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Abstract
Despite recent attempts at 'negotiation', the attitudes of both Kim Jong-un's regime and the West seem unchanged. North Korea is still shrouded in mystery, and there are no clear plans for the future... Can we trust either side to bring about peace? And if so, how?
This provocative insider's account blasts apart the myths which paint North Korea as a rogue state run by a mad leader. Informed by extraordinary access to the country's leadership, Glyn Ford investigates the regime from the inside, providing game-changing insights, which Trump and his administration have failed to do. Acknowledging that North Korea is a deeply flawed and repressive state, he nonetheless shows that sections of the leadership are desperate to modernise and end their isolation.
With chapters on recent developments including the Trump / Kim summit, Ford supports a dialogue between East and West, whilst also criticising Trump's facile attempts. Talking to North Korea provides a road map for averting a war in North East Asia that would threaten the lives of millions.
'A timely, perceptive, and penetrating analysis of North Korea. This is a must for those who are interested in contemporary North Korean affairs'
Chung-in Moon, Distinguished University Professor, Yonsei University
'With direct access to North Korean government officials and a lifetime of observation and analysis of the country, Glyn Ford has an insight into the country like no other. A strongly recommended impartial read, revealing previous political tricks and failures of 73 years of miscommunication and stagnation... and a possible path out of this mess'
Nicholas Bonner, Founder of Koryo Tours
'With almost fifty visits to the DPRK, Glyn Ford is one of the top European experts on the Korean Peninsula. Readers, whatever their political views, will find much to stimulate their thinking regarding one of the most important political-security issues of our time'
Jeffrey D. Feltman, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs
'An insightful and provocative analysis'
William Ury, co-founder of the Harvard Negotiation Project, co-author of Getting to Yes: Negotiating an Agreement Without Giving In (Random House, 2012)
'Glyn Ford is a very rare case of a Westerner who has both political experience in the West and first-hand experience of dealing with North Korea. His book shows a possible way out of the continuous crisis through slow-motion change - the only way which might work'
Andrei Lankov, author of 'The Real North Korea: Life and Politics in the Failed Stalinist Utopia '
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover | ||
Contents | vii | ||
List of Figures and Tables | x | ||
Map of North Korea | xii | ||
Country Leaders, 1990-2018 | xiii | ||
Chronology since 1900 | xiv | ||
Acknowledgements | xviii | ||
Notes on Asian Names | xxii | ||
Preface | xxiii | ||
1. Introduction: The Pyongyang Paradox | 1 | ||
Part I: Roots of the Present Crisis: Understanding North Korea's History | 29 | ||
2. Drawing the Iron Curtain | 31 | ||
3. Kim's Korea | 64 | ||
4. Famine, Markets, Refugees, and Human Rights: The Kim Jong Il Era | 103 | ||
Part II: Continuity and Change | 133 | ||
5. Kim Jong Un | 135 | ||
6. Daily Life in North Korea | 158 | ||
Part III: The Diplomatic Stage | 177 | ||
7. The Nuclear Factor | 179 | ||
8. Foreign Affairs: Between Rapprochement and Standoff | 219 | ||
9. Conclusion - After Singapore | 241 | ||
Notes | 260 | ||
Bibliography and Further Reading | 276 | ||
Index | 288 |