North Korea, officially Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea, country in northeastern Asia that occupies the northern portion of the
Korea Peninsula. North Korea is bounded on the north by China, on the northeast
by Russia, on the east by the East Sea (Sea of Japan), on the south by South
Korea, and on the west by the Yellow Sea. It has an area of 120,538 sq km
(46,540 sq mi). The state of North Korea was established in 1948 as a result of
the Soviet military occupation of the northern portion of the peninsula after World
War II. The capital and largest city of North Korea is P’yŏngyang.
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II
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LAND AND RESOURCES
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North Korea is extremely mountainous and marked by
deep, narrow valleys. A complex system of ranges and spurs extends across the
country in a generally northeastern to southwestern direction. The most
prominent mountain range is the Nangnim-sanmaek, in the north central region.
Mount Paektu (2,744 m/9,003 ft), on the Chinese border, is the highest peak.
Lowland plains comprise only about one-fifth of the total area and are largely
confined to the country’s western coast and to the several broad river valleys
of the west. Fertile alluvial soils are found in these river valleys. Most of
the soils in the mountainous regions lack organic material and are relatively
infertile. Only 18 percent of North Korea’s land is arable. Nearly all the
major rivers rise in the mountains and flow west to the Yellow Sea. The longest
river, the Yalu (Amnok), forms part of the border with China. Other streams
include the Taedong, Ch’ŏngch’ŏn, and Chaeryŏng rivers. Of the major rivers
only the Tumen flows to the eastern coast to empty into the East Sea.
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A
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Climate
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North Korea has a continental climate, with hot
summers and cold winters. The average July temperature at P’yŏngyang is 24°C
(75°F). Winter temperatures at Wŏnsan in the south average -4°C (25°F) but are
considerably lower in the north. Annual precipitation in most parts of the
country is about 1,000 mm (about 40 in) and is concentrated in the summer
months.
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B
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Vegetation and Animal Life
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Extensive coniferous forests are found in the country’s
mountainous interior. Predominant species include spruce, pine, larch, fir, and
cedar. The lowland areas of the west have been deforested and are under
cultivation. Because of deforestation, large indigenous mammals of North Korea,
which include leopards, tigers, deer, bears, and wolves, are becoming
increasingly rare, and are confined to remote forested regions. Birdlife
includes crane, heron, eagle, and snipe.
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C
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Mineral Resources
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North Korea is one of the richer nations in
Asia in mineral resources, possessing major reserves of anthracite coal, iron ore,
tungsten, magnesite, and graphite. Among the other minerals present are copper,
gold, lead, molybdenum, silver, uranium, and zinc. Most estimates suggest that
North Korea’s vast anthracite coal reserves exceed 10 billion tons. Iron ore
reserves, centered in Musan-ŭp, are estimated to be 3 billion tons; lead and
zinc, concentrated in the Komdŏok area of the northeast, roughly 12 million
tons each; tungsten, a strategic mineral needed in jet engines and missiles,
232,000 tons; and magnesite, found in Tanch’ ŏn-ŭp, Ryongyang, and Taehŭung-ni,
6 billion tons. Together with adjacent deposits in China, North Korea’s
magnesite reserves are among the world’s largest. Steel manufacturers must have
this fire-resistant mineral to line blast furnaces. Gold mines are located at
Unsan-dong, Sangnong, and Hŏ-ch’on, but the extent of North Korea’s unexploited
gold potential is unknown. American and Japanese companies operated these mines
prior to the creation of North Korea.
Mineral production has declined or stopped altogether at
many North Korean mines since 1990, reflecting the economic dislocations
resulting from the decline of aid from China and the former Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR). Problems in maintaining the infrastructure,
especially the breakdown of transportation links with the mountainous mining
areas, also contributed to declining mineral production. In 2003 China became
the main importer of the minerals still produced by North Korean mines that
have remained operational.
Preliminary geological studies suggest the possibility of
significant oil and gas reserves in the seabed along the west coast on the
North Korean side of the Yellow Sea. Two foreign consulting companies engaged
by North Korea—Cantek of Canada and an affiliate of Nissho-Iwai of Japan—estimated
potential reserves of 12 billion barrels of oil in the seabed near Anju-ŭp,
according to the North Korea Petroleum Ministry.
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III
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POPULATION
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North Korea is one of the most ethnically homogeneous
countries in the world, with no racial or linguistic minorities other than a
small resident foreign (mainly Chinese) population. Koreans are believed to
have descended from people who began to migrate to the Korea Peninsula from the
northeastern part of the Asian mainland as early as 5000 bc.
