« A Contrarian View of China's Future | Main | Mary McCarthy: The Left's CIA Mole »

April 21, 2006

All Expenses Paid to North Korea

I've always thought it would be fascinating to go to North Korea. It's one of the most isolated countries in the world. See my review of the book Pyongyang here.

But something about this invitation just doesn't sit well with me. Perhaps it's the playing up of socialism:

Dear Duke Alumni and Friends:

I am pleased to extend a very special invitation. We have learned that the government of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea -- the DPRK, which is North Korea -- has decided to allow a limited number of Americans into the country later this year. This small window of opportunity will be only the fourth time in fifty years that American tourists have been allowed into the DPRK.

No one knows when the next opportunity will occur.

The DPRK is a hospitable and fascinating destination, completely unique in the world. There is no U.S. State Department Travel Warning for the country. The DPRK government welcomes foreign visitors on a regular basis, and maintains a tourism infrastructure to accommodate them. The buildings we will visit are lavish showcases. North Korea's capital, Pyongyang, has huge, green parks, marble monuments, and wide, immaculate boulevards.

We have arranged a 12-day tour, beginning and ending in Beijing, China, entry point for North Korea. The highlight of our seven days in the DPRK is the "Arirang Grand Mass Gymnastic and Artistic Performance" in Pyongyang. The performance exemplifies the ideal of a nation in total collective and artistic harmony, and is quite probably the earth's largest and most astounding human spectacle. Just imagine: 100,000 people perfectly synchronized in a socialist realism extravaganza that can only be seen in North Korea. ( For itinerary, click here ) . . .

Because we anticipate a strong response to these initial invitations, I want to provide you with information you may need before making your decision to participate:

* Visa and passport requirements: Visas for China and North Korea are included in the
cost of the program, and we will provide instructions for procuring them. Passports must
be valid for one full year after the end of your visit.

* Food: Korean food (such as beef, rice, and spicy pickled cabbage) is normally served.
Dietary requests for vegetarian fare can be met.

* Health: You should be in good health for this visit, as medical facilities are basic.
No inoculations are required.


I hope you will join us!

I bolded all the parts that bother me. Not sure how I feel about this. Will the cost of the trip be supporting the regime there in any way? Is this some sort of dog and pony show to boost images of the world's most dictatorial state? And if so few are allowed to go there, how does my alma mater rate a few slots? Who knows who?

I love Duke, but this makes me uneasy.

Posted by Chester at April 21, 2006 10:35 PM

Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.theadventuresofchester.com/MT/mt-tb.cgi/859

Comments

It's a state run Dog and Pony show. The Chinese used to have them when they initially "opened to the West".

Posted by: Soldier's Dad at April 22, 2006 9:25 AM

Wow, sounds like it would be a fantastic tour except for all those darn communists. I agree with Soldier's Dad, this is a major dog and pony show. And isn't "The performance exemplifies the ideal of a nation in total collective and artistic harmony" akmost right out of Mao's little Red Book.

Posted by: Sackett at April 22, 2006 11:04 PM

Clearly it wouldn't to show you anything about north korea that their government doesn't want you to see.

I guess do it if you think you'd enjoy it. Probably good food, good hotel service, spectacles you wouldn't see anywhere else on earth. Depending on how much it costs you might not want to contribute money to the north korean government, but on the other hand there's no telling whether they make a profit on the tours. If they're running at a loss (which is likely for a new program) then it would get down to just whether you thought you'd enjoy it.

Posted by: J Thomas at April 23, 2006 9:26 AM

Or perhaps they (DPRK) are feeling ignored due to whats going on with Iran right now and want some Americans there so they can stage an "incident" of some kind to bring themselves back into the focus of things?

Just wild speculation on my part but you never know with regimes like this...

My second guess like other posters have already stated would be a big dog and pony show.

Posted by: CanForce 101 at April 23, 2006 11:13 PM

I got the same invitation, except delete "Duke" everywhere and replace with "MIT." Some tour organizer has been buying alumni mailing lists

Posted by: JRM at April 25, 2006 3:51 PM