North Korea News Podcast by NK News - Eric Foley: Why it’s better to launch balloons into North Korea under the radar
Episode Date: June 27, 2024North Korea launched balloons toward the South for a third consecutive day on Wednesday, bringing the total number of launches to seven since May as the DPRK continues to retaliate against anti-regime... leafleting by ROK activists. Pastor Eric Foley of the Voice of the Martyrs Korea, an NGO that regularly sends Bibles to the North […]
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Tours to reserve your spot today. Hello listeners and welcome to the NK News Podcast.
My name is Jacos Wetzit.
I'm your host and this episode was recorded on Wednesday, the 12th of June, 2024.
Joining me here in the NK News Studio today is Eric Foley of Voice of the Martyrs Korea,
who sends balloons to North Korea with Bibles in them or under them.
And we're gonna talk about that.
As we did actually almost four years ago,
you were last on the program, Eric,
on 28th of July, 2020, episode 139.
So yeah, it's almost four years ago.
Much has happened since then.
And then we're obviously talking with you
in the context of North and South Korea,
or balloons being sent of North and South Korea or balloons being sent
from North and South Korea across the demilitarized zone at each other. Let's
start with what your organization, Voice of the Martyrs Korea, does. What does it do
in relation to North Korea? Well, the Voice of the Martyrs Korea works in
partnership with underground North Korean Christians and the nature of our
work is to do whatever it is that they ask us to
do which is to support them in their work of spreading the Christian message
inside North Korea and to North Koreans wherever they're found. How many of these
underground North Korean Christians do you believe there to be? Good estimate
would be a hundred thousand of which 30,000 would be in concentration camps.
You'll hear estimates as high as two million
from some groups, but in our view,
that's quite on the high end.
And how do you communicate with them?
Or how do they communicate with you?
Well, the communication process is related
to where the individuals happen to be.
North Korean Christians are found in many places
around the world, not only inside North Korea,
but also China, Russia, Mongolia,
Southeast Asia, North Africa, even South America.
And so the North Korean Christians
have their own methods of communication
of both how to share information externally
and how they communicate inside North Korea.
So we make use of all of those methods
and try to talk as little as possible
about any of them in specific.
Okay, and so you're sending balloons to North Korea that contain Bible tracts.
We don't actually comment on our own field operations about what we are, or
not doing at any point in time.
What I'll say is this, is that every year using all of the methods that are at our
disposal, we bring 40,000 Bibles into North Korea.
So you could say land, sea, air, and then also we do radio broadcasting,
four radio broadcasts a day.
But balloons have historically been one of those methods.
And every day we make the decision of how we're going to do what we do based
upon the circumstances of what's happening here, what's happening in North
Korea and what seemed like the best options for us at that time.
Now let's talk about the anti-leafleting law in South Korea that went into effect in March 2021.
So that was after I last interviewed you for the podcast.
How did that law affect you and your group's activities?
Comparatively little. I think really you'd have to go back to right at the time that we we met last time, Jacko, in June 2020.
That was the point of great tension between North and South Korea,
North Korea making very open and explicit statements to say that South Korea had to halt all launches.
And of course,
And these are not just referring to you, but also other groups.
Absolutely. Yeah, sure.
Because there are a number of civic, I don't know how many, but let's say there were about 10 civic groups in South Korea that send
materials through aerial means into North Korea.
Some of them are religious and have religious messages,
and some of them are political.
Would that be fair to say?
Yeah, I think that's true.
And actually, I would classify most are actually both.
That is, they do a combination
of both political and religious messages.
And entertainment too, right?
I mean, there's a fair amount of entertainment materials. K-pop, K-drama, things like that,
that other people do.
We're not.
I mean, all we do is Bibles.
But in that summer of 2020, there was an immediate, I would say, sudden and
comprehensive effort on the part of municipalities along the border region to
use existing laws related to litter, noise control, transportation of gas.
Obviously to send balloons you need what gas is normally used?
Some groups use hydrogen. We don't. When we've done balloon launches we use helium.
Hydrogen being flammable and a real concern being the safety of where we're launching from
and where we're launching to. But in the summer of 2020, essentially, launches were, a strong
effort was made to halt launches at every level. And so that would be police, military, and
intelligence services. And even at that time, groups of college students were hired to travel
along throughout the border areas and the areas known to be frequented by launchers in order to identify where
launches were taking place in an effort to interdict them.