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A
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Population Characteristics
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The population (2008 estimate) of North Korea is
23,479,089. The average population density is 195 persons per sq km (505 per sq
mi). The population, however, is very unevenly distributed and is largely
concentrated in the lowland plains of the west. Urbanization of the North
Korean population has progressed rapidly since the 1950s; 62 percent of the
total population of North Korea is now classified as urban.
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B
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Principal Cities
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P’yŏngyang, the capital, is North Korea’s largest city.
Other major cities include Ch’ŏngjin, Namp’o, Sinŭiju, Wŏnsan, and Kaesŏng.
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C
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Language and Religion
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North Korea’s national language is Korean, which is
written in a phonetic script known as Chosŏn'gŭl (called Hangeul
in South Korea).
Religious freedom is guaranteed by the North Korean
constitution, but in practice religious activity is discouraged, and about
two-thirds of the people are nonreligious. Perhaps the most prominent religious
tradition belongs to the indigenous Ch’ŏndogyo (“Religion of the
Heavenly Way”), which combines elements of Confucianism and Daoism (Taoism).
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IV
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EDUCATION AND CULTURAL ACTIVITY
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Education and culture in North Korea are under state
control and are utilized by the governing Korean Workers’ Party regime to
indoctrinate and foster its ideology.
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A
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Education
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Education is free and compulsory in North Korea for
the first ten years of schooling. In the late 1980s, some 1.5 million pupils
were enrolled annually in elementary schools, and another 2.8 million students
attended vocational and secondary schools. Statistics for subsequent years are
unavailable. The principal institution of higher education is Kim Il Sung
University (founded in 1946) in P’yŏngyang. Total enrollment in some 280
institutions of higher education exceeds 300,000. The literacy rate is estimated
at about 99 percent.
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B
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Cultural Life and Institutions
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Cultural activity is aided, encouraged, and shaped
by the government in consonance with its political goals. Historical museums
and libraries are located in many of the larger counties. The government has
also formed national symphony, theater, and dance companies.
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C
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Communications
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The government-run Korean Central News Agency is the
principal distributing source of news in North Korea; several daily newspapers
are published. Radio broadcasting is under the auspices of the Korean Central
Broadcasting Committee. Television broadcasting was instituted in 1969, with
programming limited to the evening.
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V
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GOVERNMENT
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Following World War II (1939-1945), the Korea
Peninsula was divided into two military occupation zones. The northern zone was
occupied by military forces from the Soviet Union, and the southern zone was occupied
by United States military forces. In 1946 the Soviet Union recognized a
government led by Kim Il Sung, the leader of the Korean Communist Party, in the
northern zone. The Korean Communist Party merged that year with another group
to form the Korean Workers’ Party. In 1948 the Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea (DPRK) was formally established as a centralized Communist state under
the control of the Workers’ Party, which espoused a Marxist-Leninist ideology.
Following the departure of Soviet advisers and forces in 1958, however, North
Korea began to lessen the importance of Marxism-Leninism compared to a
nationalistic ideology known as juche (self-reliance). Juche was linked
to “Kim Il Sungism,” which extolled Kim Il Sung as the personification of
national pride. This ideology continued even after Kim Il Sung died in 1994 and
was replaced by his son, Kim Jong Il.
North Korea’s first constitution was approved in
1948. It was revised in 1972, 1992, and 1998. Before Kim Il Sung’s death in
1994, executive power in North Korea was vested in a president, who was head of
state, and a premier, who was technically head of government. The president was
elected by the Supreme People’s Assembly, the unicameral legislature, for a
four-year term. The president in turn appointed the premier and members of the
Central People’s Committee, the government’s highest policymaking body. The
post of president was vacant following the death of Kim Il Sung and was later
abolished by the 1998 constitution. Kim designated his son, Kim Jong Il, as his
successor; however, Kim Jong Il did not assume the presidency. Under a 1998
constitutional amendment, the chair of the National Defense Commission, a post
held by Kim Jong Il, was recognized as North Korea’s “highest office.”
The 1998 constitution created the National Defense
Commission and gave the armed forces increased governmental power. The
commission was described as “the supreme military guidance organ of state
sovereignty.” Kim Jong Il became chairman of the commission as well as general
secretary of the Workers’ Party. The office of president was abolished.
