 The Perfect Soldier: Special Operations, Commandos, and the Future of Us Warfare by James F. Dunnigan
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Dirty Little Secrets
North Korea's Secret Weapon
by James Dunnigan September 10, 2006
Discussion Board on this DLS topic
One way the North Korean leadership has maintained
control of the country, despite over a decade of famine and the world's
harshest police state, is the large number of troops assigned to
produce food for the armed forces. Having troops raise their own food
is actually an ancient practice. But in the 20th century, the Russian
and Chinese communists made food production (mainly farming, but also
raising animals) a major part of military life. In this way, these
communist dictatorships were able to keep their military budgets low,
maintain larger peacetime armies, while keeping the troops busy (and
out of trouble). Some of the more enterprising military leaders managed
to make some money by selling surplus food to civilians.
Since the end of the Cold War, and the end of the large subsidies
North Korea got from the Soviet Union and China, the North Korean
military has depended more on their uniformed farmers. Since the North
Korean military consists of about four percent of the population, and
mainly conscripts in uniform for six years, keeping the troops well fed
also takes care of a significant chunk of the, potentially hostile,
population. But, most importantly, the increased use of military
agriculture insured that the troops were not hungry enough to rebel.
However, in some cases, this meant diverting agricultural resources
(fertilizer, machinery, and even seed) to the military farms, at the
expense of the civilian ones. Some two million North Koreans have
starved to death since the 1990s, and this sort of thing usually
creates a lot of unhappy people. But the North Korean leadership has
used the food shortages to increase their control of the population.
Areas that show signs of unrest, get less food, even if it causes
severe malnutrition and starvation. The military feeds itself, and is
kept under tight discipline. The secret police and bureaucracy is well
fed, and continues to use food as a very effective weapon.
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