JUCHE AND MILITARISM
By
M.L. Sondhi
The Hindustan Times, April, 02, 1985
Since the beginning of the modern era, politically
responsible Indians have been concerned to find political
and social concepts which should eschew coercion and
militarism. Satyagraha, Panchsheel,
Non-alignment all sought successful solutions to national
and global problems without imposing any hegemonic ideology
on the complexity of problems. In this context it is very
curious that some commentators have suggested that the North
Korean sponsored Juche Ideology could be congruent with
moral principles and could provide practical options for
economic and social progress. To combat this false view we
must not only take a close look at the egocentric
individualism of Kim Il Sung, but also the pernicious
results produced by the environment of Third World
militarism on an Asian society leading to acute
disproportions and a slowdown of the rate of development.
At a time when India is actively seeking
up-gradation of technology and seeking to remove
deficiencies of infrastructure in fields like transport,
communications and energy, we cannot afford to confuse the
rhetoric and reality of the closed society model which is an
integral part of the concept of Juche together with a
process of progressive militarization. North Korea stands
today at a historic crossroad. It had been pursuing the
Juche ideology of socio-economic and political self-reliance
as the basis of its “unique” communism for decades but in
September last year its death knell was sounded when
Pyongyang adopted a joint venture law which specifically
allows the introduction of foreign investment and joint
ventures in North Korea.
Economic Crisis
It is strange how the regime has tried to
absolve itself from the responsibility of creating the
economic crisis by its ideological obsessions. It is indeed
a hybrid logic which propagates Juche Ideology to Afro-Asian
countries (and even maintains an Asian Regional Institute of
Juche Idea – ARIJI – in New Delhi since 1979) while
forgetting its radicalism in promulgating laws designed to
allure capitalist countries to help North Korea’s sagging
economy with men, money, material and technology.
It is unfortunate that North Korea has
neither been circumspect nor cautious in its efforts to
relate itself to the dynamics of the global economy. It has
time and again fiddled with the idea of importing foreign
technology from abroad. In the early seventies, North Korea
started to procure western technology in an ambitious way
for upgrading its obsolete technology. But this grand
project ended in a fiasco because in the absence of a proper
environment of modernisation it made its existing problems
worse. There was neither proper training nor maintenance
and economic decision-making in Pyongyang was caught in
contradictory currents. As a result of the hardware
purchases on credit from the West in the early 1970s, North
Korea still owes some $3.5 billion to western banks and
manufacturers, on which it has defaulted a number of times.
Not Realistic
If North Korean policy-makers had a more
realistic and comprehensive outlook on international
economic relations, they would have co-operated with South
Korea which was willing to offer its technology. Moreover,
most of the countries at whom the joint venture law was
aimed did not have diplomatic relations with North Korea.
Instead they have close commercial and political relations
with South Korea. The whole question became an issue which
hinged on the improvement of North-South Korean relations,
since Seoul made it clear that it would favour foreign
investments in the North only after propitious changes took
place in the Pyongyang-Seoul relationship. For the most
part Japanese and European firms remained sceptical about
the modalities of working out the principles of foreign
investment in North Korea. The reluctance of the North to
put their relations with the South on a permanently sound
basis was clearly evident when Pyongyang unilaterally
suspended the inter-Korean Economic and Red Cross talks
which South Korea had pursued diligently. This
back-tracking only hurt North Korea in economic terms since
it again focussed on Pyongyang’s refusal to open up and
develop a real stake in the international economy.
The Founders of Non-alignment were careful
to develop a political rhetoric to express the needs and
aspirations of the broad masses of the people. According to
them there was a great need for world peace so that the
crippling waste of resources in an armaments race could be
avoided. Conversely the Juche ideology hinges on the living
legend of a Superman who expresses both a hegemonic and
armaments culture in the terms in which he is eulogised: “a
shining star in the heaven”, “the omniscient and omnipotent
protector of Korea”, whose “eagle eye misses nothing”, and
the “sun of the nation”. The strange pattern of distortion
of political values is evident from the huge newspaper
advertisements which are purchased by North Korean diplomats
in Third World countries to stir up hysteria and fanaticism
in extolling the virtues of Juche.
