Informal Institute for National Security Thinkers and Practitioners


Quotes of the Day:


“In this war, which was total in every sense of the word, we have seen many great changes in military science. It seems to me that not the least of these was the development of psychological warfare as a specific and effective weapon.”
- General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1945 



“Psychological warfare has always rested as an uneasy activity in democracies, even in wartime. It is partly to do with the suspicion that using the mind to influence the mind is somehow unacceptable. But is it more unacceptable to shoot someone's brains out rather than to persuade that brain to drop down their weapon and live?”
Dr. Phillip M. Taylor,
Munitions of the Mind, Manchester University Press, 1995

“Success will be less a matter of imposing one’s will and more a function of shaping behavior ― of friends, adversaries and, most importantly, the people in between.”
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
26 November 2007


1. Yoon, Japan PM pay joint tribute to Korean atomic bomb victims

2. Yoon, Japan PM hold summit in Hiroshima

3. Yoon says Kishida's visit to memorial stone for Koreans 'courageous'

4. The Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act calls for execution of violators in a bid to eliminate South Korean style speech from the DPRK

5. Quad summit: Leaders condemn North Korea for its 'destabilising ballistic missile launches'

6. Yoon, Biden, Kishida hold summit in Hiroshima

7. Readout of President Biden’s Meeting with Prime Minister Kishida Fumio of Japan and President Yoon Suk Yeol of the Republic of Korea

8. Yoon, Biden, Kishida agree to upgrade trilateral cooperation to new level

9. Yoon promises Zelenskyy additional aid, including demining equipment

10. S. Korean anti-piracy unit takes part in multinational operation






1. Yoon, Japan PM pay joint tribute to Korean atomic bomb victims



(LEAD) Yoon, Japan PM pay joint tribute to Korean atomic bomb victims | Yonhap News Agency

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023

(ATTN: COMBINES story slugged Yoon-Japan PM; UPDATES with quotes during summit)

By Lee Haye-ah

HIROSHIMA, Japan, May 21 (Yonhap) -- South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida paid tribute to Korean victims of the 1945 Hiroshima atomic bombing Sunday, an unprecedented move demonstrating their commitment to improving bilateral ties.

The two leaders made a joint visit to a cenotaph honoring the Korean victims at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, marking the first visit by a South Korean president and the first joint visit by leaders of the two countries. Yoon was joined by first lady Kim Keon Hee, while Kishida was joined by his wife, Yuko.


South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol (2nd from L) , Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (2nd from R), first lady Kim Keon Hee (L) and Kishida's wife, Yuko, pay tribute in front of a cenotaph for Korean victims of the Hiroshima atomic bombing at the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, Japan, on May 21, 2023. (Yonhap)

Around 50,000 Koreans fell victim to the atomic bombing, including 30,000 killed, after many were brought to Japan to work as forced laborers during its 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula, according to the Korea Atomic Bombs Victim Association.

Yoon, who arrived in Hiroshima on Friday to attend a Group of Seven summit, met with a group of Korean survivors that day.

The cenotaph was erected in 1970 with the funding of Korean residents in Japan and was initially located outside the park. In 1999, it was relocated to its current spot at the request of Korean residents and Japanese civic groups.

Bilateral relations have warmed significantly following South Korea's decision in March to compensate Korean victims of Japanese wartime forced labor on its own without asking for contributions from Japanese firms.

Yoon visited Tokyo in March for a summit with Kishida and the Japanese prime minister reciprocated earlier this month with a visit to Seoul, resuming so-called shuttle diplomacy between the two countries' leaders after 12 years.


South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida shake hands during a summit in Hiroshima, Japan, on May 21, 2023. (Yonhap)

After paying tribute, the two leaders held a summit, their third in two months.

"Our joint visit conveys our tribute to the Korean A-bomb victims and, at the same time, will be remembered as a courageous act by the prime minister to prepare for a peaceful future," Yoon said in opening remarks at the summit.

Recalling Kishida's remark during a trip to Seoul that his "heart aches" to think of forced labor victims, Yoon said the remark "resonated greatly" with the South Korean people and represents Kishida's courage and determination to show a sincere attitude.

Yoon also said he hopes cooperation between the two countries will further deepen on economic security and other global agenda based on the result of the G-7 summit.

Kishida said in his opening comments that the joint visit to the cenotaph is "very important" for Korea-Japan relations and in wishing for world peace.

He also said the two leaders holding their third summit in about two months clearly demonstrates progress in relations between the two countries and that he hopes to discuss with Yoon ways to further strengthen cooperation on global issues.

hague@yna.co.kr

(END)

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023



2. Yoon, Japan PM hold summit in Hiroshima


Yoon, Japan PM hold summit in Hiroshima | Yonhap News Agency

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023

By Lee Haye-ah

HIROSHIMA, Japan, May 21 (Yonhap) -- South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida held a summit in Hiroshima on Sunday, their third meeting in two months as bilateral relations thaw.

The latest meeting came on the sidelines of a Group of Seven summit, while the previous two were held in Tokyo in March and then in Seoul earlier this month during bilateral visits by Yoon and Kishida, respectively.

Bilateral relations have warmed significantly since Seoul offered in March to compensate Korean victims of Japanese wartime forced labor on its own without asking for contributions from Japanese firms.

Earlier in the day, Yoon and Kishida paid tribute to Korean victims of the 1945 Hiroshima atomic bombing by visiting a cenotaph for the victims at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park.


