PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Democratic People's Republic of
Korea (D.P.R.K. or North Korea)
Geography
Area: 120,410 sq. km. (47,000 sq. mi.),
about the size of Mississippi.
Cities:
Capital--Pyongyang. Other cities--Hamhung, Chongjin,
Wonsan, Nampo, and Kaesong.
Terrain: About 80% of land area is
moderately high mountains separated by deep, narrow valleys and
small, cultivated plains. The remainder is lowland plains covering
small, scattered areas.
Climate: Long, cold, dry winters; short,
hot, humid, summers.
People*
Nationality: Noun and
adjective--Korean(s).
Population (1998): 21.2 million.
Annual growth rate: About -0.03%.
Ethnic groups: Korean;
small Chinese and Japanese populations.
Religions: Buddhism,
Shamanism, Chongdogyo, Christian; religious activities have been
virtually nonexistent since 1945.
Language: Korean.
Education: Years compulsory--11. Attendance--3
million (primary, 1.5 million; secondary, 1.2 million; tertiary, 0.3
million). Literacy--99%.
Health (1998): Medical treatment
is free; one doctor for every 700 inhabitants; one hospital bed for
every 350. Infant mortality rate--88/1,000. Life
expectancy--males 49 yrs., females 54 yrs.
Government
Type: Highly centralized communist state.
Independence: September 9, 1948.
Constitution: 1948; 1972,
revised in 1992.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of
state); premier (head of government). Legislative--Supreme
People's Assembly. Judicial--Supreme Court; provincial, city,
county, and military courts.
Subdivisions: Nine provinces; four
province-level municipalities (Pyongyang, Kaesong, Chongjin, Nampo);
one free trade zone (Najin-Sonbong FTZ).
Political party: Korean
Workers' Party (communist).
Suffrage: Universal at 17.
Economy*
GDP (1997): $21.8 billion; 25% is
agriculture, 60% is mining and manufacturing, and 15% is services
and other.
Per capita GDP (1997): $900 purchasing power parity.
Agriculture: Products--rice, corn, potatoes, fruits,
vegetables, tobacco.
Mining and manufacturing:
Types--steel, cement, textiles, petrochemicals, machines,
military equipment.
Trade (1996): Exports--$912 million;
machinery and equipment, military hardware, iron, steel, metal ores,
nonferrous metals, nonmetallic minerals, textile fibers.
Imports--$1.95 billion: textiles, petroleum, coking coal,
grain. Major partners--Russia, China, Japan, Hong Kong,
European countries. These figures do not include trade with South
Korea.
*In most cases, the figures used above are estimates based upon
incomplete data and projections.
U.S. POLICY TOWARD NORTH KOREA
The Perry Process
On November 12, 1998, President
Clinton named former Secretary of Defense William J. Perry to
conduct a comprehensive review of U.S. policy toward North Korea.
The President's decision rose out of North Korea's August 31, 1998
launching of a "Taepodong-1" ballistic missile, which was widely
perceived as a destabilizing act.
The U.S. seeks progress from North Korea in the following areas
as being necessary for improved bilateral relations: credible
condemnation and forswearing of terrorism, continued dialogue
between North and South Korea on the future and possible
reunification of the Korean Peninsula, nuclear matters, restraints
on the development of long-range missiles, return of the remains of
U.S. military personnel missing in action during the Korean war, and
greater respect for human rights. The U.S. also has expressed
concern about North Korea's export of ballistic missiles and related
technology and the North Korean conventional military threat.
After a comprehensive review of U.S. policy, a May 25-28, 1999
trip to Pyongyang, and extensive international coordination,
especially with the Governments of South Korea and Japan, Dr. Perry
issued his report, "Review of United States Policy Toward North
Korea: Findings and Recommendations" on October 12, 1999. The report
recommended a two-path strategy. If North Korea would address areas
of concern, the U.S. (and U.S. allies) would "in a step-by-step and
reciprocal fashion, move to reduce pressures on the D.P.R.K. that it
perceives as threatening.... If the D.P.R.K. moved to eliminate its
nuclear and long-range missile threats, the United States would
normalize relations with the D.P.R.K., relax sanctions that have
long constrained trade with the D.P.R.K. and take other positive
steps..."If, however, North Korea refused to go down this 'positive
path,' "the United States and its allies would have to take other
steps to assure their security and contain the threat."
As part of the process begun by Dr. Perry, the U.S., South Korea,
and Japan established a high-level Trilateral Coordination and
Oversight Group (TCOG) to coordinate North Korea policy. The TCOG's
creation was announced jointly by representatives of the three
governments on April 25, 1999, after a meeting in Hawaii. There were
six TCOG meetings in 1999, including a summit in Auckland on
September 12 and a ministerial level meeting in Singapore on July
27. A 12th TCOG meeting was held on October 7, 2000, in Washington.
On September 25, 2000, the State Department announced that Dr.
William Perry was stepping down from his duties as North Korea
Policy Coordinator. Ambassador Wendy R. Sherman, the Counselor of
the Department, succeeded Dr. Perry as North Korea Policy
Coordinator and Special Adviser to the President and the Secretary
of State.
