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MIYAMOTO, SATORU
(3)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
100724
DPRK troop dispatches and military support in the Middle East: change from military support to arms trade in the 1970s
/ Miyamoto, Satoru
Miyamoto, Satoru
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2010.
Summary/Abstract
The DPRK now trades in arms with the Middle East. However, in the October War (1973) the DPRK first began military cooperation with the Middle East by sending troops and providing unrequited military support. This switch was made to win support within the UN from these Middle Eastern countries, and so to counteract the US presence in the UN. Failing this, the DPRK withdrew from the UN in 1976. The DPRK then turned to arms trading both to build up its foreign currency reserves and to help liberate developing countries from US control.
Key Words
proliferation
;
Arms Trade
;
DPRK
;
Middle East
;
Africa
;
North Korea
;
UN
;
Kim Il Sung
;
Military Support
;
Troop Dispatch
;
Foreign Policy
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2
ID:
190458
Why Is the Political Regime of North Korea Tough? Comparison with the Market Economization of China, Vietnam, and Cuba
/ Miyamoto, Satoru
Miyamoto, Satoru
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine the stability and toughness of North Korea’s political regime from the perspective of radicalism and gradualism of the market economization. Since it is believed that gradualism keeps the regime stable. I examined the hypothesis that North Korea and Cuba effectively abandoned their socialist planned economy and introduced market economization after witnessing the economic crisis in China and Vietnam during the Cold War. As a result, North Korea and Cuba experienced the economic crisis and gradual economic development after the Cold War. The socialist planned economy remained an ideal in North Korea. Therefore, market economization became gradualism because of its suppression by the ideal in North Korea.
Key Words
North Korea
;
Radicalism
;
Planned Economy
;
Regime Transition
;
Gradualism
;
Market Economization
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'Full Text'
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3
ID:
190459
Why Is the Political Regime of North Korea Tough? Comparison with the Market Economization of China, Vietnam, and Cuba
/ Miyamoto, Satoru
Miyamoto, Satoru
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine the stability and toughness of North Korea’s political regime from the perspective of radicalism and gradualism of the market economization. Since it is believed that gradualism keeps the regime stable. I examined the hypothesis that North Korea and Cuba effectively abandoned their socialist planned economy and introduced market economization after witnessing the economic crisis in China and Vietnam during the Cold War. As a result, North Korea and Cuba experienced the economic crisis and gradual economic development after the Cold War. The socialist planned economy remained an ideal in North Korea. Therefore, market economization became gradualism because of its suppression by the ideal in North Korea.
Key Words
North Korea
;
Radicalism
;
Planned Economy
;
Regime Transition
;
Market
;
Gradualism
;
Economization
Links
'Full Text'
In Basket
Export