The Impossible State
The Impossible State
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As my first book in my 2021 non-fiction reading challenge, The Impossible State felt at times like an impossible challenge. It was randomly selected for me by the tbr game I am playing each month and it has been high up on my priority list of physically owned non fiction.
In The Impossible State, seasoned international-policy expert and lauded scholar Victor Cha pulls back the curtain on provocative, isolationist North Korea, providing our best look yet at its history and the rise of the Kim family dynasty and the obsessive personality cult that empowers them. Cha illuminates the repressive regime???s complex economy and culture, its appalling record of human rights abuses, and its belligerent relationship with the United States, and analyzes the regime???s major security issues???from the seemingly endless war with its southern neighbor to its frightening nuclear ambitions???all in light of the destabilizing effects of Kim Jong-il???s death and the transition of power to his unpredictable heir.Ultimately, this engagingly written, authoritative, and highly accessible history warns of a regime that might be closer to its end than many might think???a political collapse for which America and its allies may be woefully unprepared.
The Impossible State
The first recorded trade between the two Koreas was in November 1988, in the form of a forty-kilogram (90-lb) box of clams that arrived in Pusan. The next was a shipment of 612 pieces of Korean artwork that arrived in Pusan on January 1989.