From October 8-12, 2000, North Korean Vice Marshal Jo Myong Rok,
the First Vice Chairman of the National Defense Commission, visited
the U.S. as the Special Envoy of Chairman Kim Jong Il. At the
conclusion of his visit, the two countries issued a Joint Communique
in which the two sides stated that neither government would have
hostile intent toward the other and confirmed the commitment of both
governments to make every effort in the future to build a new
relationship free from past enmity. Among other issues, the
communique mentioned missile issues and the Agreed Framework, and it
noted that Secretary of State Madeleine Albright would visit the
D.P.R.K. "to convey the views of U.S. President William Clinton
directly to Chairman Kim Jong Il...and to prepare for a possible
visit by the President of the United States."
The United States does not maintain any diplomatic, consular, or
trade relations with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
(D.P.R.K., or North Korea). Negotiations are ongoing to implement a
provision of the 1994 Agreed Framework between the U.S. and D.P.R.K.
for an exchange of diplomatic missions at the liaison office level.
On September 20, 1995, a consular protecting power arrangement
was implemented, allowing for consular protection by the Swedish
Embassy of U.S. citizens traveling in North Korea. The Swedish
Embassy in Pyongyang is not authorized to issue U.S. visas. U.S.
citizens and residents wishing to travel to North Korea must obtain
visas in third countries.
There are no U.S. Government restrictions on travel by private
U.S. citizens to North Korea. However, they may spend money in North
Korea only to purchase items related to travel, e.g. plane and train
tickets, accommodations, meals, guide and admission fees. In
addition, $100 worth of merchandise for personal use may be brought
back into the United States as unaccompanied baggage. (Also see
Travel and Business Information.)
U.S. Support for North-South Dialogue and Reunification
The United States supports the peaceful reunification of
Korea--divided following World War II--on terms acceptable to the
Korean people and recognizes that the future of the Korean Peninsula
is primarily a matter for them to decide. The U.S. believes that a
constructive and serious dialogue between the authorities of North
and South Korea is necessary to resolve the issues on the peninsula,
and that concrete steps to promote greater understanding and reduce
tension are needed to pave the way for reunifying the Korean nation.
The U.S. remains prepared to participate in negotiations between
North and South Korea if so desired by the two Korean Governments
and provided that both are full and equal participants in any such
talks.
On the basis of these principles, on April 16, 1996, President
Clinton and South Korean President Kim Young Sam proposed to convene
a "Four Party Meeting" of representatives of South Korea, North
Korea, the United States, and the People's Republic of China as soon
as possible, without preconditions. The purpose of these "Four Party
Talks" has been to initiate a process aimed at replacing the current
military armistice agreement with a permanent peace. Six plenary
sessions of the Four Party Talks were held in Geneva from December
1997 through August 1999. Two subcommittees have been created to
discuss armistice replacement and tension reduction.
On his inauguration in February 1998, R.O.K. President Kim
Dae-jung enunciated a new policy of engagement with North Korea
dubbed "The Sunshine Policy." The policy had three fundamental
principles: no tolerance of provocations from the North, no
intention to absorb the North, and the separation of political
cooperation from economic cooperation. Private sector overtures
would be based on commercial and humanitarian considerations. The
use of government resources would entail reciprocity. President
Kim's consistent application of this policy eventually set the stage
for the inter-Korean summit held in Pyongyang June 13-15, 2000.
The U.S. has strongly supported R.O.K. President Kim Dae-jung's
engagement policy and welcomed the active phase of North-South
dialogue that began with the inter-Korean summit. That summit
produced a Joint Declaration noting that the two governments "have
agreed to resolve the question of reunification independently and
through the joint efforts of the Korean people. . . ." Following the
summit, the two Koreas held ministerial-level meetings July 29-31 in
Seoul and August 29-September 1 in Pyongyang. They also held Defense
Minister talks on Cheju Island (South Korea) September 25-26. Also,
on September 14, following a visit to South Korea by Kim Yong Sun
(Chairman of the Korean Workers' Party's Asia-Pacific Peace
Committee), the R.O.K. and D.P.R.K. announced that Chairman Kim Jong
Il would visit South Korea in the near future, following a visit by
Supreme People's Assembly (SPA) Presidium President Kim Yong Nam.
This dialogue led the two governments to open liaison offices in the
truce village of Panmunjom on August 14. On August 15, in accordance
with the summit's Joint Declaration, the two sides sent delegations
of 100 members of separated families to each other's capitals for
reunion meetings. On September 18, R.O.K. President Kim Dae-jung
presided over a groundbreaking ceremony for the planned re-linking
of the Seoul-Sinuiju railway line, which crosses through the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
U.S. Efforts on Denuclearization
North and South Korea
had begun talks in 1990, which resulted in a 1991 denuclearization
accord (see, under Foreign Relations, Reunification Efforts Since
1971). Lack of progress on implementation of this accord triggered
actions on both sides that led to North Korea's March 12, 1993,
announcement of its withdrawal from the nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT). The UN Security Council on May 11 passed a resolution
urging the D.P.R.K. to cooperate with the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) and to implement the 1991 North-South
denuclearization accord. It also urged all member states to
encourage the D.P.R.K. to respond positively to this resolution and
to facilitate a solution.
