficult to force North Korea to abide by inter-Korean agreements while South Korea does not.

We really need to develop a comprehensive and effective Alliance information and influence activities campaign. 

 

10.  Chinese, Russian military aircraft violate S. Korea's air defense zone

en.yna.co.kr · by 오석민 · December 22, 2020

The Chinese and Russians seem to be getting bold and taking advantage of the conditions and perceived stress among the friends and allies of Northeast Asia.

This. seems to be a pretty significant air operation in the KADIZ.

 

11. Denuclearizing North Korea: Six Options for Biden

warontherocks.com · by Victor Cha · December 22, 2020

As a wise diplomat once told me, everything that could be done diplomatically with north Korea has been tried at one time or another. At best we can try to repackage and try different combinations of actions.  

Dr.Cha provides a useful summary of what has occurred and many of the key issues on the Korean peninsula. He provides some useful recommendations but I do not think he has gone far enough.

Unification is mentioned only once in passing Dr. Cha's essay.  There is no discussion of solving the "Korea question". which I believe is the only way we will achieve an acceptable, durable political arrangement that will serve US and ROK/US alliance interests.

As we have written: "Any effective approach toward North Korea should be based on two new assumptions. The first recognizes that Kim will give up his nuclear program only when he concludes that the cost to him and his regime is too great – that is, when he believes possession of nuclear weapons threatens his survival. But external pressure alone, although important, will almost certainly fail to create the right cost-benefit ratio. It is the threat from the North Korean people that is most likely to cause Kim to give up his nuclear weapons.26 As former CIA analyst Jung Pak of the Brookings Institution has argued, “Kim fears his people more than he fears the United States. The people are his most proximate threat to the regime.”27 The ROK-U.S. alliance has yet to adopt a strategy with this in mind." 

Again, there is no silver bullet to the north Korea problem. This is why we need to focus on the long-term solution to the security and prosperity challenges on the Korean peninsula.  That is to focus on resolving the Korean question,' the unnatural division of the peninsula.”   Solve that and the nuclear issues and the human rights abuses and crimes against humanity will be fixed.  The question to ask is not what worked and what did not, but whether our action advanced our interests and moved us closer to the acceptable, durable political arrangement that will protect, serve, and advance US and ROK/US alliance interests?  That is: A secure, stable, economically vibrant, non-nuclear Korean peninsula unified under a liberal constitutional form of government with respect for individual liberty, the rule of law, and human rights, determined by the Korean people.  In short, a United Republic of Korea (UROK)
 
The way ahead is deterrence, defense, denuclearization and solving the “Korea question” (e.g., unification) with the understanding that denuclearization of the north will only happen when we resolve the Korea question.

 

12. Incoming Biden gov't likely to seek N.K. dialogue in 2021 rather than sanctions: think tank

en.yna.co.kr · by 송상호 · December 22, 2020

An obvious shaping operation is taking place by pro-Moon administration think tanks.  Just as an aside we have never been opposed to substantive productive dialogue with the north.   I also feel confident the incoming Biden administration is not going to make unilateral concessions such as sanctions relief only in the hope that it will lead to dialogue.  The Biden administration is not going to operate under the same assumptions regarding the nature and objectives of the Kim family regime that the Moon administration is operating under.  Rather than trying to shape the Biden administration policy, ROK thank tanks should be recommending that the Moon administration should reassesses and change its erroneous assumptions to more realistic ones that will allow the ROK and US alliance to develop mutually supportive ad reinforcing policies and strategies - or better yet -  a combined ROK/US alliance strategy.

 

13. China's top legislator calls for enhancing exchanges with ROK

china.org.cn

Of course it wants more engagement with the ROK.

 

14. Status Quo Ante with a Twist: Biden’s Probable East Asia Policy

cato.org· by Ted Galen Carpenter

Here is the argument of the appeasement pundits. "Greater flexibility" means to provide unilateral concessions in return for hopes of dialogue. All of these proposals focus on the US as the problem.  But the problem is Kim Jong-un and the nature of the Kim family regime.  While our demand for denuclearization may be a non-starter to north Korea, China, and some pundits, the Kim family regime's objective to dominate the Korean peninsula is also a non-starter. However, we must recognize what are the north Korean objectives and strategies and develop appropriate policies and strategies based on a realistic understanding of the nature of the Kim family regime.

 

15. Assessing the impact of North Korea's border blockade

dailynk.com· by Ha Yoon Ah · December 22, 2020

Please do not compare north and South Korean Special Forces.  They are not equivalent.

North Korea has deployed the Storm Corps (11th Corps), a special forces unit, along the entire Sino-North Korean border to enforce the border blockade. A military organization equivalent to the South Korean army’s Special Warfare Command, it is considered the country’s most elite unit, so much so that within North Korea, the force is called a “murder weapon.”

The unit’s original purpose was to secretly infiltrate enemy positions and attack rear areas to sow confusion in wartime. But now, with North Korean authorities making quarantine efforts their top priority, members of the unit are monitoring the border for smugglers and performing general guard duty at the border.

But there is likely to be a long-term impact of the border blockade and it is possible that it will not only lead to great suffering of the Korean people in the north, it could lead to internal instability if the military and security services suffer breakdowns in discipline due to a COVID outbreak.

 

16.  N. Korea claims no confirmed cases of coronavirus: WHO

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · December 22, 2020

"Move along.  Nothing to see here."

 

17.  Ruling party chief expresses regret over criticism of new law banning anti-Pyongyang leaflets

en.yna.co.kr · by 김나영 · December 21, 2020

Rep. Lee: I think you should regret the passage of this law, not the criticism of it. It is obviously going against human rights, freedom of expression, and the norms of free and democratic countries in the international community despite the rationalization of its supporters.  The basic argument is to restrict freedom of expression to protect citizens of south Korea. As I have said, if defense of Koreans in the South is your concern (and it rightly should be) then you should improve the defensive capabilities of the nation.  This action puts the Korean people at greater risk because it not only protects the Kim family regime it strengthens and emboldens it.  We can expect even greater provocations in the future because you have proven the regime's blackmail diplomacy works.  

 

18. North Korea first lady Ri Sol Ju leads makeup trends, defector says

upi.com· by Elizabeth Shim

Something of a little less substance though it is important to see how cultural trends evolve and how public (party) personas influence change.

But perhaps now that there are skincare [products for men, the north will succumb to the cultural bankruptcy of the west (note sarcasm).

 

19. HBO Max Hit “The Flight Attendant” Has a Surprise North Korea Angle

The National Interest · by Stephen Silver · December 21, 2020

Okay, now for something in the entertainment world.  I had no desire to see this show but now with the north Korean connection I may have to take a look.

 

------------------------

 

"Nothing in life is as important as you think it is when you are thinking about it." 

- Daniel Kahneman

 

“In foreign policy, a modest acceptance of fate will often lead to discipline rather than indifference. The realization that we cannot always have our way is the basis of a mature outlook that rests on an ancient sensibility, for tragedy is not the triumph of evil over good so much as triumph of one good over another that causes suffering. Awareness of that fact leads to a sturdy morality grounded in fear as well as in hope. The moral benefits of fear bring us to two English philosophers who, like Machiavelli, have for centuries disturbed people of goodwill: Hobbes and Malthus.” 

- Robert D. Kaplan, Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Requires a Pagan Ethos

 

“If you concentrate exclusively on victory, while no thought for the after effect, you may be too exhausted to profit by peace, while it is almost certain that the peace will be a bad one, containing the germs of another war.” 

- B.H. Liddel-Hart