http://joongangdaily.joins.com/200311/18/200311182238152779900090109012.html
I guess I shouldn't be surprised
to read this from a Unification research guy or some editor of the Joongang
Ilbo.
This is the editorial staff that put together the 15 or so series of articles
that said it was going to explore how "Americans" and the world views the
US in our contemporary times. It was a 15 article rabid hatchet job.
[GLOBAL EYE] Say a eulogy for U.S-Korea ties
The Korea-U.S. alliance is dying, if not already dead. Government officials
too often insist that the Korea-U.S. bond is solid and intact, which only
shows how serious the situation is. Their attitude of denial and their attempts
to cover up the situation are the key problems. They lack a sense of reality,
or even worse, want to look elsewhere even when they realize there are problems.
In any case, we cannot hope the situation improves by itself.
The alliance began to crack a long time ago. What has torn the two countries
apart? First of all, Korea has changed. Once we achieved
a coveted democracy by our own hands, Koreans started to believe that
Korea doesn't need to submit to the United States to legitimize our
government.
[People with no Korea experience -- These are common
thoughts in South Korea.
It was the US who supported the dictators (true in some important respects)
but I guess Koreans didn't.....And the US pressure on the dictators to reform
was covert lies, I guess, because Korea has nothing to thank the US
for in its democratization.....I guess....]
Korea was once pressured to open its market, even at
the expense of our national pride, because of its huge trade surplus
with the United States.
[I wish non-expat people could understand the importance
of the line about "our national pride"!! But thankfully he did mention
Korea's Miracle on the Han was because of its trade surplus it enjoyed for
a long time.]
But now we no longer have to swallow our pride
in order to enter the American market. Our pleas for help after the country's
sudden economic collapse in 1997 are now just a distant memory. In fact,
back then some people blamed the United States for putting us in a difficult
position.
[Right, ingrateful asshole. It was literally
unbelievable to me as the Korean economy was in free fall and my salary couldn't
buy a coke cola in US dollars and what most of Korean society wanted to scream
about was how the bastard Americans in the IMF were destorying the Korean
economy! BY A BAIL OUT OF THE KOREAN ECONOMY!!!
And what are you trying to say here.......you don't have to swallow your
pride anymore to enter the US market? When before swallowing pride
was to open up the Korean market? I guess we have the Great Yellow
Hope -- China -- in the background here. Trade with China is rivalling
that of the US, so Korea can be saved from the White Devil ----- for those
of you unfamiliar with Korea, the use of the word Devil is not uncommon.
I was hounded out of a subway car by a 70 something old man giving
a speech on the Russia Devils and American Devils who took the opportunity
to practice is remarkably good English to chase me through a couple of cars
and finally off the train by saying, "Go home! White Devil! Go
home!" And for further information, Korea calls themselves the Red
Devils for soccer matches and what not....]
More recently, the voters have chosen a president who has no debt to the United States. That certainly made
Washington nervous. The president has chosen Blue House
aides who can say "no" to Washington, which is part of the reason
that talk about dispatching additional troops to Iraq has created so much
unnecessary controversy.
But I am not here to blame them for the death of the alliance.
[No. YOUR type is the reason the alliance should die a very speedy
death!]
They have their reasons to oppose Washington. They grew up hating their predecessors
who were submissive to the United States.
[Again.......refer back to the lines about about how
Korea "democratized on its own" when you read the above line. The idea
is clear. The US was the stumbling block to democracy in Korea. It
was because of America a Park Chung Hee got power or a Chun Do-Hwan. Just
as the US is THE block to unification.]
It is not just Korea that has changed. The United States is no longer what
it used to be, especially after the devastating 9/11 attacks, which caused the entire country to panic. American society
has picked up on the hysteria, and we can no
longer expect the generosity of the most powerful country in the world.
Washington is obsessed with the idea that it has
to guard its status as the sole superpower at any cost.
[Because of 9-11.....you fucking asshole......]
Aside from the neoconservatives in the White House, President George W. Bush
is different from his predecessors. A born-again Christian,
Mr. Bush sees the world in terms of black and white, no gray. Koreans cheered
when he said he wouldn't try to change the political system in Pyeongyang,
but in his mind, he still thinks the North Korean leader presides over one
part of the "axis of evil." To Mr. Bush, Kim Jong-il is no different from
Saddam Hussein of Iraq. Washington might reluctantly accept North Korea in
talks, but it has never even dreamed of coexisting with such a country.
North Korea is one of the key reasons for the death of the alliance. Seoul
has defined the North as a nation we need to embrace and care for, and has
asked Washington to join this cause. However, this request began the rift
between the United States and Korea. If North Korea
is not an enemy, why do we need the United States? As our stance on
North Korea has softened and the government has pursued the tolerance-based
"Sunshine Policy," Washington was bound to become estranged from us.
The more Washington mentioned the military threat
North Korea poses, the more Koreans started to see the United States as an
obstacle to the grand reconciliation of the two Koreas. I understand
why some of the president's aides give Washington the cold shoulder. After
all, they are supposed to be devoted to reconciliation and cooperation with
the North.
It would be ideal if we could keep the inter-Korean cooperation and maintain
the useful and beneficial alliance with the United States. But that is too
much to ask for. The United States has become
an unpopular partner to us as well as to the rest of the world.
Even though the few so-called "Korea watchers" in Washington are exhausted
from their efforts to preserve the U.S.-Korea alliance, I feel the need to stop talking about the United States.
The bond cannot be saved now. We can only delay its destined death.
[Yeah....right....you-many-foul-mouthed-words person.......And
I know just about when the delay in the death will end! Right after
North Korea collapses or has a coup or whatever it takes to fully remove
the threat.
Right........When you no longer don't for US blood to stand by waiting to
be shed for your bleeping pride if your Northern brothers attack......
Koreans LIKE YOU will be in the press and streets screaming for the death
of the alliance once and for all......you complete fucking jackass.......(sorry,
I can hold back only so much......)]
It might be too early to play a requiem in honor of the Korea-U.S. alliance.
But I have spoken on behalf of the soon-to-be-dead in the manner of a living
person writing his own obituary to boost what life he has left.
* The writer is an editorial writer and director of the JoongAng Ilbo Unification
Research Institute.
by Kil Jeong-woo