The U.S. responded by holding political-level talks with the
D.P.R.K. in early June 1993 that led to a joint statement outlining
the basic principles for continued U.S.-D.P.R.K. dialogue and North
Korea's "suspending" its withdrawal from the NPT. A second round of
talks was held July 14-19, 1993, in Geneva. The talks set the
guidelines for resolving the nuclear issue, improving U.S.-North
Korean relations, and restarting inter-Korean talks, but further
negotiations deadlocked.
Following the D.P.R.K.'s spring 1994 unloading of fuel from its
five-megawatt nuclear reactor, the resultant U.S. push for UN
sanctions, and former U.S. President Carter's June 1994 visit to
Pyongyang, a third round of talks between the U.S. and the D.P.R.K.
opened in Geneva on July 8, 1994. The talks were recessed upon news
of the July death of North Korean President Kim Il Sung, then
resumed in August. On October 21, 1994, representatives of the
United States and the D.P.R.K. signed an Agreed Framework for
resolving the nuclear issue.
The 1994 Agreed Framework calls for the following steps.
- North Korea agreed to freeze its existing nuclear program to
be monitored by the IAEA.
- Both sides agreed to cooperate to replace the D.P.R.K.'s
graphite-moderated reactors for related facilities with
light-water (LWR) power plants, to be financed and supplied by an
international consortium (later identified as KEDO).
- The U.S. and D.P.R.K. will work together to store safely the
spent fuel from the five-megawatt reactor and dispose of it in a
safe manner that does not involve reprocessing in the D.P.R.K.
- The two sides agreed to move toward full normalization of
political and economic relations.
- Both sides will work together for peace and security on a
nuclear-free Korean Peninsula.
- Both sides agreed to work together to strengthen the
international nuclear non-proliferation regime.
In accordance with the terms of the 1994 Framework, the U.S.
Government in January 1995 responded to North Korea's decision to
freeze its nuclear program and cooperate with U.S. and IAEA
verification efforts by easing economic sanctions against North
Korea in four areas through:
- Authorizing transactions related to telecommunications
connections, credit card use for personal or travel-related
transactions, and the opening of journalists' offices;
- Authorizing D.P.R.K. use of the U.S. banking system to clear
transactions not originating or terminating in the United States
and unblocking frozen assets where there is no D.P.R.K. Government
interest;
- Authorizing imports of magnesite, a refractory material used
in the U.S. steel industry--North Korea and China are the world's
primary sources of this raw material; and
- Authorizing transactions related to future establishment of
liaison offices, case-by-case participation of U.S. companies in
the light-water reactor project, supply of alternative energy, and
disposition of spent nuclear fuel as provided for by the Agreed
Framework, in a manner consistent with applicable laws.
North Korea agreed to accept the decisions of the Korean
Peninsula Energy Development Organization (KEDO), the financier and
supplier of the LWRs, with respect to provision of the reactors.
KEDO subsequently identified Sinpo as the LWR project site and held
a groundbreaking ceremony in August 1987. In December 1999, KEDO and
KEPCO signed the Turnkey Contract (TKC), permitting full-scale
construction of the LWRs.
In January 1995, as called for in the 1994 Geneva Agreed
Framework, the U.S. and D.P.R.K. negotiated a method to store safely
the spent fuel from the five-megawatt reactor. According to this
method, U.S. and D.P.R.K. operators would work together to can the
spent fuel and store the canisters in the spent fuel pond. Actual
canning began in 1995. In April 2000, canning of all accessible
spent fuel rods and rod fragments was declared complete.
In 1998, the U.S. identified an underground site in Kumchang-ni,
D.P.R.K., which it suspected of being nuclear-related. In March
1999, after several rounds of negotiations, the U.S. and D.P.R.K.
agreed that the U.S. would be granted "satisfactory access" to the
underground site at Kumchang-ni. In October 2000, during Special
Envoy Jo Myong Rok's visit to Washington, the U.S. announced in a
Joint Communique with the D.P.R.K. that U.S. concerns about the site
had been resolved.
As called for in Dr. William Perry's review of U.S. policy toward
North Korea (see under U.S. Policy Toward North Korea) the U.S. and
D.P.R.K. launched new negotiations in May 2000 called the Agreed
Framework Implementation Talks.
HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL HIGHLIGHTS
The Korean Peninsula was first populated by peoples of a
Tungusic branch of the Ural-Altaic language family who migrated from
the northwestern regions of Asia. Some of these peoples also
populated parts of northeast China (Manchuria); Koreans and
Manchurians still show physical similarities.
Koreans are racially and linguistically homogeneous. Although
there are no indigenous minorities in North Korea, there is a small
Chinese community (about 50,000) and some 1,800 Japanese wives who
accompanied the roughly 93,000 Koreans returning to the North from
Japan during 1959-62.
Korean is a Ural-Altaic language and is related to Japanese and
remotely related to Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian, and Mongolian.
Although dialects exist, the Korean spoken throughout the peninsula
is mutually comprehensible. In North Korea, the Korean alphabet
(hangul) is used exclusively, unlike in South Korea, where a
combination of hangul and Chinese characters is used as the written
language.