Nominally, the Supreme People’s Assembly was to hold
ultimate authority in the land under the 1998 constitution. But the chairman of
its presidium, or executive committee, became a de facto ceremonial head of
state, whose major function has been to represent North Korea in dealings with
other national leaders. In June 1999 two official organs of the Workers’ Party
Central Committee, in a joint article, indicated how powerful the North Korean
army had become. The article equated the North Korean army with the people of
North Korea. It declared that “giving priority to the Army is the perfect mode
of politics in the present times … a mode of leadership which solves all problems
arising in the Revolution. Our revolutionary philosophy is that the Army is
precisely the Party, people, and state.”
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A
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Executive
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The highest executive office in North Korea is chair of
the National Defense Commission. The 1998 constitution created the National
Defense Commission and abolished the office of president. The state apparatus
is subordinate to the paramount authority of the National Defense Commission.
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B
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Legislature
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The legislature, which in theory is the supreme
government organ, is the unicameral Supreme People’s Assembly. Its 687 members
are elected by direct vote for four-year terms. The legislature generally meets
only several times a year; its day-to-day duties are performed by the standing
committee of the assembly.
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C
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Judiciary
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The judicial system of North Korea consists of the
central court and the provincial and people’s courts. The central court is the
state’s highest judicial authority; its judges are appointed to four-year terms
by the standing committee.
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D
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Local Government
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North Korea is divided into nine provinces, three
special cities, and one special district. Provinces are further subdivided into
210 counties and districts. Each local administrative unit has an elected
people’s assembly.
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E
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Political Parties
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The dominant political party is the Korean Workers’
Party. Two smaller parties join with the Korean Workers’ Party in the
Democratic Front for the Reunification of the Fatherland.
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F
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Social Services
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All North Korean citizens are entitled to
disability benefits and retirement allowances. Medical care is free and
available at people’s clinics throughout the country.
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G
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Defense
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In 2004 the U.S. government estimated that the
total personnel of the North Korean regular armed forces was about 1,106,000,
distributed as follows: army, 950,000; navy, 46,000; and air force, 110,000.
This total excludes reserve forces.
Estimates of weaponry were: tanks, 3,800; field
artillery, 12,000; surface ships, 430; submarines, 90; and jet fighter
aircraft, 760. The North Korean forces are equipped primarily with weapons,
such as T-62 tanks, received from the former Soviet Union and China during the
Cold War.
In 2004 North Korea’s 760 fighter jets included
only 60 advanced Soviet models (MiG-23s, MiG-29s, and SU-25s). Most of its
mainstay fighters are MiG-19s, MiG-21s, Il-28s, and SU-7s. Some 320 are
outmoded MiG-15s and MiG-17s. By contrast, South Korea had 520 advanced
fighters in 2004, including 162 U.S.-supplied advanced fighters. The United
States, which has a military alliance with South Korea, based more than 100
military airplanes in South Korea in 2004, including 70 F-16s, most armed with
smart bombs.
In addition to its conventional forces, North
Korea announced in February 2005 that it had become a “nuclear weapons state”
in order to defend itself against what it perceived as the threat of a U.S.
preemptive attack. In July 2006 North Korea launched seven test missiles,
including a long-range Taepodong-2 believed to have the range to reach North
America. The UN Security Council imposed sanctions on North Korea, banning
other nations from supplying it with materials necessary for building missiles.
In early October 2006 North Korea tested a nuclear weapon in an underground
explosion.
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VI
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ECONOMY
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The government of North Korea maintains a
predominantly centralized, or state-controlled, economy. After the
establishment of the Democratic People’s Republic in 1948, all industry was
nationalized and agriculture was collectivized. Government economic policy
emphasized a doctrine of self-reliance and downgraded the role of foreign
trade. Economic plans gave emphasis to the development of heavy industry and
the mechanization of agriculture.
North Korea became dependent on its Cold War
benefactors, the Soviet Union and China, for crude oil, refined petroleum
products, and feedstock for its fertilizer factories. Thus, when Soviet and
Chinese aid declined after 1990, the country was unable to operate its
fertilizer factories, its tractors, and its irrigation pumps. Flood damage in
1995 and 1996, in addition to the petroleum shortage, crippled agricultural
production and led to famine conditions in some parts of the country. With only
18 percent of its largely mountainous terrain arable and agricultural
production still inadequate to meet its needs, North Korea became dependent on
foreign food aid, largely from China, South Korea, and the United States.
