Intelligence Officer Defects from North Korea

Considering that this defection did happen a year ago it does seem like a legitimate question to ask if this had any political motivations:

nk defector image

A North Korean military intelligence officer has defected to South Korea, the South’s Unification Ministry announced on Monday. While declining to give details, ministry spokesman Jeong Joon-hee confirmed the man is a colonel and called the defection “meaningful.” He is believed to be one of the highest-ranking North Koreans to defect to the South.

Jeong said the defection could be read as a sign of fissure at the top levels of North Korea’s regime.

The announcement comes just days after South Korea said that 13 North Koreans who worked at a state-run restaurant defected en masse last week. Chinese officials confirmed Monday that the North Koreans were working in China, that they left China April 6 and that they were North Korean passport holders.

It is unclear when the high-ranking military official defected to the South. Defectors are often questioned and debriefed for months before news of their defections is publicly announced. In this case, South Korean news wire Yonhap reports the official defected sometime last year, which immediately sparked criticism that the government’s announcement is politically motivated: South Koreans go to the polls in parliamentary elections this week, and previous governments have similarly been accused of trying to influence elections with conveniently-timed announcements.  [NPR]

You can read more at the link.

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Bruce K. Nivens
Bruce K. Nivens
8 years ago

How would the timing of news of a NK official’s defection affect elections in the ROK?

MTB Rider
8 years ago

@bruce

It appears it didn’t.
http://www.voanews.com/content/south-korean-election-disrupts-political-landscape/3285218.html

SEOUL—
For the first time in 16 years, a South Korean ruling party has failed to win a majority in a legislative election.

The surprise losses suffered by President Park Geun-hye’s Saenuri Party Wednesday revealed widespread public discontent with her conservative economic policies and growing division over her “get tough” approach to the North Korean nuclear threat.

Showing a high level defector was supposed to show that the Get Tough Policy was working, and that with Fatty Kim thinning out the herd up north, Park Geun-hye was speeding up the collapse of the North.

Now the question is, will the North be able to put another mole in as President during the next Presidential Election.

Meanwhile, It’s the Stupid Economy… The Kids need a Job, they have college bar tabs to pay off.

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