Korea's traditional religions are Buddhism and Shamanism.
Christian missionaries arrived as early as the 16th century, but it
was not until the 19th century that they founded schools, hospitals,
and other modern institutions throughout Korea. Major centers of
19th-century missionary activity included Seoul and Pyongyang, and
there was a relatively large Christian population in the north
before 1945. Although religious groups exist in North Korea, most
available evidence suggests that the government severely restricts
religious activity.
According to legend, the god-king Tangun founded the Korean
nation in 2333 BC. By the first century AD, the Korean Peninsula was
divided into the kingdoms of Shilla, Koguryo, and Paekche. In 668
AD, the Shilla kingdom unified the peninsula. The Koryo
dynasty--from which Portuguese missionaries in the 16th century
derived the Western name "Korea"--succeeded the Shilla kingdom in
935. The Choson dynasty, ruled by members of the Yi clan, supplanted
Koryo in 1392 and lasted until the Japanese annexed Korea in 1910.
Throughout most of its history, Korea has been invaded,
influenced, and fought over by its larger neighbors. Korea was under
Mongolian occupation from 1231 until the early 14th century and was
plundered by Japanese pirates in 1359 and 1361. The unifier of
Japan, Hideyoshi, launched major invasions of Korea in 1592 and
1597. When Western powers focused "gunboat" diplomacy on Korea in
the mid-19th century, Korea's rulers adopted a closed-door policy,
earning Korea the title of "Hermit Kingdom."
Though the Choson dynasty paid tribute to the Chinese court and
recognized China's hegemony in East Asia, Korea was independent
until the late 19th century. At that time, China sought to block
growing Japanese influence on the Korean Peninsula and Russian
pressure for commercial gains there. This competition produced the
Sino-Japanese War of 1894-95 and the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05.
Japan emerged victorious from both wars and in 1910 annexed Korea as
part of the growing Japanese empire.
Japanese colonial administration was characterized by tight
control from Tokyo and ruthless efforts to supplant Korean language
and culture. Organized Korean resistance during the colonial
era--such as the March 1, 1919, Independence Movement--was
unsuccessful, and Japan remained firmly in control until the end of
World War II in 1945.
Japan surrendered in August 1945, and Korea was liberated.
However, the unexpectedly early surrender of Japan led to the
immediate division of Korea into two occupation zones, with the U.S.
administering the southern half of the peninsula and the U.S.S.R
taking over the area to the north of the 38th parallel. This
division was meant to be temporary and to facilitate the Japanese
surrender until the U.S., U.K., Soviet Union, and China could
arrange a trusteeship administration.
At a meeting in Cairo, it was agreed that Korea would be free "in
due course;" at a later meeting in Yalta, it was agreed to establish
a four-power trusteeship over Korea. In December 1945, a conference
convened in Moscow to discuss the future of Korea. A 5-year
trusteeship was discussed, and a joint Soviet-American commission
was established. The commission met intermittently in Seoul but
deadlocked over the issue of establishing a national government. In
September 1947, with no solution in sight, the United States
submitted the Korean question to the UN General Assembly.
Initial hopes for a unified, independent Korea quickly evaporated
as the politics of the Cold War and domestic opposition to the
trusteeship plan resulted in the 1948 establishment of two separate
nations with diametrically opposed political, economic, and social
systems and the outbreak of war in 1950 (see, under Foreign
Relations, Korean war of 1950-53).
ECONOMY
North Korea's faltering
economy and the breakdown of trade relations with the countries of
the former socialist bloc--especially following the fall of
communism in eastern Europe and the disintegration of the Soviet
Union--have confronted Pyongyang with difficult policy choices.
Other centrally planned economies in similar straits have opted for
domestic economic reform and liberalization of trade and investment.
Despite its recent moves toward limited economic opening, North
Korea has thus far avoided making any fundamental changes. Its
leadership seems determined to maintain tight political and
ideological control.
About 80% of North Korea's terrain consists of moderately high
mountain ranges and partially forested mountains and hills separated
by deep, narrow valleys and small, cultivated plains. The most
rugged areas are the north and east coasts. Good harbors are found
on the eastern coast. Pyongyang, the capital, near the country's
west coast, is located on the Taedong River.
Although most North Korean citizens live in cities and work in
factories, agriculture remains a rather high 25% of total GNP,
although output has not recovered to early 1990 levels. While trade
with the South has expanded since 1988, no physical links between
the two remain, and the infrastructure of the North is generally
poor and outdated.
North Korea suffers from chronic food shortages, which were
exacerbated by record floods in the summer of 1995 and continued
shortages of fertilizer and parts. In response to international
appeals, the U.S. provided 500,000 tons of humanitarian food aid in
the period July 1999-June 2000 through the UN World Food Program and
through U.S. private voluntary organizations.
Colonial Rule and Postwar Division
Beginning in the
mid-1920s, the Japanese colonial administration concentrated its
industrial development efforts in the comparatively underpopulated
and resource-rich northern portion of Korea, resulting in a
considerable movement of people northward from the agrarian southern
provinces of the Korean Peninsula.
