A world away, there were millions in tears to mourn the passing of North Korea’s Kim Jong-il. Few Western leaders have expressed condolences even though South Korea and Japan had the compassion to do so.

The Chicago Tribune reports, “North Korea claimed Kim's death generated a series of spectacular natural phenomena, creating a mysterious glow atop a revered mountain, cracking a sheet of ice on a lake with a loud roar and inspiring a crane to circle a statue of the nation's founder before perching in a tree and drooping its head in sorrow.”
If he was revered at home with these exaggerated powers, he was just as demonized one-dimensionally abroad. In death as in life, he was presented only as the two-bit dictator of “the Hermit Kingdom”—insult, insult--who wore elevator shoes and had a big collection of western movies. How many times have you heard that! That’s about all we heard endlessly.
If did not have a few nuclear bombs, he would have likely been overthrown years ago. Despite the constant characterizations of him as bizarre and a maniac, State Department officials who accompanied Madeline Albright on a visit there told the New York Times how impressed they were with his strategic thinking and how well informed he was.
The West saw him, through the lens of our media, only as the embodiment of a hateful communism, stereotyping him an enemy to be feared.
Like Havel, his views were simplified, but in another direction.
He was pictured as Dr. Evil in a James Bond Movie—ironically, he had collected them all--and his country was the poster child of George Bush’s overhyped “Axis of Evil.” In the end, Bush did not prevail in his attack on him.
In a news world of black and whites, he was long blamed for every problem in the country. Yes, the people there are poor, suffer from famine and underdevelopment. They do need help, but refuse it at the expense of their independence and Juche ideology.
Have we already forgotten the many decades when South Korea had a U.S.- backed dictator who had collaborated with the Japanese war machine? He was hated by “his” people who protested for years against him, even as the Pentagon backed him and western investors profited from the economy.
The oxymoron of Western “intelligence” was caught napping when Kim died. Fears of his son—the “grand successor”--launching a war turned out to be bogus. (Remember all the reports of the US and South Korea “on alert?”)
Within a few days, we learned that his power will be shared with the country’s bureaucratic military establishment. Kim #3 is on a tight leash.
The transition there went smoothly proving once again how little our media knows about the country and its history of defeating Japanese invaders and an American “police action” (with Chinese help) under the umbrella of the UN.
In our official cold war narrative, that war was blamed solely on a North Korean invasion on June 25, 1950.
In those years, the legendary journalist I.F. Stone refuted Washington’s fabricated Korea War propaganda.
Since then, historians like the University of Chicago’s Bruce Cumings have shown how the North Koreans were provoked and the conflict’s causes were complex. The North Koreans are said to have lost a million people in that war, but the country survived.
The people there may not have the “rights” we think we do, but they certainly seem to support their government and system even as human rights abuses are legion and dissidents expose Pyonyang’s policies.
So, there is more, much more, to both the stories of both Kim and Havel, two men with opposing political orientations, but whose views and roles have been simplified and distorted for myth-making political purposes in our “objective” media.