South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida shakes hands during a summit in Hiroshima, Japan, on May 21, 2023. (Yonhap)

hague@yna.co.kr

(END)

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023



3. Yoon says Kishida's visit to memorial stone for Koreans 'courageous'




Yoon says Kishida's visit to memorial stone for Koreans 'courageous'

koreaherald.com · by Shin Ji-hye · May 21, 2023

President Yoon Suk Yeol said Sunday his counterpart Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida would be "remembered for his courageous actions in laying the groundwork for a peaceful future" after their joint visit to the cenotaph commemorating Korean victims of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

They visited the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park early in the morning to pay their respects to the Korean victims, in prior to the bilateral summit held on the sidelines of the G7 Summit.

"This is the first instance where the leaders of both countries have jointly paid their respects (to the Korean victims), and it is also the first time a Korean president has paid tribute at the cenotaph," he said as opening remarks at the summit.

"Our visit together today will be remembered as Kishida’s courageous act to prepare for a peaceful future while conveying his condolences to the Korean atomic bomb victims,” he said.

Yoon also expressed his gratitude for Kishida for “showing courage and determination” during the summit in Seoul early this month, where Kishida expressed his heartfelt sorrow for the Korean laborers who worked in Japanese companies during Japan's rule of the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945.

Yoon hoped Korean and Japan would further deepen cooperation on global agendas including economic security based on the results of the G-7 summit.

Regarding the joint visit to the memorial, Kishida said, “I think it was a very important event for peace between Korea and Japan and for peace and prosperity in the world. At the same time, we will visit the memorial stone with other leaders and have many conversations.”

“This is the third meeting with President Yoon in two months,” he added. “I think we are showing progress in Japan-Korea relations between our leaders.

The two leaders had bilateral summits in Tokyo in March and in Seoul in early this month to restore the two countries' "shuttle diplomacy.”



By Shin Ji-hye (shinjh@heraldcorp.com)

koreaherald.com · by Shin Ji-hye · May 21, 2023



4. The Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act calls for execution of violators in a bid to eliminate South Korean style speech from the DPRK


All 65 articles of the law are below.


There should be no doubt that Kim Jong Un is deathly afraid of outside information of all types. We should make him even more afraid and prove his fears correct.


The Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act calls for execution of violators in a bid to eliminate South Korean style speech from the DPRK

asiapress.org

South Korean dramas are very popular among North Koreans. They even secretly watch the drama “Crash Landing on You.” (Netflix)

The maximum penalty for using or spreading South Korean style speech in North Korea is execution. The Kim Jong-un regime enacted the terrible law that carries this penalty – the “Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act” - in January of this year. The full text of the law was acquired by Daily NK and published in March. ASIAPRESS inquired to South Korea’s unification ministry about the law and the ministry replied that “the government has obtained the same document and is sharing it throughout its departments.”

In May, North Korea’s government began implementing crackdowns based on the new law. The start of these major crackdowns by government agencies, enterprises, social organizations and schools was revealed by ASIAPRESS reporting partners living in North Korea.

◆ Crackdowns on South Korean style speech

The “Pyongyang Cultural Language” is considered the DPRK’s “standard language.” The new law claims to be protecting this language from outside influence; however, the full text shows that the law is full of antagonistic language toward South Korea, making it clear that the regime is extremely afraid of the impact of South Korean style language on the country’s society.

The law prohibits the use of “oppa” (a word used by women to refer to older brothers or boyfriends/husbands) toward men who are not part of their family and bans the use of “nim” (an honorific attached to names and titles), calling it “an imitation of ways the puppets address others.”

ASIAPRESS reporting partners say that there has been an increase in people being reported and investigated by the police for using South Korean style speech. The police are not only investigating spoken speech but also language used on cell phone text messages.

◆ Kim Jong-un’s unrestrained hatred of South Korean culture

Two and a half years before the law was enacted, ASIAPRESS acquired and published a document released by the Kim Jong-un regime that was entitled: “A Proposal for Measures and Related Proposals to Thoroughly Clean Up the Trash That Imitates and Copies the Words of the Puppets.

The cover of the internal document, which was obtained by ASIAPRESS. The top underlined part refers to "sniper warfare, pursuit warfare, search warfare, and sweeping warfare.” The document includes a quote from Kim Jong-un saying, "We have to consider the phenomenon of imitating the words of the puppets to be a very serious problem.” Photographed by ASIAPRESS.

The document includes a section with comments made directly by Kim Jong-un.

“The phenomenon of imitating and copying the ‘puppet’s language’ in the daily vocabulary of youths is a very serious national and social problem. In addition, it is a very serious problem in relation to the prospects of our party from a political standpoint.”

The influx of Korean culture and information, or Hallyu, has influenced the young generation to imitate the language of ‘puppets’, which is the South Korean way of speaking, indicating Kim Jong-un’s strong feeling that it is a serious problem that could upset the system.

The document shows Kim Jong-un’s deep hatred of South Korean culture. The Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act has been enacted to allow the government to crack down on the use of South Korean speech and the spread of South Korean culture. Without any sense of embarrassment or disgrace, the law says that anyone using or spreading South Korean speech can face the death penalty. The law shows how intent Kim Jong-un is to eliminate South Korean influence from his country.

◆ The Full Text of the Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act (Quoted from Daily NK.)

THE PYONGYANG CULTURAL LANGUAGE PROTECTION ACT OF THE DEMOCRATIC PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF KOREA

Adopted by Decree No. 19 of the Supreme People’s Assembly on January 18 of Juche year 112 (2023)

CHAPTER I. BASICS OF THE PYONGYANG CULTURAL LANGUAGE PROTECTION ACT

Article 1. Purpose of the Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act

The Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea contributes to the protection and active revival of the Pyongyang Cultural Language by completely eliminating the use of the puppet language, denouncing abnormal language elements, and establishing a socialist language lifestyle throughout the entire society.