This trend was reversed after the end of World War II, when more
than 2 million Koreans moved from North to South following the
division of the peninsula into Soviet and American military zones of
administration. This southward exodus continued after the
establishment of the D.P.R.K. in 1948 and during the 1950-53 Korean
war. The North Korean population is now 21.2 million, compared with
46.4 million in South Korea.
The post-World War II division of the Korean Peninsula resulted
in imbalances of natural and human resources, with disadvantages for
both the North and the South. By most economic measures, after
partition the North was better off in terms of industry and natural
resources. The South, however, had two-thirds of the work force. In
1945, about 65% of Korean heavy industry was in the North but only
31% of light industry, 37% of agriculture, and 18% of the
peninsula's total commerce.
North and South both suffered from the massive destruction caused
during the Korean war. In the years immediately after the war, North
Korea mobilized its labor force and natural resources in an effort
to achieve rapid economic development. Large amounts of aid from
other communist countries, notably the Soviet Union and China,
helped the regime achieve a high growth rate in the immediate
postwar period.
Efforts at Modernization
During the early 1970s, North
Korea attempted a largescale modernization program through the
importation of Western technology, principally in the heavy
industrial sectors of the economy. Unable to finance its debt
through exports that shrank steadily after the worldwide recession
stemming from the oil crisis of the 1970s, the D.P.R.K. became the
first communist country to default on its loans from free market
countries.
In 1979, North Korea was able to renegotiate much of its
international debt, but in 1980 it defaulted on all of its loans
except those from Japan. By the end of 1986, hard-currency debt had
reached more than $4 billion. It also owed nearly $2 billion to
communist creditors, principally Russia. The Japanese also declared
the D.P.R.K. in default. By 2000, taking into account penalties and
accrued interest, North Korea's debt was estimated at $10-$12
billion.
Largely because of these debt problems but also because of a
prolonged drought and mismanagement, North Korea's industrial growth
slowed, and per capita GNP fell below that of the South. By the end
of 1979, per capita GNP in the D.P.R.K. was about one-third of that
in the R.O.K. The causes for this relatively poor performance are
complex, but a major factor is the disproportionately large
percentage of GNP (possibly as much as 25%) that the D.P.R.K.
devotes to the military.
In April 1982, Kim Il Sung announced a new economic policy giving
priority to increased agricultural production through land
reclamation, development of the country's infrastructure--especially
power plants and transportation facilities--and reliance on
domestically produced equipment. There also was more emphasis on
trade.
In September 1984, North Korea promulgated a joint venture law to
attract foreign capital and technology. The new emphasis on
expanding trade and acquiring technology, however, was not
accompanied by a shift in priorities away from support of the
military. In 1991, the D.P.R.K. announced the creation of a Special
Economic Zone (SEZ) in the northeast regions of Najin, Chongjin, and
Sonbong. Investment in this SEZ has been slow in coming. Problems
with infrastructure, bureaucracy, and uncertainties about investment
security and viability have hindered growth and development.
The D.P.R.K. announced in December 1993 a 3-year transitional
economic policy placing primary emphasis on agriculture, light
industry, and foreign trade. However, lack of fertilizer, natural
disasters, and poor storage and transportation practices have left
the country more than a million tons short of grain self-sufficiency
each year. Moreover, lack of foreign exchange to purchase spare
parts and oil for electrical generation has left many factories
shuttered. Without significant opening to the outside world and
substantial outside resources, the D.P.R.K. is unlikely to return to
a path of sustainable economic growth.
North-South Economic Ties
Following a 1988 decision by
the South Korean Government to allow trade with the D.P.R.K. (see,
under Foreign Relations, Reunification Efforts Since 1971), South
Korean firms began to import North Korean goods. Direct trade with
the South began in the fall of 1990 after the unprecedented
September 1990 meeting of the two Korean Prime Ministers. Trade
between the countries increased from $18.8 million in 1989 to $333.4
million in 1999, much of it processing or assembly work undertaken
in the North.
During this decade, the chairman of the South Korean company
Daewoo visited the D.P.R.K. and reached agreement on building a
light industrial complex at Nampo. In other negotiations, Hyundai
Asan obtained permission to bring tour groups by sea to Kumgangsan
on the southeast coast of the D.P.R.K. and more recently to
construct an 800-acre industrial complex at Kaesong, near the DMZ,
at a cost of more than $1 billion.
In response to the Kim Jong Il/Kim Dae-jung summit, the D.P.R.K.
and the R.O.K. agreed in August 2000 to reconnect the Seoul-Sinuiju
railroad where it crosses the DMZ. In addition, the two governments
said they would build a four-lane highway bypassing the truce
village at Panmunjom. Once these projects are completed, the Kaesong
industrial park will have ready access to South Korean markets and
ports.
New Commercial Ties
On June 19, 2000, the United
States announced easing of sanctions against North Korea and allowed
a wide range of exports and imports of U.S. and D.P.R.K. commercial
and consumer goods. Imports from North Korea are permitted, subject
to an approval process. Direct personal and commercial financial
transactions are allowed between U.S. and D.P.R.K. persons.
Restrictions on investment also have been eased. Commercial U.S.
ships and aircraft carrying U.S. goods are allowed to call at
D.P.R.K. ports.
