UN Thoughts on North Korea, Part II
As the Chief Administrator of the United Nations, I sincerely urge the diplomatic community to consider the implications regarding North Korea's actions, or lack thereof, of the past few days. By situating itself into a willing absence from negotiations, the country has begrudged itself within the international sphere, and isolated itself from those willing to work in a beneficial direction.
Kim Jong Il cites an unjust past for sure reasoning to continue into the field of nuclear technology, but I ask now, what does the world owe you? It has been five decades since foreign military forces last set foot on North Korean soil, a North Korea guided into Communism by its own doings as well as Chinese influence and aid. It is true that the Cold War era thrust most of the Western world away, however once the era ceded, the West offered only help toward North Korea's fledgling economy, only ending after Kim Jong Il quit answering his diplomatic phone and constructed a line of his own.
What is your reasoning? Where is the threat, Kim?
Your friend,
UN Chief Administrator Siegel