Article 2. Definitions

The definitions of the terminology in this law are as follows.

  1. The Pyongyang Cultural Language is our native national language and is the most pure and excellent language which has been developed in accordance with the demands of the current era. It serves as our country’s standard national language.
  2. The puppet language is a jumbled together language that has completely lost the essentials of the Korean language due to its vocabulary, grammar and intonation becoming Westernized, Japanized and Sinicized. It is a lowly and disgusting garbage language that exists nowhere else in the world.
  3. Abnormal language elements refer to foreign loan words, the remnants of the Japanese language, and difficult-to-understand vocabulary of Chinese origin that do not conform to the standards of the Pyongyang Cultural Language.

Article 3. The Basic Principles of the Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act

The protection and active revival of the Pyongyang Cultural Language is critical to maintain and celebrate our ideology, our system, and our culture. The State shall move forward with an intense struggle across the entire society to completely eliminate the puppet language circulating in our country’s language domain.

Article 4. The Principles of Strengthening a Law-abiding Culture

Strengthening a law-abiding culture is essential to protect the Pyongyang Cultural Language. The State shall strengthen law-abiding culture within all sectors and all units to ensure that all citizens are well aware of the legal demand to completely eliminate the puppet language and adhere to our Pyongyang Cultural Language so as to thoroughly abide by the law.

Article 5. The Principles of the Nationwide Struggle to Completely Eliminate Remnants of the Puppet Language

The struggle to eliminate the remnants of the puppet language is a serious political and class struggle that affects the very fate of our socialist system and the very existence of our people and future generations. The State shall conduct a highly intensive struggle to liminate the remnants of the puppet language in all sectors and all units to ensure that the entire society ostracizes those who imitate and copy the puppet language and ensure that every person is awakened and is as vigilant as possible toward one another.

Article 6. The Principles of Legal Punishment Toward People Who Spread the Puppet Language

The State shall treat anyone who imitates or spreads the puppet language as garbage contaminated with puppet culture and as criminals. Anyone, regardless of the seriousness of the matter, shall face serious legal sanctions, including the death penalty.

CHAPTER II. THE NATIONWIDE STRUGGLE TO ELIMINATE THE REMNANTS OF THE PUPPET LANGUAGE

Section 1. Obstructing the Sources of the Spread of the Puppet Language

Article 7. Basic Requirements for Obstructing the Sources of the Spread of the Puppet Language

The complete obstruction of the sources of the spread of the puppet language is the first step in the struggle to protect the Pyongyang Cultural Language from infiltration by the rotten language culture of the puppets. Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens must exhaustively identify the elements and spaces in which the puppet language can spread, such as the inflow and dissemination of published propaganda material by the puppets and the inflow and dissemination of goods with markings in the writing style of the puppets to ensure their physical removal with a view to guarantee remnants of the puppet language do not infiltrate our language domain.

Article 8. Strengthening of Inspections and Security Activities on the Border

Border inspection authorities, including customs offices and border security organizations, shall strictly inspect all personnel, goods, freight and transportation methods entering the DPRK and strengthen security activities to ensure that goods marked with the puppet language or with markings in the writing style of the puppets never seep into our territory. Officials shall not conduct inspections irresponsibly or take money or goods in return for allowing in goods marked with the puppet language or with markings in the writing style of the puppets.

Article 9. Strengthening of Aerial Surveillance and Searches for Leaflets

Legal institutions, institutions, enterprises and organizations shall strengthen aerial surveillance and searches to seek out all leaflets and dirty goods sent into the DPRK by the puppets and conduct proper disposal of these items with a view to obstruct the inflow of the puppet language through leaflets.

Article 10. Surveillance and Handling of Garbage in Rivers, Streams and Seas

Legal institutions, institutions, enterprises and organizations shall strengthen surveillance over the border region, frontlines, rivers and streams in coastal regions, and the seas to obstruct the entry of the puppet language through garbage with a view to remove, burn and bury garbage with puppet language markings or using the writing style of the puppets.

Article 11. Requirements to be Adhered to During Trade-Related Projects and International Economic Activities

Central international trade guidance institutions, central international economic guidance institutions and provincial people’s committees shall search exhaustively for routes in which scraps of the puppet language can enter the DPRK during international projects and international economic activities and take measures to deal with these routes. Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not receive propaganda materials published by the puppets, or goods with puppet language markings or that use the writing style of the puppets, from foreigners residing or living in our country or from Koreans living overseas.

Article 12. Monitoring International Business Travellers and People Given Government Permission to Travel to China

Institutions, enterprises and organizations shall conduct strict education and monitoring over citizens conducting business travel to other countries and to those given government permission to travel to China to ensure that they do not illegally bring back propaganda materials published by the puppets, goods marked with the puppet language, or goods which use the writing style of the puppet language, nor imitate the puppet language they saw and heard in other countries.

Article 13. Strengthening Control over Published Propaganda Works

Institutions shall prevent the inflow of the puppet language into the DPRK through published propaganda works by strengthening controls over the published propaganda works of other countries.

Article 14. Strengthening Monitoring and Control over Electronic and Radio Wave Equipment

The State’s radio wave monitoring institutions and central information industrial guidance institutions shall obstruct the inflow of the puppet language by strengthening monitoring and controls over electronic and radio wave equipment.