The Departments of Treasury, Commerce, and Transportation have
issued regulations, published in the June 19, 2000 Federal Register,
affecting sanctions-easing. Points of Contact: Treasury--Dennis P.
Wood, Chief of Compliance Programs, Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Tel. (202) 622-2490, http://www.treas.gov/ofac;
Commerce--James A. Lewis, Director, Office of Strategic Trade,
Bureau of Export Administration, Tel. (202) 482-0092;
Transportation--Christopher T. Tourtellot, Office of the Assistant
General Counsel for International Law, Tel. (202) 366-9183.
This easing of sanctions does not affect U.S. counterterrorism or
non-proliferation controls on North Korea, which prohibit exports of
military and sensitive dual-use items and most types of U.S.
assistance. Statutory restrictions, such as U.S. missile sanctions,
remain in place. Restrictions on North Korea based on multilateral
arrangements also remain in place.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
North Korea has a centralized government
under the rigid control of the communist Korean Workers' Party
(KWP), to which all government officials belong. A few minor
political parties are allowed to exist in name only. Kim Il Sung
ruled North Korea from 1948 until his death in July 1994. Kim served
both as Secretary General of the KWP and as President of North
Korea.
Little is known about the actual lines of power and authority in
the North Korean Government despite the formal structure set forth
in the constitution. Following the death of Kim Il Sung, his
son--Kim Jong Il--inherited supreme power. Kim Jong Il was named
General Secretary of the Korean Workers' Party in October 1997, and
in September 1998, the SPA reconfirmed Kim Jong Il as Chairman of
the National Defense Commission and declared that position as the
"highest office of state." North Korea's 1972 constitution was
amended in late 1992. The government is led by the president and, in
theory, a super cabinet called the Central People's Committee (CPC).
The constitution designates the CPC as the government's top
policymaking body. It is headed by the president, who also nominates
the other committee members. The CPC makes policy decisions and
supervises the cabinet, or State Administration Council (SAC). The
SAC is headed by a premier and is the dominant administrative and
executive agency.
Officially, the legislature, the Supreme People's Assembly, is
the highest organ of state power. Its members are elected every 4
years. Usually only two meetings are held annually, each lasting a
few days. A standing committee elected by the SPA performs
legislative functions when the Assembly is not in session. In
reality, the Assembly serves only to ratify decisions made by the
ruling KWP.
North Korea's judiciary is "accountable" to the SPA and the
president. The SPA's standing committee also appoints judges to the
highest court for 4-year terms that are concurrent with those of the
Assembly.
Administratively, North Korea is divided into nine provinces and
four provincial-level municipalities--Pyongyang, Chongjin, Nampo,
and Kaesong. It also appears to be divided into nine military
districts.
Principal Party and Government Officials
Kim Jong
Il--General Secretary of the KWP; Supreme Commander of the People's
Armed Forces; Chairman of the National Defense Commission; son of
Kim Il Sung and de facto heir. Kim Yong Nam--President of the
Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly; titular head of state.
Paek Nam Sun--Foreign Minister. Li Hyong Chul--Ambassador to the UN.
DEFENSE AND MILITARY ISSUES
North
Korea now has the fourth-largest army in the world. The North has an
estimated 1.2 million armed personnel, compared to about 650,000 in
the South. Military spending equals 20%-25% of GNP, with about 20%
of men ages 17-54 in the regular armed forces. North Korean forces
have a substantial numerical advantage over the South (approximately
2 or 3 to 1) in several key categories of offensive weapons--tanks,
long-range artillery, and armored personnel carriers.
The North has perhaps the world's second-largest special
operations force (55,000), designed for insertion behind the lines
in wartime. While the North has a relatively impressive fleet of
submarines, its surface fleet has a very limited capability. Its air
force has twice the number of aircraft as the South, but, except for
a few advanced fighters, the North's air force is obsolete. The
North--like the South--deploys the bulk of its forces well forward,
along the DMZ. Several North Korean military tunnels under the DMZ
were discovered in the 1970s.
In 1953, the Military Armistice Commission (MAC) was created to
oversee and enforce the terms of the armistice. The Neutral Nation
Supervisory Committee (NNSC)--originally made up of delegations from
Poland and Czechoslovakia on the D.P.R.K.-Chinese People's
Volunteers side and Sweden and Switzerland on the UN side--monitors
the activities of the MAC. In recent years, North Korea has sought
to dismantle the MAC in a push for a new "peace mechanism" on the
peninsula. In April 1994, it declared the MAC void and withdrew its
representatives. Prior to this, it had effectively ended the
functions of the NNSC.
Also over the last several years, North Korea has moved even more
of its rear-echelon troops to hardened bunkers closer to the DMZ.
Given the proximity of Seoul to the DMZ (some 25 miles), South
Korean and U.S. forces are likely to have little warning of any
attack. The United States and South Korea continue to believe that
the U.S. troop presence remains an effective deterrent.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
North Korea's
relationship with the South has informed much of its post-World War
II history and still drives much of its foreign policy. North and
South Korea have had a difficult and acrimonious relationship in the
five decades since the Korean war.
