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TERRY, SUE MI (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   132164


Korea whole and free: why unifying the Peninsula won't be so bad after all / Terry, Sue Mi   Journal Article
Terry, Sue Mi Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract When Kim Il Sung, North Korea's founding ruler, died in 1994, many outside observers predicted that his state would die with him. That never happened, of course, and his son Kim Jong Il managed to keep the regime alive until his own death, in 2011. When his son Kim Jong Un took the reins that year, numerous Korea watchers again predicted a collapse. Once again, they were proved wrong. Despite its extreme poverty, North Korea is still very much alive and a major threat to its southern neighbor.
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2
ID:   182247


North Korea’s Nuclear Family : How the Kims Got the Bomb and Why They Won’t Give It Up / Terry, Sue Mi   Journal Article
Terry, Sue Mi Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract When the Biden administration, following a months-long review, announced its North Korea policy this past April— “diplomacy, as well as stern deterrence”—the news barely registered. The question of how to deal with the nuclear-armed pariah state, a matter never resolved but never fully escalating into an existential threat, has dogged a long succession of U.S. administrations. The prevailing sense today, amid a pandemic and heightened greatpower tension, seems to be that Washington has bigger ¼sh to fry and more urgent crises to focus on.
Key Words Nuclear  North Korea  US  North Korean Nuclear Threat 
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