Article 15. Strengthening of Monitoring and Control Over Internet Users

Institutions shall establish strict controls over the use of the Internet and strengthen monitoring and controls to ensure that users do not copy published propaganda works, materials and programs with markings of the puppet language or that use the writing style of the puppet language during the course of using the Internet for various reasons, including science-related research.

Article 16. Ban on the Consumption and Distribution of Published Propaganda Works of the Puppets and Broadcasts by the Puppets

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not engage in consuming or distributing published propaganda works of the puppets or broadcasts by the puppets.

Article 17. Tracking and Exposing Acts of Consuming Video Content and Broadcasts by the Puppets

Legal institutions, institutions, enterprises and organizations shall regularly conduct inspections of electronic media, including computers and cellphones, and establish a well-organized public reporting system to exhaustively track and uncover all phenomena related to the secret viewing of videos and broadcasts created by the puppets.

Section 2. The Extermination of the Remnants of the Puppet Language

Article 18. Basic Requirements for Exterminating the Remnants of the Puppet Language

The extermination of the remnants of the puppet language is a critical requirement to better adhere to our socialist system and our people’s spiritual and cultural life and more firmly establish the revolutionary and class strongholds. With a clear concept of hostility, institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall mercilessly eliminate the remnants of the puppet language that has infiltrated our language domain through a nationwide struggle.

Article 19. Ban on Imitating Puppet Style Titles

Citizens shall not imitate the use of titles in the puppet style, such as young people calling non-relatives oppa or adding nim at the end of a professional title. Citizens can use the title oppa until the end of their time in the Korean Children’s Union, but starting from their time in the Socialist Patriotic Youth League, they must use the titles dongji and dongmu.

(Oppa means “elder brother,” while nim is an honorific attached to names or titles. Dongji and dongmu mean “comrade.”)

Article 20. Ban on Imitating Expressions in the Puppet Style

Citizens shall not imitate puppet style expressions in their linguistic lives.

Article 21. Ban on the Use of the Puppet Writing Style and Grammar

Citizens shall not write text or create documents using the writing style or grammar of the puppet language.

Article 22. Ban on the Imitation of Puppet Style Intonation

Citizens shall not imitate puppet style intonation by raising and lengthening their intonation at the end of a phrase in an obsequious, lilting and nauseating way.

Article 23. Ban on Giving Names in the Puppet Style

Citizens shall not sloppily give names to their children in the puppet style nor create aliases imitating the language style of the puppets when using cellphones and on computer networks.

Article 24. Ban on the Production and Distribution of Compilations, Pictures and Scrolls with the Puppet Language or Using the Writing Style of the Puppet Language

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not produce or distribute compilations, pictures, or scrolls with the puppet language or that use the writing style of the puppet language.

Article 25. Ban on the Spread of the Style of the Puppet Language through Cell Phones and Computer Networks

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not exchange notices or electronic mail written in the style of the puppet language through cell phones and computer networks.

Article 26. Ban on the Trafficking and Use of Goods Marked with the Puppet Language or the Writing Style of the Puppet Language

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not illegally sell or use goods marked with the puppet language or writing style of the puppet language, or electronics goods and programs displaying the puppet language.

Article 27. Ban on the Spread of Published and Printed Works with the Puppet Language or Writing Style of the Puppet Language

Institutions and its members shall strictly adhere to established systems for handling published and printed works and shall not distribute published or printed works with the puppet language or writing style of the puppet language.

Article 28. Ban on the Use of the Puppet Language Style in Written Documents

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not use the style of the puppet language while writing documents.

Article 29. Ban on the Spread of the Puppet Language Style Through Business Activities

Institutions, enterprises, and organizations shall not post prices, menus, instructions or advertisements, or display items marked with the puppet language or using the writing style of the puppet language.

Article 30. The Requirement to Install Puppet Language Scrubbing Programs

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens are obligated to install puppet language scrubbing programs designated by the State onto their cell phones, computers and servers.

Article 31. Strengthening Education and Control to Eliminate the Puppet Language Style

Institutions, enterprises, and organizations shall strengthen education and controls over their employees and students to ensure they clearly understand that supporting the schemes of the enemies to distort our style of socialism from within is a traitorous act.

Article 32. Strengthening Monitoring over Ex-convicts and Problematic People

Legal institutions, institutions, enterprises and organizations shall increase the intensity of their controls on people who have previously consumed or distributed impure propaganda materials, those who make various excuses to avoid showing up for work or school, and those who frequently leave work early and move around as they please to ensure that they have absolutely no time available to consume propaganda works created by the puppets.

Article 33. Notifying and Criticizing Parents Who Fail to Correctly Educate Their Children

Local people’s committees, institutions, enterprises, organizations, local offices (including those in villages, laborers’ zones, and districts), and neighborhood watch units (inminban) shall notify parents who allow their children to imitate the puppet language style due to the improper education of their offspring through various meetings, such as employee reviews and neighborhood watch unit meetings, to ensure they hang their heads in shame.

Article 34. Revelations and Criticism Through Publishers and the Media

Publishing and media institutions shall sharply expose and criticize phenomena where the puppet language is imitated through newspapers and broadcasts to ensure that people using the style of the puppet language are roundly repressed, ostracized and blamed so they can no longer stand tall with us in the ranks.

Article 35. Education Through Public Struggle

Legal institutions, including social safety institutions, shall conduct public struggles in various formats and sizes, including revelations through documentation, mass struggle meetings, public arrests, public trials, and public executions to break the spirits of those contaminated by rotten puppet culture and to awaken the masses at large.