North Korea occupies the northern portion of a mountainous
peninsula projecting southeast from China, between the Sea of Japan
and the Yellow Sea. Japan lies east of the peninsula across the Sea
of Japan. North Korea shares borders with the People's Republic of
China along the Yalu River and with China and Russia along the Tumen
River.
The military demarcation line (MDL) of separation between the
belligerent sides at the close of the Korean war forms North Korea's
boundary with South Korea. A demilitarized zone (DMZ) extends for
2,000 meters (just over 1 mile) on either side of the MDL. Both the
North and South Korean Governments hold that the MDL is only a
temporary administrative line, not a permanent border.
During the postwar period, both Korean Governments have
repeatedly affirmed their desire to reunify the Korean Peninsula,
but until 1971, the two governments had no direct, official
communications or other contact. During former U.S. President
Carter's 1994 visit, Kim Il Sung agreed to a first-ever North-South
summit. The two sides went ahead with plans for a meeting in July
but had to shelve it because of Kim's death.
Korean War of 1950-53
As noted, differences developed
after World War II over the issue of establishing a Korean national
government. The Soviet Union and Korean authorities in the North
refused to comply with the UN General Assembly's November 1947
resolution on elections and blocked entry of the United Nations
Temporary Commission on Korea into the North. Despite this refusal,
elections were held in the South under UN observation, and on August
15, 1948, the Republic of Korea was established in the South.
Syngman Rhee, a Korean nationalist leader, became the Republic's
first president.
On September 9, 1948, the North established the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea headed by then-Premier Kim Il Sung, known
for his anti-Japanese guerrilla activities in Manchuria during the
1930s. Both administrations claimed to be the only legitimate
government on the peninsula.
After the establishment of the two states, South Korea
experienced several violent uprisings by indigenous, pro-North
Korean leftist guerrillas. As Soviet troops left in late 1948 and
U.S. troops in the spring of 1949, border clashes along the 38th
parallel intensified.
North Korean forces invaded South Korea on June 25, 1950. The
United Nations, in accordance with the terms of its Charter, engaged
in its first collective action and established the UN Command (UNC),
to which 16 member nations sent troops and assistance. Next to South
Korea, the United States contributed the largest contingent of
forces to this international effort. The battle line fluctuated
north and south, and after large numbers of Chinese "People's
Volunteers" intervened to assist the North, the battle line
stabilized north of Seoul near the 38th parallel.
Armistice negotiations began in July 1951, but hostilities
continued until July 27, 1953. On that date, at Panmunjom, the
military commanders of the North Korean People's Army, the Chinese
People's Volunteers, and the UNC signed an armistice agreement.
Neither the United States nor South Korea is a signatory to the
armistice per se, although both adhere to it through the UNC.
The armistice called for an international conference to find a
political solution to the problem of Korea's division. This
conference met at Geneva in April 1954 but, after 7 weeks of futile
debate, ended without agreement or progress. No comprehensive peace
agreement has replaced the 1953 armistice pact; thus, a condition of
belligerency still exists on the peninsula.
Reunification Efforts Since 1971
In August 1971, North
and South Korea agreed to hold talks through their respective Red
Cross societies with the aim of reuniting the many Korean families
separated following the division of Korea and the Korean war. After
a series of secret meetings, both sides announced on July 4, 1972,
an agreement to work toward peaceful reunification and an end to the
hostile atmosphere prevailing on the peninsula. Officials exchanged
visits, and regular communications were established through a
North-South coordinating committee and the Red Cross.
However, these initial contacts broke down and ended in 1973
following South Korean President Park Chung Hee's announcement that
the South would seek separate entry into the United Nations and
after the kidnapping from Tokyo of South Korean opposition leader
Kim Dae-Jung by the South Korean intelligence service. There was no
other significant contact between North and South Korea until 1984.
Dialogue was renewed on several fronts in September 1984, when
South Korea accepted the North's offer to provide relief goods to
victims of severe flooding in South Korea. Red Cross talks to
address the plight of separated families resumed, as did talks on
economic and trade issues and parliamentary-level discussions.
However, the North then unilaterally suspended all talks in January
1986, arguing that the annual U.S.-South Korea "Team Spirit"
military exercise was inconsistent with dialogue. There was a brief
flurry of negotiations on co-hosting the 1988 Seoul Olympics, which
ended in failure and was followed by the 1987 KAL flight 858
bombing.
In a major initiative in July 1988, South Korean President Roh
Tae Woo called for new efforts to promote North-South exchanges,
family reunification, inter-Korean trade, and contact in
international forums. Roh followed up this initiative in a UN
General Assembly speech in which South Korea offered for the first
time to discuss security matters with the North.
Initial meetings that grew out of Roh's proposals started in
September 1989. In September 1990, the first of eight prime
minister-level meetings between North Korean and South Korean
officials took place in Seoul, beginning an especially fruitful
period of dialogue. The prime ministerial talks resulted in two
major agreements: the Agreement on Reconciliation, Nonaggression,
Exchanges, and Cooperation (the "Basic Agreement") and the
Declaration on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula (the
"Joint Declaration").
The Basic Agreement, signed on December 13, 1991, and calling for
reconciliation and nonaggression established four joint commissions.