Ironically enough the North Koreans have no
opportunity to make authentic comparisons of the pace of
economic development in the two parts of Korea. They are
simply not aware of the tremendous economic strides made by
their brethren across the 38th parallel. The
rising productivity in industry and agriculture and the high
real income per head in South Korea show that it is possible
for a modernising Asian country to be highly adaptive to
changing circumstances through an open economy even though
it lacks natural resources. The South Korean economy has
been thriving on mutual co-operation and bilateral trade by
taking a rational account of economic realities. Seoul has
purposefully imported the latest technology and in turn
offered its technical know-how to all countries. President
Chun has persuasively offered technology (and other
infrastructure necessary for the basic needs of life) free
of cost to North Korea to stress the convergence of
interest.
Good Start
It is important to pinpoint the fact that at
the time of the partition of Korea, most of the heavy and
light industries were in the North, and the South had
nothing that it could boast of. It was even dependent on
the North for its power requirements, as all the power
stations were there. The verdict of history is that the
South Korean economic miracle is the very antithesis of the
North Korean Juche concept.
Can North Korea side-step its agonising
economic problems by redefining the Juche concept?
Unfortunately for Pyongyang the development of militarism
and the building of a Humane Economy in the Third World are
incompatible tasks. The structural weaknesses of the North
Korean economy cannot be overcome without changing the rigid
concepts and rules of the Juche ideology. The technical
complexity of modern production cannot overcome without
changing the rigid concepts and rules of the Juche
ideology. The technical complexity of modern production
cannot be mastered by a system which is rigidly hierarchic
and bureaucratic at home and isolated and aggressive abroad.
The North Korean leadership is locked in a
hopeless struggle on the economic front: decreased demand
for its key exports and drastic decline in production below
the prescribed targets. The fragile economy is nowhere more
evident than in the conduct of North Korean diplomacy:
Pyongyang appears to have allowed its missions abroad to
traffic in smuggled goods and drugs. In 1983, even India
was reluctantly forced to expel a North Korean diplomat on
charges of smuggling diamonds, wrist watches and
video-recorders. Similarly, North Korean diplomats have
been expelled from Egypt, Denmark, Norway, Finland and
Burma.
Arms Culture
The political interests of North Korea are
now being dictated by the armaments culture which has
dangerous ramifications. Despite chronic economic problems,
North Korea is spending 25 per cent of its GNP on its armed
forces. The number of its military personnel has doubled
from the early 1970s and its commando force has grown to be
the largest in the world. Under the circumstances South
Korea can hardly be blamed for being apprehensive of the
military intentions and terrorist designs of Pyongyang. The
existence of 100,000 commandos kept in a state of alert for
a pre-emptive strike on South Korea has greatly complicated
the prospects for any form of positive integration and the
development of interdependence in the Korean Peninsula.
Academic analysts of Third World studies are
often concerned with the critique of the military-industrial
complex model. The Juche ideology has only
institutionalised this model and has sacrificed basic human
needs to a non-productive armaments culture. The dogmatists
of the North have only exacerbated the contradictions by
ignoring the Juche party platform for purchasing industrial
equipment and heavy machinery from Japan and Western Europe,
and decision-makers in Pyongyang even sometimes traumatised
themselves when they purchased South Korean machinery
bearing other foreign labels.
North Korea has a good chance of reaching
its potential if the growing opposition to the hereditary
succession of Kim Il Sung’s son Kim Jong Il could help in
the transformation of the comparatively narrow ruling
elite’s ethos in the direction of pragmatic problem
solving. The capabilities and resources of North Korea can
be utilised in an optimal manner in a new era of economic
liberalism and outward looking growth oriented commercial
policies. The Juche as an ideology of repression is
incapable of expressing the aspirations of Koreans, Indians
or any other Asian, African or Latin American people who are
in search of a prosperous economic future. |