The Pope going to Pyongyang: for what?

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
12 Min Read

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Try this on for curious juxtaposition: South Korea’s top spook is “working for a possible visit by Pope Francis to North Korea.”

An account by a Seoul-based Roman Catholic publication reports that, on Tuesday, “at a Catholic Eucharist in Mokpo, in the southern province of Jeolla, Park Jie-won, director of the National Intelligence Service, reported that he would meet with Archbishop Kim Hee-jung and the apostolic nuncio in South Korea, Archbishop Alfred Xuereb, to discuss Pope Francis’s visit to Pyongyang.”

What’s that all about?

As for Park, he’s a politician who lost an election and was named spy chief in 2020 by President Moon Jae-in. Like Moon, Park’s a devout Catholic – and a devout partisan for what they and their fellow left-nationalist pols on the South’s current ruling-party side call “engagement” with the North.

Rather than engagement, critics prefer the term appeasement. It was Park himself, as top aide to then-President Kim Dae-jung in 2000, who secretly arranged the wherewithal to persuade North Korean ruler Kim Jong Un to agree to a summit with his Southern counterpart: a bribe of half a billion dollars. For that, Park went to prison, briefly.

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