These commissions--on South-North reconciliation, South-North
military affairs, South-North economic exchanges and cooperation,
and South-North social and cultural exchange--were to work out the
specifics for implementing the general terms of the basic agreement.
Subcommittees to examine specific issues were created, and liaison
offices were established in Panmunjom, but in the fall of 1992, the
process came to a halt because of rising tension over the nuclear
issue.
The Joint Declaration on denuclearization was initialed on
December 31, 1991. It forbade both sides to test, manufacture,
produce, receive, possess, store, deploy, or use nuclear weapons and
forbade the possession of nuclear reprocessing and uranium
enrichment facilities. A procedure for inter-Korean inspection was
to be organized and a North-South Joint Nuclear Control Commission
(JNCC) was mandated with verification of the denuclearization of the
peninsula.
On January 30, 1992, the D.P.R.K. also signed a nuclear
safeguards agreement with the IAEA, as it had pledged to do in 1985
when acceding to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. This
safeguards agreement allowed IAEA inspections to begin in June 1992.
In March 1992, the JNCC was established in accordance with the joint
declaration, but subsequent meetings failed to reach agreement on
the main issue of establishing a bilateral inspection regime.
As the 1990s progressed, concern over the North's nuclear program
became a major issue in North-South relations and between North
Korea and the U.S. The lack of progress on implementation of the
joint nuclear declaration's provision for an inter-Korean nuclear
inspection regime led to reinstatement of the U.S.-South Korea Team
Spirit military exercise for 1993. The situation worsened rapidly
when North Korea, in January 1993, refused IAEA access to two
suspected nuclear waste sites and then announced in March 1993 its
intent to withdraw from the NPT. During the next 2 years, the U.S.
held direct talks with the D.P.R.K. that resulted in a series of
agreements on nuclear matters (see, under U.S. Policy Toward North
Korea, U.S. Efforts on Denuclearization).
Relations Outside the Peninsula
After 1945, the Soviet
Union supplied the economic and military aid that enabled North
Korea to mount its invasion of the South in 1950. Soviet aid and
influence continued at a high level during the Korean war; as
mentioned, the Soviet Union was largely responsible for rebuilding
North Korea's economy after the cessation of hostilities. In
addition, the assistance of Chinese "volunteers" during the war and
the presence of these troops until 1958 gave China some degree of
influence in North Korea. In 1961, North Korea concluded formal
mutual security treaties with the Soviet Union (inherited by Russia)
and China, which have not been formally ended.
In the 1970s and early 1980s, the establishment of diplomatic
relations between the United States and China, the Soviet-backed
Vietnamese occupation of Cambodia, and the Soviet occupation of
Afghanistan created strains between China and the Soviet Union and,
in turn, in North Korea's relations with its two major communist
allies. North Korea tried to avoid becoming embroiled in the
Sino-Soviet split, obtaining aid from both the Soviet Union and
China and trying to avoid dependence on either. Following Kim Il
Sung's 1984 visit to Moscow, there was a dramatic improvement in
Soviet-D.P.R.K. relations, resulting in renewed deliveries of
advanced Soviet weaponry to North Korea and increases in economic
aid.
The establishment of diplomatic relations by South Korea with the
Soviet Union in 1990 and with the P.R.C. in 1992 put a serious
strain on relations between North Korea and its traditional allies.
Moreover, the fall of communism in eastern Europe in 1989 and the
disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 resulted in a significant
drop in communist aid to North Korea. Despite these changes and its
past reliance on this military and economic assistance, North Korea
proclaims a militantly independent stance in its foreign policy in
accordance with its official ideology of juche, or self-reliance.
At the same time, North Korea maintains membership in a variety
of multilateral organizations. It became a member of the UN in
September 1991. North Korea also belongs to the Food and Agriculture
Organization; the International Civil Aviation Organization; the
International Postal Union; the UN Conference on Trade and
Development; the International Telecommunications Union; the UN
Development Program; the UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural
Organization; the World Health Organization; the World Intellectual
Property Organization; the World Meteorological Organization; the
International Maritime Organization; the International Committee of
the Red Cross; and the Nonaligned Movement.
In July 2000, North Korea began participating in the ASEAN
Regional Forum (ARF), as Foreign Minister Paek Nam Sun attended the
ARF ministerial meeting in Bangkok July 26-27. The D.P.R.K. also
expanded its bilateral diplomatic ties in that year, establishing
diplomatic relations with Italy, Australia, and the Philippines. The
U.K. and Germany also have announced their intentions to establish
diplomatic relations.
Terrorism
The D.P.R.K. is not known to have sponsored
any terrorist acts since 1987, when KAL 858 was bombed in flight.
The D.P.R.K. has made several statements condemning terrorism. Most
recently, on October 6, 2000, the U.S. and the D.P.R.K. issued a
Joint Statement in which "the two sides agreed that international
terrorism poses an unacceptable threat to global security and peace,
and that terrorism should be opposed in all its forms." The U.S. and
D.P.R.K. agreed to support the international legal regime combating
international terrorism and to cooperate with each other to fight
terrorism. Pyongyang continues to provide sanctuary to members of
the Japanese Communist League-Red Army Faction who participated in
the hijacking of a Japan Airlines flight to North Korea in 1970.