The Oklahoman

Negotiator­s must grasp this monster

- Jonah Goldberg JonahsColu­mn@aol.com

Pr esident Trump’s decision to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un elicited a wide range of responses from experts. But one thing you hear from everyone is that the president and administra­tion need to prepare. The North Koreans may be technologi­cally (and morally) backward and rhetorical­ly juvenile, but they’re also incredibly adept and discipline­d at internatio­nal politics. They have eaten our lunch for more than 30 years.

Before getting their facts and figures together about nuclear stockpiles and missile throw weights, perhaps the administra­tion should ponder a simple question that even the experts never seem very interested in. What is North Korea?

It seems like a silly question. It’s a country, of course. But what kind of country? The labels we hear most often — dictatorsh­ip, totalitari­an, communist, “Stalinist” — have their merits descriptiv­ely or historical­ly. But they’re all inadequate.

Those are all relatively modern terms, and North Korea really isn’t a modern country. Its social and political model is ancient.

For starters, Kim Jong Un is a monarch. According to government propaganda (or really, the state religion) his father, Kim Jong Il, was a creature of divine birth, born under a double rainbow atop the holy Baekdu Mountain. When he was born, a new star appeared and winter turned to spring.

Kim Jong Un is also a divine being, with a body so efficient that he has never needed to use a bathroom. According to official myth, Kim could drive at age 3. As a student at Kim Il Sung University (named after his grandfathe­r), Kim reportedly wrote 1,500 books and six operas in three years.

It’s easy to laugh at this stuff — his father claimed to have invented the hamburger — but it isn’t a laughing matter, because the North Korean people believe it.

The country has been raised in a mystical cult. The North Koreans shed any allegiance to Marxism Leninism decades ago, replacing it with Juche, a philosophy that elevates a “Great Leader” as a monarch over society.

North Korea mirrors ancient monarchies in another respect: It is a feudal society. Under a system called Songbun, North Korea divides the population into three major classes and roughly 50 sub-classes. Whatever class you’re born into determines nearly everything important about your life, and each class is largely hereditary. It’s possible to improve your status, though extremely difficult and rare.

The lowest caste of North Koreans are the slavelabor peasants, who are the first to be starved when the state resorts to man-made famine. As Nicholas Eberstadt recently wrote in Commentary magazine: “Life chances in North Korea — and no less important, death chances — turn on one’s assigned class. … [D]eath from starvation is almost entirely consigned to the state’s designated enemies from the ‘hostile classes.’”

North Korea is arguably the greatest implementa­tion of the totalitari­an regime imagined in Plato’s “Republic.” Based on a series of myths that Plato would call “noble lies,” North Koreans subscribe to the belief that they are a superior, chosen race in much the same way Nazis subscribed to potted views about Aryans. It forms the backdrop for the regime’s paranoia about the outside world.

Of course, the regime itself also operates as an extortion racket, feeding off not just its own people, but a global black market in arms, drugs, sex traffickin­g and counterfei­ting.

The regime has been willing to starve its own people in the pursuit of nuclear weapons, which it sees as the only guarantor of its sovereignt­y and its eventual destiny of reuniting the peninsula. Negotiatin­g with North Korea may be the right thing to do, but our negotiator­s should understand the monstrosit­y they’re dealing with.

NOTE: Charles Krauthamme­r is away.

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