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          N. Korean Defections Raise Questions about Security, Loyalty

   by Jeff Seldin

   Three defections across the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone
   separating North and South Korea are raising questions about the global
   flashpoint.
   South Korean officials said three North Korean defectors have sneaked
   across the DMZ in the past three months, one of them announcing his
   arrival by knocking on the door of a South Korean barracks.
   That incident has drawn a public rebuke from South Korean President Lee
   Myung-bak, who summoned the defense minister Thursday and said those
   responsible for the security lapse should be punished. But it is also
   raising concerns about the state of North Korea's forces.
   Soldiers stationed by Pyongyang along DMZ are normally selected very
   carefully and are thought to be among those most loyal to the regime.
   And before the recent defections, the last such attempt to cross the
   DMZ was about two years ago.
   ''Lax discipline in the North
   A South Korean official who asked not to be named said the events,
   especially the most recent defection, by a North Korean soldier who
   first killed his superiors, are troublesome. The official, who is very
   familiar with the ongoing interrogation, called Saturday's incident
   evidence of lax discipline in the North's ranks.
   But some analysts warned it is dangerous to read too much into the
   incidents.
   "The defections themselves may not signal anything more than isolated
   incidents," said Georgetown University Professor Balbina Hwang. "Now,
   three in a period over a couple of months across the DMZ may or may not
   be significant. What would be far more significant is if we saw an
   entire platoon or an entire unit of the North Korean army defect all
   together."
   Hwang, a former State Department adviser on East Asia, said the DMZ
   remains the "most dangerous border left on the planet," and that there
   are clearly problems with low morale on both sides, not just the North.
   "This [North Korea] is, obviously, a system that is eroding.  It is a
   system that is weak.  But a system that is in crisis?  That does not
   seem to be the case," she said.
   A more relaxed mood
   In some ways, North Korea may be stabilizing after the recent
   leadership transition.
   Ruediger Frank with Vienna University in Austria, visited North Korea
   last month.
   "The mood was much more relaxed. You could already feel that entering
   the airport building, how the officials would relate to you, but also
   from the attitude of our guides, or minders, and also people on the
   street, actually," Frank said.  "You can look into their faces and
   though you can't really talk to everybody, you get a certain
   impression."
   Frank, a frequent visitor to North Korea who has studied at Kim Il Sung
   University, added it was not just the mood that was better. There were
   signs the economy was changing, as well, with many more vendors hawking
   their goods.
   "Certainly between April and September, which is a very short period, I
   would say the number has quadrupled, or even increased four to five
   times, perhaps," he said.  "And what people sold were not just fresh
   agricultural products, but mainly soda of all types, cigarettes, bread
   and, of course, seasonal products, which is bing su or water ice."
   Frank added that he saw "even at intersections right in the
   countryside, that is not in provincial cities where an intersection of
   two major roads was, not just one woman sitting there with a plastic
   bowl or someone sitting on the ground, selling stuff, but that looked
   much more institutionalized, much more professional."
   "You would see three or four of them joining together catering to
   customers who would drive by either on their bicycles or who would walk
   by," he said.
   Uncertainty in the South
   In the meantime, Georgetown University's Balbina Hwang said there is
   another factor to consider in the ongoing wrangling between the Koreas,
   South Korea's upcoming presidential election.
   "In South Korea this is a particularly, I don't want to say unstable,
   but it is a particularly tumultuous period politically," she said. "And
   it is very clear that periods of political turmoil in South Korea have
   actually been periods of advantage for North Korea."
   Hwang said she expects more saber-rattling from the North. Already,
   Pyongyang warned its rockets are capable of striking the continental
   United States, likely a response to a new U.S.-South Korean deal
   extending the range of Seoul's missiles. U.S. officials have dismissed
   the threats.
   Still State Department Assistant Secretary Mike Hammer said the United
   States is bracing for more threats.
   "Clearly, North Korea remains defiant," he said at a recent briefing at
   a Foreign Press Center in New York. "We want to make sure it ceases its
   provocative acts and we're still looking for it to undertake its
   commitments and to move in the direction we would all like to see."
   Containing defections
   In the meantime, it appears Pyongyang is moving to prevent further
   defections.
   South Korean officials told VOA's Korean service that since last week's
   defection, the North has been conducting special inspections of its
   frontline units, including the unit to which the defector belonged.
   The regular penalties for defection also make clear there is a high
   price to be paid for disloyalty.  Under North Korea's collective
   punishment system, a soldier's defection would mean harsh treatment for
   his family, extending for three generations.
   More than 23,500 North Koreans have escaped and resettled in South
   Korea since the Korean War ended in 1953 with a cease-fire agreement.
   But nearly all of them make their way through China and Southeast Asia
   to get to South Korea, risking repatriation if they are caught in
   China.
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   [1]http://www.voanews.com/content/north-korean-defections-raise-questio
   ns-about-security-loyalty/1528999.html

References

   1. http://www.voanews.com/content/north-korean-defections-raise-questions-about-security-loyalty/1528999.html