Bow Before the Portrait: Sino-North Korean Relations Enter the Kim Jong Un Era
December 23, 2011 in Uncategorized by The China Beat
By Adam Cathcart
Adam Cathcart is Assistant Professor History at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington and the editor of SinoNK.com.
The pigs were being slaughtered in the streets when the news of Kim Jong Ils death arrived in Dachuan, a small logging village in the mountains of western Sichuan province. Over the immense and extended cacophony of the blood-letting, the retired head of the local bank explained, with a bit of apologetic joy, that the villagers were getting ready for Spring Festival, then turned back to the news from Pyongyang, shaking his head at the retrograde tendencies of Chinas Korean socialist brothers.
It was a fitting juxtaposition, watching events in North Korea amid the production of reams of red pork with rich peasants in China. Meat, after all, was the sine qua non of success for Kim Il Sung and his son, both of whom proclaimed their magnanimous desire to make good on the promise of rice with meat soup in every pot (and a tile roof for every rural house). Yet, as even a cursory read of virtually any analysis or short trip to the North Korean border with China can attest, the battle for higher living standardsas opposed to monumentsin essentially every place outside of the DPRKs model capital has been lost. Mao Zedong said he could do without meat, making revolution with just grain and rifles, but North Korea has ample rifles but no grain, and the revolution is dead.
Amid the welter of random, confusing, instructive, and occasionally cruel responses to Kim Jong Ils death among Chinese, Mao Zedongs death in 1976 has been a touchstone. This particular parallel, encouraged by Chinese state media, is significant because it implicitly holds out the hope that a market-oriented North Korean Deng Xiaoping might yet emerge out of the factions assumed to be maneuvering in Pyongyang. But North Korea is hardly exiting the fractured rebellion of a Cultural Revolution. The DPRK remains instead in the thrall of a persistently centralized leadership system in which Kim Il Sung and his son had purged, jailed, exiled, or killed all the advocates of possible systemic alternatives. In Andrei Lankovs phrase, the blade of state of state remains sharp enough to cut off its diseased parts, and gazing at the grizzled ranks of the Pyongyang senior elite, it seems unlikely that some wholesale adoption of Chinese-style market reforms is in the offing.
http://www.thechinabeat.org/?p=4052
I think this is a fairly good analysis of Sino-North Korean politics. Clearly, the road for peace in Korea goes through Beijing.