Serious malnutrition persists. The loss of Cold War aid subsidies has also led
to a deterioration of its economic infrastructure.
Beginning in 2002, the government initiated
economic reforms designed to reverse the economic decline. These reforms
included decentralizing control over many state enterprises, which no longer
receive subsidies if they are unprofitable; a revised price and wage structure
that has given farmers higher wages for their production; new work rules in
agricultural cooperatives that reward the more productive farm workers; and
private markets in which individual vendors sell agricultural and consumer
goods. These goods, which are subject to government price controls, are either
locally produced or imported from China, Japan, and South Korea.
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A
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Labor
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In 2006 the estimated total workforce of North
Korea was 11.4 million, with 38 percent of the workforce engaged in
agriculture. The major industrial and technical trade unions are affiliated
with the General Federation of Trade Unions; also important is the Korean
Agricultural Working People’s Union. Professional workers, including artists,
writers, lawyers, and scientists, have their own trade organizations.
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B
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Agriculture
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Large-scale mechanization, irrigation, and land reclamation
have increased crop yields. The principal crops (with their yields in 2006)
include rice (2.5 million metric tons), corn (2 million), and potatoes (2
million). Other important crops are millet, barley, wheat, vegetables, apples,
sweet potatoes, and soybeans. Livestock number about 3.2 million pigs, 570,000
cattle, 172,000 sheep, and 27 million poultry.
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C
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Forestry and Fishing
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Production of round wood stood at 7.3 million cubic
meters (259 million cubic feet) in 2006. North Korea has a modern fishing
fleet; in 2005 the catch was 712,995 metric tons, largely anchovy, tuna,
mackerel, and seaweeds.
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D
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Mining
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Mining is an important sector of the North Korean
economy, and efforts are being made to develop new deposits. The focus has been
on iron ore and coal, which had, in 2004, outputs of 1.3 million and 30.1
million metric tons, respectively. Other important minerals include tungsten,
magnesite, zinc, copper, lead, silver, gold, graphite, and uranium.
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E
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Manufacturing
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Metallurgical industries and the manufacture of heavy
machinery represent a major share of North Korea’s national income. Other
manufactures include trucks, diesel locomotives, heavy construction equipment,
cement, synthetic fibers, fertilizers, and refined copper, lead, zinc, and
aluminum.
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F
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Energy
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North Korea is well endowed with coal and hydroelectricity
resources. Hydroelectric power accounts for 56 percent of the electrical
output. In 2003 electricity production was 18.7 billion kilowatt-hours.
In the past, given its lack of proven
petroleum reserves, North Korea also relied on imports of petroleum to meet its
energy needs. Initially, it sought to reduce its dependence on these imports by
maximizing the production of coal and hydroelectric power. But North Korea
proved unable to keep up with its energy needs and turned to nuclear energy as
the key to energy self-sufficiency. The extent of its natural resource
endowments made it feasible for North Korea to pursue a peaceful nuclear
program and a military one at the same time. North Korea possesses extensive
reserves of the graphite and uranium needed for the gas-graphite type of
nuclear reactor. While this type of reactor can be used to generate
electricity, it is also uniquely suited to the diversion of nuclear fuel for
military purposes.
In 1989 U.S. spy satellites discovered that a
reactor at Yǒngbyǒn, nominally intended for civilian nuclear power generation,
had been shut down, offering an opportunity for the diversion of plutonium to
military use. This provoked a diplomatic crisis that resulted in a U.S.-South
Korean-Japanese commitment in 1994 to construct two reactors in North Korea of
a type not suited for military use. These reactors are known as light-water
reactors (LWRs). Although the agreement broke down and the reactors were never
built, North Korea continues to seek LWRs, which Japan, South Korea, and other
countries use to generate electricity.
Another possible new energy source for North Korea,
in addition to LWRs and petroleum, is natural gas. Russia’s natural gas
monopoly, Gazprom, has conducted preliminary discussions with North Korea on a
possible gas pipeline from a gas field in western Siberia or from Sakhalin
Island that would cross through North Korea en route to South Korea and would
supply North Korean power stations and fertilizer plants.
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G
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Transportation
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The railroad system of North Korea is electrified
along most of its 8,530 km (5,300 mi) of track. It has direct links to South
Korea, China, and Russia. In May 2007 two passenger trains traveled between
North and South Korea for the first time since the Korean War began in 1950.
