North Korean Attempt to Prove Kim Jong Il Healthy QuestionedThis is a featured page

North Korean Attempt to Prove Kim Jong Il Healthy Questioned - Phantoms and Monsters Wiki
North Korean Attempt to Prove Kim Jong Il Healthy Questioned - Phantoms and Monsters Wiki
It seems that the angle of the shadow cast by the "Dear Leader" is different to his comrades'. Is this a faked photograph or does the North Korean leader cast a different kind of shade?

It was intended to be the photograph that settled the matter once and for all — three months after vanishing from public view, and after reports that he had undergone brain surgery following a stroke, the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Il, was alive and well.

But a close look reveals something shady around the ankles of the world’s last Cold War dictator.

While the legs of his soldiers cast a shadow at a sharp angle, the shadow of the “Dear Leader” is dead straight. In addition, there is a black line running horizontally behind the soldiers’ legs, but it mysteriously disappears behind Mr Kim.

Rather than a genuine photograph, there were growing suspicions last night that the image released by the North Korean authorities may possibly be the result of digital trickery. Yesterday the state-controlled North Korean media announced that Mr Kim had attended a musical performance at which he “waved back to the cheering performers and congratulated them on their presentation”. The photographs were first presented the day before — and together they eroded the consensus among North Korea watchers that the leader of the world’s most unpredictable nuclear power had suffered a serious health problem over the past few months.

The pictures show Mr Kim posing for a group photograph with a military unit, wearing a light coloured winter coat, sunglasses and sporting his familiar pompadour. On Sunday, in similarly undated photographs, he was shown apparently attending a football match.

“He expressed expectation and conviction that all the artistes would conduct dynamic revolutionary art activities in the future too, to powerfully encourage the army and people in the drive for accomplishing the cause of building a great prosperous powerful nation,” said yesterday’s report on KCNA.

Mr Kim ceased making public appearances in mid-August but it was only on September 9 that his absence from view became a matter of pressing concern. That was the 60th anniversary of the North Korean state, a day of almost sacred significance, when parades and celebrations were held all over the country. Despite attending the 50th and 55th anniversaries, Mr Kim failed to appear.

There was speculation that he was ill or had even died — an alarming possibility in a country with a million-strong army, nuclear weapons technology, a hungry population and no formal system of succession. The head of the South Korea spy agency, Kim Sung Ho, publicly confirmed media reports from unnamed US intelligence sources that Mr Kim had suffered a stroke and been treated by foreign doctors.

“Although he is not in a state to walk around, he is conscious,” he told South Korean MPs. “We understand that he can control the situation and he is not in an unstable condition.”

If the recent photographs are genuine, then he has made a remarkable recovery — or reports of his indisposition have been greatly exaggerated. It is a big if — and there has been much poring over other images for signs of fraud or fakery. Pictures released last month, for example, were dismissed because the state of the foliage in the background suggested that they had been taken in summer — probably before the alleged stroke.

In the photographs at the football match Mr Kim is not making great use of his left arm, leading to speculation that he was suffering partial paralysis. In the latest pictures of the military, he is seen to be clapping and raising both hands.

North Korea analysts suggested that the release of the news was timed deliberately to coincide with the election of Barack Obama. “He’s sending a message to the US,” says Moon Chung In, a professor at Seoul’s Yonsei University, who has twice met Mr Kim in Pyongyang. “They’re saying our leader is alive and well, and we’re ready to talk.”sity, who has twice net Mr Kim in Pyongyang. “They’re saying our leader is alive and well, and we’re ready to talk.”

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Basilides_The_Gnosti Russia re-aims missiles after meeting with N Korea's Kim's son. 0 Aug 29 2009, 5:59 PM EDT by Basilides_The_Gnosti
Thread started: Aug 29 2009, 5:59 PM EDT  Watch
Today's report that Russia is deploying missiles to the Far East is especially interesting when we consider the fact that Kim Jong iI's son recently went to Moscow for a meeting of an undisclosed nature with Russia's leaders. Soon after the meeting, they order their s-400 Triumph air defense missiles re-aimed at N. Korea. Wonder how the boy goofed up that one for the old man!
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lancesergeant North Korea: 2 Jul 19 2009, 12:48 AM EDT by lancesergeant
Thread started: Jul 14 2009, 7:34 AM EDT  Watch
If there is going to be any stability in the region, it will happen with the dictators passing. No one will answer back to him while he is wielding his influence. The one reason that springs to mind that there is no immediate successor boils down to one thing. The dictator in power feels his influence fading, with a megalomaniac in power anyone near to could be perceived as after his post. Paranoia sets in, and it wouldn't take much. Stalin showed it with Zhukov and Konev. North Korea would be Russia fifty years on. Would China swallow up North Korea or threaten it with invasion. The dictator is an embarassment to them, but they want to show a united front to the world. This is especially the case with the collapse of communism. Would China take over knowing that the dictator might fire off his nuclear weapons in a swansong. Any major change has to wait until he has gone. I think any composite North Korean government would be more conducive to Chinese influence with the dictator gone. But even so, it has to be remembered that they have been indoctrinated for over sixty years and it will be a steady if gradual process.
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lancesergeant North Korea 0 Jul 14 2009, 7:22 AM EDT by lancesergeant
Thread started: Jul 14 2009, 7:22 AM EDT  Watch
It wouldn't be the first time that photos have been doctored for the outside media as well as for internal digestion. It has to be remembered, whatever one's view of their politics is that he is the figurehead, be all and end all. He is the alpha and the omega. For the regime of idolatry to work he has to be seen to be literally infallible. He is the embodiment almost a living god. When he starts to weaken, it is not just him but everything the system stands for. One has to only look at Lenin's embalment to see the parellels.

Lenin stated he wanted to be buried. The powers that be, while unable to make immortal,this they could achieve in some way by having him on permanent display. There for the people. Always with them. Having the founder there kept the momentum for the organisation. With no contact with the outside world it is his world and his world only. Isolated he has to make all decisions and with no one to interelate, he fuels his megalomania, it is him against the rest. It is only China on his door step that keeps him in place. The fear is if he goes in decline he may lash out. There is also the prospect with him gone that no one can take on the reins and the country may decline in to civil war or have death throws with nuclear weapons hitting out at its imperialist perceived neighbours.

Bear in mind that the Korea's are still technically on a war footing - it was an armistice, a cease-fire, not cessation of hostilities. There are still axes grinding in both camps. If North Korea fears it is going to implode it will perceive it has nothing to lose. It still holds grievances with Japan since at least 1910. China's encapsulating of capitalist ways, may be seen as selling out by North Korea and may think it self as being backed against a wall.
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