Article 36. Reporting

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall immediately report any imitation or spreading of the puppet language to legal institutions, including social safety institutions.

Article 37. Investigations

Legal institutions, including social safety institutions, shall immediately investigate any acts of imitating or spreading the puppet language during the course of their duties or after receiving reports of such acts.

Article 38. Ban on Overlooking or Minimizing Incidents

The employees of legal institutions and monitoring and control institutions shall not overlook or minimize acts involving the imitation of the puppet language by receiving money or goods, succumbing to authority, or being swayed by personal feelings. Anyone who does not actively struggle against the phenomenon of imitating the puppet language or who shields others in an unprincipled way shall be considered traitors who support the spread of rotten puppet culture and shall be severely punished under the law.

CHAPTER III. BAN ON THE USE OF ABNORMAL LANGUAGE ELEMENTS

Article 39. Basic Requirements for the Ban on the Use of Abnormal Language Elements

The ban on the use of abnormal language elements is an important and fundamental requirement for maintaining the purity of the Pyongyang Cultural Language and actively reviving its excellence. Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not use abnormal language elements in their linguistic lives, including unsanctioned foreign loan words, the remnants of the Japanese language, and difficult-to-understand vocabulary of Chinese origin.

Article 40. Ban on the Use of Unsanctioned Foreign Loan Words

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not use foreign loan words unsanctioned by the government in speech or written language.

Article 41. Ban on the Use of Remnants of the Japanese Language

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall completely eliminate the remaining remnants of the Japanese language in various spheres of society, including mineral mining, coal mining, means of transportation, and construction, and use the Pyongyang Cultural Language instead.

Article 42. Ban on the Use of Difficult Vocabulary of Chinese Origin

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not speak or write difficult-to-understand words of Chinese origin and shall refrain from creating and using Chinese character-based words as they please.

Article 43. Ban on the Use of Abnormal Abbreviations

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not abbreviate and use certain institution names and titles as they please in their daily lives that fail to conform to norms.

Article 44. Ban on the Use of Abnormal Intonation

Citizens shall not use abnormal intonation, such as raising the intonation at the ends of phrases in an unrefined and strange way.

Article 45. Ban on Other Abnormal Language Elements

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall not use abnormal language elements banned by the State in speech or writing.

Article 46. The Use of Registered Terminology

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall first register new terminology with language inspection institutions when publishing academic magazines, dissertations, reference works, and commercial trademarks.

CHAPTER IV. ESTABLISHING THE SPIRIT OF THE SOCIALIST LANGUAGE LIFESTYLE

Article 47. Basic Requirements for the Establishing the Spirit of the Socialist Language Lifestyle

Establishing the spirit of the socialist language lifestyle is important for the protection and active revival of the Pyongyang Cultural Language. In order to establish the socialist language lifestyle throughout society, institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens must thoroughly adhere to the language’s independent and unique national character in their linguistic lives, assure its cultural character, and strictly follow the Pyongyang Cultural Language’s norms.

Article 48. Establishing a Revolutionary and People-centered Language Style

The language style of our country’s greatest leaders is a shining example of a revolutionary and people-centered language style developed independently at the noblest level to meet the fundamental demand for a written and spoken language suiting the needs of the masses. Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall thoroughly learn the revolutionary and people-centered linguistic style of these great leaders and endeavor to embody this style in their linguistic lives.

Article 49. Adhering to the Independent and Unique National Character in Our Linguistic Lives

Preserving the independent and unique national character of our language in our linguistic lives is a struggle against flunkeyism and part of the fierce class struggle to protect what is ours. Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall proactively revive and use our nation's excellent written and spoken language to meet the aims, demands, thoughts, sentiments, and feelings of the masses.

Article 50. Guaranteeing the Cultural Character in Our Linguistic Lives

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall raise the cultural character of their language, retain politeness in their speech, and elevate their linguistic lives such that it becomes a firm trend in our society. They shall not use dialects, vulgar speech, slang, or any other kinds of uncultured and immoral expressions.

Article 51. Following Linguistic Norms in Our Linguistic Lives

Institutions, enterprises, organizations and citizens shall precisely follow the linguistic norms of the Pyongyang Cultural Language in their linguistic lives, including but not limited to rules regarding vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation, proper spelling, and spacing.

Article 52. Duties of Language Research Institutions

Language research institutions shall, in accordance with the State’s language policies, further glorify the excellence of the Pyongyang Cultural Language while elevating social linguistic life and strengthening research activities to solve any problems that arise during efforts to develop the sophistication of the people’s linguistic lives.

Article 53. Duties of Language Inspection Institutions

Language inspection institutions shall assess the use of Pyongyang Cultural Language in all fields, formulate and promulgate various language standards, and strengthen monitoring and controls to prevent the use of puppet language remnants and abnormal language elements.

Article 54. Duties of Institutions, Enterprises, and Organizations

Institutions, enterprises, and organizations shall strengthen their struggle and education on law-abiding culture to eradicate the remnants of the puppet language and reject abnormal language elements while establishing the spirit of a healthy and revolutionary language lifestyle within the collective.

Article 55. Duties of Education Institutions

Education institutions shall strengthen cultural language education and regularly educate and monitor students to ensure they actively revive the excellence of the Pyongyang Cultural Language and refrain from using remnants of the puppet language or abnormal language elements.

Article 56. Duties of Publishing and Media Institutions

Publishing and media institutions shall widely promote the excellence of the Pyongyang Cultural Language and regularly publish various publications and reports related to the elimination of puppet language remnants and abnormal language elements, all while acting as leaders and models of the proper use of the Pyongyang Cultural Language.