The one-time event was regarded as largely symbolic of improved relations
between the two countries. There are 31,200 km (19,387 mi) of roads, of which
only 6 percent are paved. The Taedong River is important to internal trade; the
total length of inland waterways is about 2,250 km (1,400 mi). Major ports
include Namp’o and Haeju on the western coast and Ch’ŏngjin and Wŏnsan on the
eastern coast.
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H
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Currency and Banking
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The unit of currency is the won (2.20
won equals U.S.$1; May, 1998). North Korea has three banks, all
state-controlled; the Korean Central Bank is the bank of issue.
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I
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Foreign Trade
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The bulk of North Korea’s foreign trade through
the 1970s was with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), China, and
other Communist countries. Since then, however, trade has been diversified to
include non-Communist countries. Bilateral trade in 2003 totaled $3.3 billion,
according to estimates by the Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA estimated
that North Korea’s exports in 2003 totaled $1.2 billion, primarily minerals,
metallurgical products, manufactures (including armaments), and textiles. The
principal trade partners for exports were China (29.9 percent), South Korea
(24.1 percent), and Japan (13.2 percent). Imports totaled $2.1 billion,
primarily petroleum, coking coal, machinery and equipment, textiles, and grain.
The principal sources of these imports were China (32.9 percent), Thailand
(10.7 percent), and Japan (4.8 percent).
In 2002 the government of North Korea announced the
establishment of a special economic zone in the northwestern city of Sinŭiju,
near the border with China and linked by rail to Beijing. The zone will operate
autonomously with its own legal and economic systems, allowing free market
principles that promote foreign investment and trade. Its creation marked the
most significant reversal of economic policy in North Korea since 1948.
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VII
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HISTORY
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For the history of the Korea Peninsula before
it was partitioned in 1945 into North and South Korea, see Korea. The
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) was proclaimed in P’yŏngyang, the
capital, on September 9, 1948, but a more significant date of inception would
perhaps be August 29, 1946, when the Korean Workers’ Party (KWP) was
inaugurated under the leadership of Kim Tubong and Kim Il Sung.
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A
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Kim Il Sung’s Rise to Power
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After the establishment of the KWP, Kim Il Sung enjoyed
the support of the occupying Soviet forces (until most of them withdrew in late
1948), and began playing a leading role in Korean affairs north of the 38th
parallel. Under the Workers’ Party leadership and before the establishment of
the DPRK, key political and economic changes had already been made. These
included egalitarian land reforms that won the support of landless labor and
tenant farmers, elimination of moderate and right-wing elements, suppression of
religious groups, confiscation of land and wealth formerly belonging to the
Japanese or to enemies of the regime, and the initiation of party-directed
economic planning and development.
Kim Il Sung emerged early as the principal
leader, supported by former officers of his guerrilla forces who had fought
against Japanese colonial rule from bases in Manchuria. In 1949 border fighting
broke out between the North and the South. On June 25, 1950, North Korean
forces crossed the dividing line and invaded the South. Soon, in defense of the
South, the United States joined the fighting under the banner of the United
Nations (UN), along with small contingents of British, Canadian, Australian,
and Turkish troops. In October 1950 China joined the war on the North’s side.
By the time a cease-fire agreement was signed on July 27, 1953, some 800,000
Koreans on both sides of the 38th parallel had lost their lives, together with
115,000 Chinese and about 36,400 U.S. military personnel. See also Korean
War.
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B
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The Post-Korean War Period
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The war caused enormous damage to North Korea.
North Korea endured three years of heavy U.S. bombing in addition to a ground
offensive by UN forces along the Yalu River, the border between North Korea and
China. Virtually the entire population of North Korea lived and worked in
manmade underground caves for three years to escape the relentless attack of
U.S. planes. Schools, hospitals, factories, and troop barracks were located in
the caves. P’yŏngyang was bombed until almost no buildings were left standing,
and an entirely new capital had to be rebuilt after the war.
KWP discipline and forced-labor policies resulted
in considerable recovery and development by 1960. At the same time, the North
Korean leadership began to turn away from Soviet tutelage, emphasizing the
national character of the Korean revolution. As the quarrel between China and
the USSR intensified, North Korea maneuvered for even more independence of
action. During the 1960s heavy industrial growth was emphasized, but the
production of consumer goods and the general standard of living lagged. Late in
the 1960s, North Korea developed an especially aggressive stance toward the
South: An assassination team tried and nearly succeeded in killing South
Korea’s president, Park Chung Hee. In 1968 the Pueblo, a United States
intelligence-gathering vessel, was seized by North Korean gunboats and its crew
held in extremely severe circumstances for a year. Guerrilla raids were
launched on the South, but without much effect. A U.S. reconnaissance plane was
shot down in April 1969. These events, rather than weakening the South,
stimulated renewed defense measures and were probably counterproductive. They
also influenced the formation of a harder political order in South Korea.
