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Since 1995, the United States has provided North Korea with over $1 billion in assistance, about 60% of which has paid for food aid and 40% or so paying for energy assistance.
The country's economy has been devastated since the early 1990s and millions of people live on the edge of famine.
That has not deterred Kim from indulging his eccentric tastes. He allegedly imports £350,000 of cognac a year and eats lobster, caviar and sushi. He spent millions on a fleet of Mercedes Benz luxury cars and spends his time watching Hollywood movies such as Rambo or Friday the 13th.
No one inside North Korea would ever hear of this excess. Kim has banned mobile phones, newspapers, the internet and books. In 2004, he brought in a new criminal law, penalising anyone who tried to bring in outside music. Talking about his successor is banned too.
Originally posted by oozyism
reply to post by Jakes51
Jake, when there is sanctions, who do you think is effected?
Originally posted by oozyism
reply to post by Jakes51
You have to be kidding yourself to think that the N-Korean economy would thrive with all these sanctions imposed on it. And don't use Nuclear Bomb as an excuse for the sanctions because the US has 100X more than N-Korea.
The Chinese government has been trying to achieve denuclearization on the Korean Peninsula and opposes proliferation of nuclear weapons in an effort to maintain peace and stability in northeast Asia.
. . . China fears North Korea's sabre-rattling could prompt or justify Japanese remilitarisation, further defence spending in the South or increase US military support for Seoul – shifting the regional balance of power to its disadvantage. Any military skirmish could have a devastating impact on Sino-South Korean relations.
Originally posted by oozyism
reply to post by Jakes51
Let's not forget, not long ago the US did the same exact thing against Iraq, when sanctions were imposed against Iraq over a million Iraqi babies died in direct result of those sanctions.
Humanitarian aid doesn't help the economy Jake, I can guarantee that.
We all know US is at war with N-Korea, and for some reason doesn't want peace, if it did, it would already propose a peace treaty, instead of point nukes at N-Korea and seeking provocation.
Originally posted by oozyism
reply to post by Jakes51
and please don't post propaganda, as I said before many times in ATS, anti N-Korean propaganda is extreme and deeply rooted within Western media. So much BS has been put forwards that now we have absolutely no idea which one is BS and which one is Real.S.
Think about it, why hasn't there ever been an uprising in N-Korea? There was even an uprising in Iraq, remember? When Saddam gassed Kurds and Shiits?
That was when the US was Saddam's best friend
Telegraph doesn't make any sources clear, read the article again. In University if we don't cite our sources, we would be charged with plagiarism and sent in front of a board to decide whether it was intentional or not.
Telegraph doesn't look professional to me, you need more than that.
The few personal details that are known document his affection for the finer things in life, including lobsters and Hennessy VSOP cognac, and a reputed 20,000 tape film library.
. . . Kim Jong Il also loves to drink a certain Hennessey cognac that sells for $630 a bottle in Korea. "He is the largest customer over the last 10 years, averaging between $650,000 and $720,000 a year in purchases -- while the average [North] Korean earns only about $900 a year.
Robert Einhorn worked on nonproliferation for the State Department. He was a head negotiator on a diplomatic mission to North Korea six years ago.
ROBERT EINHORN: One dinner was European-style with French food and extraordinarily expensive French wine. And I think all of us were saying to ourselves: This is really wretched excess for a regime that is essentially starving its own people.
Fujimoto said he was dazzled by Kim's massive liquor cellar, stocked with nearly 10,000 bottles. There was Johnnie Walker Swing scotch and Hennessy XO cognac. To satisfy the Dear Leader's demanding tastes, Fujimoto was sent on international shopping trips, hauling back winter melons from China, pork from Denmark, caviar from Iran and Uzbekistan, but especially the finest sushi from Tokyo's Tsukiji fish market, the largest in the world.