Article 57. Duties of Citizens

Citizens shall use the Pyongyang Cultural Language when they speak or write while elevating their linguistic lives to speak with manners and sophistication as a reflection of their deep awareness of the moral and civic responsibilities they have towards society and the collective. Parents shall educate their children to actively revive and use our language and pay close attention to their children’s mobile phone and computer use to prevent even the most trivial scraps of impure ideology from influencing them.

CHAPTER V. LEGAL OBLIGATIONS

Article 58. The Crime of Using the Puppet Language

Any persons found to be speaking, writing, sending messages, or exchanging emails in the puppet language or creating printed materials, video recordings, compilations, pictures, photographs, or scrolls using the puppet language’s writing style shall be sentenced to six years or more of reform through labor. If the severity of the crime is deemed high, the offender shall be sentenced to a lifetime sentence of reform through labor or the death penalty.

Article 59. The Crime of Propagating the Puppet Language

Any persons found to be teaching the puppet language to others or circulating printed materials, video recordings, compilations, pictures, photographs or scrolls using the puppet language writing style shall be sentenced to ten years or more of reform through labor. If the severity of the crime is deemed high, the offender shall be sentenced to a lifetime sentence of reform through labor or the death penalty.

Article 60. Fines

In the following cases, institutions, enterprises, and organizations shall be subject to a fine between KPW 1 million ~ KPW 1.5 million, and citizens shall be subject to a fine between KPW 100,000 ~ KPW 150,000.

  1. Displaying price lists, menus, instructions, or advertisements that include abnormal language elements, such as the remnants of the Japanese language
  2. Using a mobile phone, computer, photocopier or other such device without installing a state-designated puppet language scrubbing program
  3. Failing to properly control and educate one’s child, causing them to imitate the puppet language
  4. Using foreign loan words not approved by the State in one’s speech or writing
  5. Using new terminology that has not undergone a review by a language inspection institution, which causes a negative impact on the country’s social linguistic life

Article 61. Reform through Labor Punishment

Anyone found to have repeatedly perpetrated the activities outlined in Article 60 of this Act or who have caused social criticism due to the use of abnormal language elements, shall be sentenced to three or more months of reform through labor.

Article 62. Punishment through Unpaid Labor, Demotion, or Dismissal

In the following instances, the responsible party shall be sentenced to three or more months of unpaid labor.

  1. Failing to properly conduct border inspections, which allows remnants of the puppet language to enter the country
  2. Improperly handling and/or picking up garbage from rivers, streams, and seas, which creates a space where puppet language remnants can circulate
  3. Failing to properly regulate foreign propaganda printed materials, which creates a space where puppet language remnants can circulate
  4. Failing to properly monitor and regulate Internet usage, which creates a space where puppet language remnants can circulate
  5. Failing to properly carry out regulations or education designed to eradicate puppet language remnants, which allows puppet language to be used and circulated
  6. Failing to take properly control the use of computer networks, which allows one or more users of the network to use an alias during computer-based entertainment that contains the puppet language

Article 63. Termination of Business

Businesses found to be displaying, selling, or concealing goods marked with the puppet language or the writing style of the puppet language shall be shut down.

Article 64. Confiscation of Materials

Goods and money used in or earned in the course of crimes or illegal acts in violation of the Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act shall be confiscated.

Article 65. Relationship with Other Acts and Regulations

Items not regulated by this Act, such as the application of the principles, procedures, and methods of punishments and administrative penalties shall be enacted in accordance with the relevant regulations, including criminal codes, administrative penalty codes, and regulations on fines.



asiapress.org



5. Quad summit: Leaders condemn North Korea for its 'destabilising ballistic missile launches'



Quad summit: Leaders condemn North Korea for its 'destabilising ballistic missile launches'

Hiroshima, JapanEdited By: Moohita Kaur GargUpdated: May 20, 2023, 09:04 PM IST

wionews.com

STORY HIGHLIGHTS


In a joint statement released after the summit, the Quad leaders condemned "North Korea's destabilising ballistic missile launches and pursuit of nuclear weapons in violation of multiple UN Security Council resolutions (UNSCRs)." They also expressed their concern over the situation in Myanmar and condemned "terrorism and violent extremism in all its forms and manifestations, including cross-border terrorism"

On Saturday (May 20th) at the sidelines of the G7 summit in Hiroshima, the leaders of the United States, Japan, India, and Australia, collectively known as the Quad, held a meeting. The meeting was hosted by Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, and this was the third time that the leaders met for an in-person Quad summit.

In a joint statement released after the summit, the bloc leaders condemned "North Korea's destabilising ballistic missile launches and pursuit of nuclear weapons in violation of multiple UN Security Council resolutions (UNSCRs)." They also expressed their concern over the situation in Myanmar and condemned "terrorism and violent extremism in all its forms and manifestations, including cross-border terrorism".

As per Reuters, during the opening remarks at the meeting, the four leaders — Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of Australia, Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India, Prime Minister Kishida Fumio of Japan, and President Joe Biden of the United States reiterated their commitment to the Indo-Pacific region.

President Biden said that "a great deal of the future of our world is going to be written here in the Indo-Pacific."


In their joint statement released after the meeting, the four leaders reaffirmed their "shared vision," seeking "a region where no country dominates and no country is dominated – one where all countries are free from coercion, and can exercise their agency to determine their futures. Our four countries are united by this shared vision."

The leaders said they support ASEAN centrality and unity, and that they are committed to working with Pacific island countries "to achieve shared aspirations and address shared challenges" and that they remain committed to strengthening cooperation in the Indian Ocean region.