In the 1970s, secret talks with southern
officials led to a joint declaration (July 4, 1972) that both sides would seek
to develop a dialogue aimed at unification, but by spring 1973 this effort had
dissolved in acrimony. Sporadic exchanges on unification took place throughout
the 1980s.
At the KWP Congress in 1980, Kim Il Sung’s
son, Kim Jong Il, was given high ranking in the Politburo and on the Central
Committee of the party, placing him in a commanding position to succeed his
father. Kim Il Sung was reelected president in May 1990 for a four-year term.
In 1991 both North and South Korea joined the United Nations (UN), and the two
nations signed accords regarding nuclear and conventional arms control and
reconciliation.
In 1992 North Korea signed a pact with the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to allow the country’s nuclear
facilities to be inspected. However, in 1993 the North Korean government
refused to let inspectors examine nuclear waste sites believed to contain
undeclared nuclear material that could be used for nuclear weapons. North Korea
also suspended its formal acceptance of the 1968 Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), which it had signed in 1985. In
December 1993 the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) announced that North
Korea had most likely built at least one atomic weapon from plutonium extracted
from fuel rods at a nuclear power plant. See also Arms Control; Nuclear
Weapons Proliferation.
Throughout the first half of 1994, the North Korean
government continued to resist a full IAEA inspection of suspected nuclear
sites. The crisis was defused in June, however, when former U.S. president
Jimmy Carter met with Kim Il Sung in North Korea. The following month Kim died
unexpectedly. Nevertheless, the United States and North Korea reached an
agreement in 1994 known as the Agreed Framework, in which North Korea agreed to
suspend the operation of designated nuclear facilities capable of producing and
reprocessing weapons-grade plutonium. North Korea also agreed to allow IAEA
inspections to verify the suspension.
In return, the United States, Japan, and South
Korea agreed to construct two new reactors of a type not suitable for nuclear
weapons production. The agreement called for annual deliveries of heavy fuel
oil to North Korea as well as U.S. steps to end economic sanctions against
North Korea that had been in place since the Korean War. The agreement also
envisaged steps leading to the normalization of diplomatic relations between
the United States and North Korea. North Korea agreed to dismantle the nuclear
facilities suspended under the agreement, coincident with the completion of the
two new reactors and with U.S. fulfillment of other provisions of the
agreement.
Construction of the two reactors began in 1995 but
stopped when the United States abrogated the 1994 agreement in December 2002,
charging that North Korea had violated the accord by initiating a secret
weapons-grade uranium-enrichment program. An American official who visited
P’yŏngyang said that North Korea had admitted its guilt; North Korea denied
that it did so and denied that it had such a program.
Meanwhile, a nationwide food crisis that surfaced in
1995 became a widespread famine by 1996. Factors contributing to the crisis
included the withdrawal of food subsidies from Russia and China in the early
1990s, the cumulative effect of government agricultural policies, and a series
of severe floods and droughts that damaged agricultural crops. International
humanitarian relief agencies responded to the crisis with ongoing food aid and
other relief efforts. Nevertheless, it was estimated that up to 1 million
people had died of starvation and famine-related illnesses by 1998. North
Korea’s official estimate was 200,000. Although the famine peaked in 1997, the
food crisis continued into the early 2000s.
In September 1998 North Korea revised its
constitution to recognize the chair of the National Defense Commission, a
position held by Kim Jong Il, as the country’s top government post. Kim had
been the de facto leader of North Korea since the death of his father, Kim Il
Sung, in 1994.
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C
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North Korea in the 21st Century
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In June 2000 Kim Jong Il and South Korean
president Kim Dae Jung held talks in P’yŏngyang and agreed to promote reconciliation
and economic cooperation between the two countries. The landmark event was the
first face-to-face meeting between the leaders of North Korea and South Korea
since the division of Korea in 1945. The thaw in relations led to the first
officially sanctioned temporary reunions of families separated by the Korean
War. It also increased trade and investment, relaxed military tensions, and
partially reopened road and rail links that had been severed by the creation of
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), the buffer zone created between the two Koreas
after the Korean War. In May 2007, for the first time since the Korean War
started in 1950, two passenger trains traveled between North and South Korea.
