The Korea Times

Pigs, soccer, and national delusion

- By Jed Lea-Henry Jed Lea-Henry is a writer, assistant professor, and the host of the Korea Now Podcast (https:// korea-now-podcast.libsyn.com/). You can follow Jed’s work at http://www.jedleahenr­y.org.

Everyone tells themselves certain lies, whether they are aware of it or not. Nations do the same thing, often around ideas of grandeur, bravery and righteousn­ess. This type of self-deceit — by and large — is not helpful, but it is also not particular­ly harmful either. When it comes to South Korea, this is not the case!

A highly contagious virus with a 100 percent fatality rate, and no known cure, is terrifying enough, even if it only affects pigs. In a country as small as South Korea, the risk of it spreading and wiping out the entire industry is very real. And this says nothing of the possibilit­y of the virus mutating to be able to infect humans as well.

But when the first cases of African swine fever were announced, it was the region of the country — northern Gyeonggi Province, adjacent to the border with North Korea — that seemed to crystalize the fear. When it was no longer just farmed pigs, but wild boars, things became worse. When those infected boars were found inside the Demilitari­zed Zone (DMZ) that divides the two Koreas, once, then twice, this fear became an immediate cascade.

Soon the world’s most heavily fortified border was being reinforced further by a regiment of snipers and thermal vision drones. The lesson here for South Korea should have had nothing to do with the spread of disease or the pork industry — now suffering an irrational downturn in both sales and prices — and everything to do with how they actually see their Northern neighbor when structures fail, security is questionab­le, and national lies breakdown.

In the middle of this crisis, an inter-Korean soccer game was held in Pyongyang. It is not rare to encounter North Korean sporting teams, this was, after all, an official World Cup qualifying match. What made this into a spectacle was the use, by South Korea, of its national soccer team as vanguards for political and ideologica­l ends.

Most national government­s understand­ably refuse to send their athletes into North Korea, and so games of this kind are usually held in neutral third countries. What the South Korean athletes experience­d is exactly what these government­s are trying to avoid: a media shutdown, empty stadiums, visa issues, an absence of foreign media or representa­tives, politicall­y intimidate­d referees, and complete — prisoner like — isolation (the South Korean team were restricted in their movement, had their cell phones confiscate­d, and held as the only guests in the otherwise empty Koryo Hotel).

So why would the Moon Jaein administra­tion, or anyone for that matter, submit their citizens to such an experience when they have the chance to avoid it? The answer: national unificatio­n!

When Moon Jae-in announced in 2017 that he would achieve a North-South confederat­ion before the end of his term in office, it was more than some grand political gesture. He was speaking to his own most deeply held, and publicly expressed, desires … and also that of his country. It wasn’t the first time Moon had articulate­d this hope, and he must have taken stock of the public will, which whenever polled is overwhelmi­ngly in favor of reunifying the peninsula.

First steps are necessary, and sport bears the brunt as it always tends to do. At the 2018 PyeongChan­g Winter Olympics, the same outreach happened with Korea entering a unified women’s ice hockey team. What this meant in reality was South Korean players, who had qualified on their own merit, accepting North Korean players into their team, and with it relinquish­ing their own deserved and hardearned playing time. All for national ideology — all for a national lie!

The collective memories of a divided people is enough to make South Koreans instinctiv­ely tick “yes” next to any box asking for unificatio­n. Yet ask the follow-up questions of “Are you willing to accept a tax increase to achieve this?” or “Are you willing to accept a reduction in your standard of living?” and the responses shift quickly to “No!”

The other side of this is a confrontat­ional regime in North Korea that wants unificatio­n just as much, but only on its terms, only under the government in Pyongyang and the rule of Kim Jong-un.

The South Korean soccer team emerged from the North Korean media blackout talking about a “rough,” “war-like” experience, where the players were lucky to return “safe” and “uninjured,” and of a society where “North Koreans wouldn’t even make eye contact when I talked to them, not to mention respond.”

And yet the lesson, again, seems to have been missed!

With whispers inside South Korea of biological pig-borne warfare from the North, and mental images of Kim Jong-un deliberate­ly infecting his livestock and herding them across the DMZ, the Moon administra­tion took the more rational approach. The most likely scenario now unfolding across the border is one of unchecked agricultur­al disaster, something that North Korea has a long history with.

It is sensible to believe that the few wild boars that have managed to stumble through the mine fields of the DMZ, are the tip of a nationwide epidemic that the regime in Pyongyang is not equipped to address. In fact the National Intelligen­ce Service (NIS) estimates that the entire country is infected and that the province of North Pyongan has been completely “wiped out.” With this in mind, South Korea reached out with the offer of help to their brothers and sisters (their self-professed future compatriot­s) and in response didn’t even get an acknowledg­ement of the offer.

Increasing­ly confident that the outbreak is coming from North Korea nonetheles­s, the military is currently deployed to fight pigs, but not before Seoul first “notified the North of our decision” in order to “prevent accidental clashes with the North due to our gunshots.”

South Korea and South Koreans are not strictly responsibl­e for the behavior of their Northern neighbors, but they do have a choice. Keep telling themselves the old lies that unificatio­n is something that they still want — in all its mess and detail — and that North Koreans are willing partners in an open, liberal and democratic version of this; or step away from the delusion and start seeing the regime in Pyongyang for what it actually is.

Yet as we speak, South Korea is bidding to jointly host the 2032 summer Olympics with North Korea, and pigs are still idling their way across the border, watched carefully through the rifle scopes of highly trained soldiers.

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