"We welcome the work of IORA as the Indian Ocean region’s premier forum for addressing the region’s challenges. We recognise India’s leadership in finalising the IORA Outlook on the Indo-Pacific (IOIP) and express our support for its implementation. We thank Bangladesh for its term as IORA Chair and commit to working with Sri Lanka and India as they assume the roles of IORA Chair and Vice Chair respectively this year," it said.

They discussed various areas of collaboration, including climate change, health security, infrastructure development, digital connectivity, and cybersecurity.

Additionally, the statement announces the launch of multiple new initiatives in the Indo-Pacific region.

Quad announced its 'Statement of Principles on Clean Energy Supply Chains in the Indo-Pacific', which will provide a basis for the bloc's engagement in the region on clean energy supply chain development.


As per a statement, "the principles are designed to promote diverse, secure, transparent and resilient clean energy supply chains and support a sustainable, and inclusive clean energy transition."

They also announced a Clean Energy Supply Chains initiative, which is designed to accelerate the Indo-Pacific’s clean energy transition.

Recognising the Quad nations' work in delivering millions of COVID-19 vaccine doses globally, the leaders announced that their Quad Vaccine Partnership will now evolve into a broader Quad Health Security Partnership. Through this, they "plan to implement a suite of activities to build the region’s capacity to detect and respond rapidly to outbreaks of diseases with epidemic and pandemic potential."

To boost infrastructure expertise across the Indo-Pacific they announced the 'Quad Infrastructure Fellowships Program'.

The leaders also highlighted the importance of upholding international law and addressing maritime challenges. They expressed support for the United Nations and its reform agenda and emphasised the need to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who will also host the G20 summit later this year, informed the leaders of the other three Quad countries that India would host the next Quad summit in the coming year. He also emphasised the importance of the Quad as a platform for promoting peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.

wionews.com


6. Yoon, Biden, Kishida hold summit in Hiroshima

Yoon, Biden, Kishida hold summit in Hiroshima | Yonhap News Agency

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023

By Lee Haye-ah

HIROSHIMA, Japan, May 21 (Yonhap) -- South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol held a trilateral summit with U.S. President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Sunday.

The three leaders met on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit for talks expected to focus on ways to strengthen trilateral security cooperation against North Korea's nuclear threat and China's assertiveness.

The leaders last held a three-way meeting in Cambodia in November and agreed to share missile warning data in real time to cope with the growing threat of North Korea's nuclear and missile program.


This combined photo taken Nov. 13, 2022, shows South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol (L), U.S. President Joe Biden (C) and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaking separately during their summit at a hotel in Phnom Penh. (Yonhap)

hague@yna.co.kr

(END)

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023


7. Readout of President Biden’s Meeting with Prime Minister Kishida Fumio of Japan and President Yoon Suk Yeol of the Republic of Korea




Readout of President Biden’s Meeting with Prime Minister Kishida Fumio of Japan and President Yoon Suk Yeol of the Republic of Korea | The White House

whitehouse.gov · by The White House · May 21, 2023

President Biden met today with Prime Minister Kishida Fumio of Japan and President Yoon Suk Yeol of the Republic of Korea in Hiroshima, Japan. He commended Prime Minister Kishida and President Yoon on their courageous work to improve their bilateral ties, noting that our trilateral partnership and the Indo-Pacific are stronger because of their efforts. The leaders discussed how to take their trilateral cooperation to new heights, including with new coordination in the face of the DPRK’s illicit nuclear and missile threats, on economic security, and on their respective Indo-Pacific Strategies.

###

whitehouse.gov · by The White House · May 21, 2023






8. Yoon, Biden, Kishida agree to upgrade trilateral cooperation to new level




(LEAD) Yoon, Biden, Kishida agree to upgrade trilateral cooperation to new level | Yonhap News Agency

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023

(ATTN: UPDATES with results of meeting; CHANGES photo)

By Lee Haye-ah

HIROSHIMA, Japan, May 21 (Yonhap) -- South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, U.S. President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida agreed Sunday to upgrade trilateral cooperation to a new level, Yoon's office said.

The three leaders reached the agreement during talks held on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit, noting their meeting followed Kishida's visit to the U.S. in January, Yoon's visit to Japan in March, which opened a new chapter in South Korea-Japan relations, Yoon's state visit to Washington in April, and Kishida's visit to Seoul earlier this month, according to presidential spokesperson Lee Do-woon.


Yoon, Biden and Kishida last held a three-way meeting in Cambodia in November, during which they agreed to share missile warning data in real time to cope with the growing threat of North Korea's nuclear and missile program.

During Sunday's meeting, they agreed to deepen detailed cooperation in various areas, including in the sharing of missile warning data, in their Indo-Pacific strategies, and with respect to economic security and engagement with Pacific Island nations, Lee said.


South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol (R), U.S. President Joe Biden (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida greet each other ahead of their trilateral talks in Hiroshima, Japan, on May 21, 2023, in this photo provided by the AP. (Yonhap)

hague@yna.co.kr

(END)

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023


9. Yoon promises Zelenskyy additional aid, including demining equipment


Excerpts:

"The president said he would work to promptly provide items needed by Ukraine, including demining equipment and ambulances," Lee said in a written briefing.
Yoon reaffirmed South Korea's support for Ukraine, saying Seoul values an international order based on freedom, international solidarity and rules.
The meeting took place on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit, a day after Zelenskyy arrived in Hiroshima to rally international support for his country's fight against Russia's invasion.