But the one-time event was regarded as largely symbolic of improved relations,
rather than a serious effort to renew passenger rail links.
In contrast to the growing détente between
North Korea and South Korea, relations between the United States and North
Korea reached an impasse as the 21st century began, due to tensions over the
nuclear issue. China attempted to defuse the crisis by acting as a mediator
between North Korea and the United States, which had placed North Korea on a
list of countries supporting terrorism and had characterized North Korea as
being part of an “axis of evil” in a 2002 State of the Union speech by
President George W. Bush. North Korea sought direct talks with the United
States, but the United States refused to meet in one-on-one negotiations. China
fashioned a compromise in which negotiations would take place among six
concerned nations—China, Japan, Russia, North Korea, South Korea, and the
United States. In August 2003, February and June 2004, and July and August
2005, the six-nation talks were held in Beijing, China’s capital.
In a formal proposal presented to North Korea
in June 2004 in Beijing and reaffirmed in the 2005 talks, the United States
outlined a six-stage denuclearization process. North Korea would be required at
the outset to acknowledge that a weapons-grade uranium-enrichment program
existed and to make specific commitments providing for its elimination in a
denuclearization agreement. The U.S. proposal called for North Korea to make a
commitment to dismantle all of its nuclear programs at the outset of the denuclearization
process and offered to discuss economic aid after such a commitment had been
made and the actual dismantling process was under way.
Even after the dismantlement of these nuclear
programs, however, a “wholly transformed relationship with the United States”
would follow only if North Korea changed “its behavior on human rights,”
addressed the “issues underlying” its inclusion on the terrorist list,
eliminated chemical and biological weapons programs, put an end to the
proliferation of missiles and missile-related technology, and adopted a “less
provocative conventional force disposition.”
North Korea rejected the U.S. proposal, calling for
a U.S. commitment to normalize economic and diplomatic relations in exchange
for a North Korean dismantlement pledge and a step-by-step denuclearization
process. In this process U.S. steps toward normalized relations and economic
aid for North Korea would be linked with parallel North Korean steps toward
dismantlement. North Korea also offered to negotiate a new agreement with the
United States to freeze the production of plutonium. In February 2005 North
Korea announced that it had become a nuclear weapons state, declaring that
nuclear weapons were necessary to deter what it perceived as a U.S. policy of
“regime change” in North Korea. North Korea had not tested a nuclear weapon.
The fourth round of the six-party talks
recessed in early August 2005 without an agreement. However, in September 2005
the United States and North Korea held bilateral meetings in Beijing, China’s
capital, for 13 days, leading to the resumption of the six-party negotiations.
The fourth round culminated in the adoption of a major declaration on September
19, 2005, in which North Korea pledged to “abandon” all nuclear weapons and
nuclear programs in a step-by-step process linked to economic aid, security
guarantees, and the normalization of relations with the United States.
Soon after, the United States initiated financial
sanctions against North Korea. Invoking the Patriot Act, the U.S. Treasury
Department obtained the cooperation of China in freezing North Korean accounts
in a Macao bank, accusing North Korea of counterfeiting U.S. currency. At the
same time, the Treasury Department initiated broader efforts to persuade banks
throughout the world to shun all North Korea-related accounts or transactions
as possible conduits for trade relating to weapons of mass destruction. North
Korea charged that the sanctions were a violation of Article Two of the
September 19 agreement, in which the United States pledged to normalize
relations. North Korea refused to return to the six-party negotiations and
called for the United States to engage in preliminary bilateral talks on the
financial sanctions issue prior to reconvening the six-party talks.
Then tensions in the region soared in early
July 2006 when North Korea launched seven test missiles, one of them a
long-range Taepodong-2 missile, which fell into the Sea of Japan (East Sea).
International military observers judged the test-launches as unsuccessful but
the concerned international community, via the UN Security Council, led the
call for economic sanctions against North Korea.