(2nd LD) Yoon promises Zelenskyy additional aid, including demining equipment | Yonhap News Agency

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023

(ATTN: UPDATES with details of meeting)

By Lee Haye-ah

HIROSHIMA, Japan, May 21 (Yonhap) -- South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol promised additional non-lethal aid to Ukraine in his first-ever meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Sunday, Yoon's office said.

Yoon made the promise after Zelenskyy thanked South Korea for its humanitarian assistance and asked for additional non-lethal aid, according to presidential spokesperson Lee Do-woon.

"The president said he would work to promptly provide items needed by Ukraine, including demining equipment and ambulances," Lee said in a written briefing.

Yoon reaffirmed South Korea's support for Ukraine, saying Seoul values an international order based on freedom, international solidarity and rules.

The meeting took place on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit, a day after Zelenskyy arrived in Hiroshima to rally international support for his country's fight against Russia's invasion.


South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol (L) shakes hands with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during an expanded session of the Group of Seven summit in Hiroshima, Japan, on May 21, 2023. (Pool photo) (Yonhap)

It also came only days after Yoon met with Zelenskyy's wife, first lady Olena Zelenska, in Seoul and pledged to provide active assistance to her country in close coordination with the international community.

South Korea has sent humanitarian aid to Ukraine but rejected Kyiv's requests for lethal weapons.

During her meeting with Yoon, Zelenska made a request for additional aid in areas where South Korea is able, saying she understands its difficulties in providing lethal weapons, according to Yoon's office.

The Yoon-Zelenskyy meeting was arranged at Ukraine's request, it said.

Yoon and Zelenskyy agreed on the need for bilateral cooperation for Ukraine's post-war reconstruction, including for the participation of excellent South Korean businesses that can help accelerate its recovery.

Zelenskyy emphasized the growing importance of international support amid the prolonged war, and Yoon responded that South Korea will stand with the Ukrainian people until peace is restored, Lee said.


This compilation photo provided by Yonhap News TV shows South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol (L) and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. (PHOTO NOT FOR SALE) (Yonhap)

hague@yna.co.kr

(END)

en.yna.co.kr · by 이해아 · May 21, 2023


10. S. Korean anti-piracy unit takes part in multinational operation



S. Korean anti-piracy unit takes part in multinational operation | Yonhap News Agency

en.yna.co.kr · by 유지호 · May 21, 2023

SEOUL, May 21 (Yonhap) -- South Korea's anti-piracy Cheonghae unit participated in a counter-piracy operation with armed forces from 13 other countries earlier this month, the military said Sunday.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said the Cheonghae unit joined the likes of the United States, Italy, Japan and Canada in the May 14-20 operation organized by the Combined Task Force (CTF) 151.

Codenamed "Hanul," the operation involved conducting maritime patrolling and issuing anti-piracy warnings in the Middle East waters, including the Gulf of Aden, according to the JCS.


This photo provided by the Joint Chiefs of Staff shows the Cheonghae unit's Chungmugong Yi Sun-shin destroyer (R) alongside the Italian frigate Luigi Rizzo during a counter-piracy operation codenamed "Hanul" in waters near the Gulf of Aden on May 17, 2023. (PHOTO NOT FOR SALE) (Yonhap)

The Cheonghae unit's Chungmugong Yi Sun-shin destroyer and the Italian frigate Luigi Rizzo were deployed Wednesday, as the forces looked to establish interoperability for anti-piracy missions.

The CTF 151 also carried out a command post exercise with the CTF 465 under the European Union Naval Force, United Kingdom Marine Trade Operations and Maritime Security Centre-Horn of Africa.

South Korea took command of the CTF 151 from Brazil in February, with R. Adm. Ko Seung-bum at the helm.

Under the 34-member Combined Maritime Forces, the CTF 151 was established in 2009 with a focus on counter-piracy missions. The CTF 151 has previously been led by the United States, Britain and Japan, among others.


This photo provided by the Joint Chiefs of Staff shows the Cheonghae unit's Chungmugong Yi Sun-shin destroyer (L) alongside the Italian frigate Luigi Rizzo during a counter-piracy operation codenamed "Hanul" in waters near the Gulf of Aden on May 17, 2023. (PHOTO NOT FOR SALE) (Yonhap)


(END)

en.yna.co.kr · by 유지호 · May 21, 2023










De Oppresso Liber,

David Maxwell

Vice President, Center for Asia Pacific Strategy

Senior Fellow, Foundation for Defense of Democracies

Senior Fellow, Global Peace Foundation

Editor, Small Wars Journal

Twitter: @davidmaxwell161

Phone: 202-573-8647

email: david.maxwell161@gmail.com



De Oppresso Liber,
David Maxwell
Vice President, Center for Asia Pacific Strategy
Senior Fellow, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Senior Fellow, Global Peace Foundation
Editor, Small Wars Journal
Twitter: @davidmaxwell161
Phone: 202-573-8647


If you do not read anything else in the 2017 National Security Strategy read this on page 14:

"A democracy is only as resilient as its people. An informed and engaged citizenry is the fundamental requirement for a free and resilient nation. For generations, our society has protected free press, free speech, and free thought. Today, actors such as Russia are using information tools in an attempt to undermine the legitimacy of democracies. Adversaries target media, political processes, financial networks, and personal data. The American public and private sectors must recognize this and work together to defend our way of life. No external threat can be allowed to shake our shared commitment to our values, undermine our system of government, or divide our Nation."
Company Name | Website
Facebook  Twitter  Pinterest  
basicImage