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North Korea Becomes a Nuclear Weapons Nation
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Then in early October 2006 North Korea tested a
nuclear weapon in an underground explosion. United States intelligence
agencies, after testing air samples for radiation and measuring seismic
readings, concluded that North Korea had tested a plutonium bomb with an
explosive force of less than 1 kiloton of TNT. By contrast, the plutonium bomb
that the United States dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, had an explosive force of 20
kilotons of TNT. Some nuclear weapons experts suggested that the small size of
the explosion indicated that North Korean scientists and engineers may have
encountered problems in imploding the device. Nevertheless, North Korea became
the eighth country in the world known to have tested a nuclear weapon. United
States intelligence experts estimated that North Korea had an arsenal of six to
nine nuclear weapons. See also Nuclear Weapon; Nuclear Weapons
Proliferation.
In response to the test the UN Security
Council unanimously voted to impose financial and weapons sanctions on North
Korea for a “clear threat to international peace and security.” The resolution
called upon “all nations to take cooperative action, including through the
inspection of cargo, in accordance with their respective national laws,” to
prohibit the delivery of any materials related to weapons of mass destruction.
It also banned trade with North Korea in heavy conventional weapons and luxury
goods, and it called on nations to freeze funds connected with North Korea’s
nonconventional arms programs. However, the resolution left member states free
to decide how to implement its provisions, and it was not expected to lead to
the interdiction of North Korean ships at sea or to the imposition of a
quarantine or embargo on North Korea.
North Korea reacted angrily to the UN Security
Council resolution, calling it a “declaration of war.” While calling for stiff
sanctions against North Korea, U.S. president Bush said the United States had
“no intention of attacking” North Korea. Bush added, however, that the United
States reserved the right to consider “all options to defend our friends in the
region,” a reference to Japan and South Korea, U.S. allies that are nonnuclear
weapons states. UN secretary general Kofi Annan called on the United States to
conduct bilateral talks with North Korea, but the official U.S. position remained
that it would only engage in multilateral negotiations.
In a series of trilateral (U.S.-China-North
Korea) and bilateral (U.S.-North Korea) meetings on October 31, 2006, in
Beijing, North Korea agreed to return to the six-party talks in exchange for a
U.S. agreement to seek a solution of the Macao bank dispute and the issue of
global banking sanctions. The solution was to be negotiated through a working
group linked to the six-party talks.
A first round of talks in December ended in a
stalemate. Negotiations resumed in February 2007, resulting in a breakthrough
outlining the first concrete steps for putting into practice the September 2005
agreement in which North Korea pledged to dismantle its nuclear program if
certain conditions were met.
The agreement reached in February set deadlines for the
first phase of North Korea’s abandonment of all nuclear weapons and research
programs. North Korea agreed to close and seal its main nuclear reactor and
reprocessing plant at Yǒngbyǒn under the monitoring of international
inspectors. In return, North Korea would receive 100,000 tons of fuel oil.
South Korea also agreed to provide 400,000 tons of food aid to its impoverished
northern neighbor as part of the deal. In addition, the United States and Japan
agreed to begin bilateral talks with North Korea on normalizing relations. For
the United States, that would involve the lifting of financial sanctions. The
United States also agreed to resolve the Macao banking dispute within 30 days.
The February agreement also provided that North Korea
would receive another 900,000 tons of fuel oil, or equivalent aid, in stages
after taking steps to permanently disclose and dismantle all of its nuclear
facilities and programs. The details of the second phase of the deal were to be
worked out in a new round of six-nation talks scheduled for mid-2007.
In July 2007 inspectors from the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) verified that North Korea had shut down its main
nuclear reactor and all other nuclear facilities at the Yǒngbyǒn complex. In
return, North Korea received its first shipments of fuel and food aid. A new
round of six-nation talks ended later in July without an agreement on a
timetable for North Korea to fully disable and disclose all of its nuclear
facilities and programs. But in further talks held in late September, North
Korea committed to a deadline of December 31.
In October 2007 Kim Jong Il hosted South
Korean president Roh Moo Hyun in P’yŏngyang in the first face-to-face meeting
of Korean leaders since the historic summit of 2000. Their talks resulted in a
joint declaration that stated a bilateral commitment to work toward signing a
formal peace treaty for the Korean War and that outlined a number of specific
projects to build closer economic ties between the two countries. Among other
projects, South Korea agreed to build a special economic zone in the North
Korean port of Haeju, as well as a new railway and highway linking the Kaesŏng
Industrial Complex to other cities. Under the 2000 summit agreement, South
Korea had built the Kaesŏng complex as a special economic zone, and factories
opened there in 2004. In November 2007 the prime ministers from both countries
met for the first time in 15 years and held additional talks on improving
bilateral ties.