So that extended from the summertime on through the,
the, the period where balloons are normally launched,
which basically usually ends in the fall.
So that's because of weather conditions, right?
You might get about 15 to 20 nights a year where it's possible to launch balloons from that few of Korea
Yeah, it's actually a lot fewer than one would guess
reports of the news
It seems that there are a lot of a lot more nights on which balloons are in fact launch correct than 15 20
Yeah, some groups for some groups. There's really two aspects of balloon launching. One is the attempt to get materials into North Korea. The other is the political theater
that's involved in the balloon launching process. And groups will
weight that differently. They'll put different elements of emphasis on those
things. So some groups will launch on holidays because those are particularly
meaningful or symbolic occasions, but they really have nothing to do with the direction of the winds at that time.
But let me drill down on the 15 to 29 so you think where do you get that from,
that number? Well when you do balloon launching you have to be able to have
good meteorological data to do the work if what your goal is is to get
materials into North Korea. It's a lot more complex than
it seems because you're really not looking at just surface level winds. Depending upon the kind of
balloon that you're using, you're really looking at meteorological conditions at all altitudes.
You have to factor in a lot of different issues ranging from the weight of the material, the type
of gas you're using, where you're launching from, where the intended or broad target area may be. But for all intents and purposes really, looking across all of the
different types of balloons, it's still a very small number of days where the winds are suitable
to go from South to North to get materials into North Korea. That's why even the other night when the JCS was commenting on the launch
by Pak Sang-Hak, their comment was some of those balloons may have entered into
North Korea. For the most part those groups will tell you that often the
balloons don't reach North Korea or they reach North Korea in such small numbers
that you have to look and account for the response from North Korea to be
related to something more than the actual materials that wind up there
Can you say more about that? Yeah, sure
so so North Korea may not only be responding to the actual number of
Materials that end up on the ground in North Korea because for most launchers the ones that are often most public
That you'll see in the media the most
The the types of materials that
they're launching don't tend to be very effective at reaching North Korea.
So you're talking about actually physically reaching North Korea?
Yeah, so there is, I think it's important to distinguish between the actual
physical process of launching materials into North Korea and the reasons for
doing that and the political motivations for doing that kind of launching materials into North Korea and the reasons for doing that and the political
motivations for doing that kind of launching so for some groups the ones that are the
the groups that most people hear about because an important part of what they do is to end up in the media to
promote their viewpoints and and their reasons for launching to share what it is
they're launching why they're launching it how many they're launching. And so often those reports, those media reports portray a level of effectiveness that those groups
don't reach. Why does the media do that? That's my question for you, Jacko. I think
balloons are incredibly symbolic. Even now today, I think people tend to underrate
the technical capacity of balloons
to do actual important work.
You saw that last year, maybe it was two years ago,
when China floated a balloon over North America.
And in many ways, people responded to it
as if it were a joke.
I mean, why would you be using such outdated technology?
But balloons can be very effective at certain tasks,
but they also possess a symbolic value that goes beyond their their technical effectiveness. And so that's what makes balloon launching so
vexing to analyze as a subject is North Korea, South Korea responding to actual
to analyze as a subject is North Korea, South Korea responding to actual materials that have been received or are they responding to the overall perception or value that's
created through the public elements of what balloon launchers do.
Now coming back to 2020, were you or your organization prosecuted for sending leaflets
to North Korea?
I was charged under existing municipal ordinances.
Okay, so you were not charged under the anti-lethaling law
that went into effect in March 2021.
Correct.
But previously existing ordinances.
Correct, and to my knowledge,
that is the case for most of the launchers
who were impacted in that time period.
The March 2021 law,
it wasn't even a formalization of the enforcement
that had come before.
It was really a new approach to thinking
about how balloon activities would be treated.
And it centralized the responsibilities
for addressing balloon launches
with the Ministry of Unification.
And that was really new.
You know, the Ministry of Unification had appeared here
and there over the years as factors in balloon launches,
but essentially enforcement had been done by three groups,
right, municipal police, local police,
in the areas around the border region,
the military, and the intelligence services.
All of those groups were frequent attendees
at the launches of various groups like ours.
Right and they have enforcement arms and tools. I don't think the ministry of unification has
that kind of enforcement power. Yeah I think the there was the 2021 law probably raised more
questions for launchers than it answered. It attempted to say that launches had to be
pre-approved and materials had to be vetted.
When you say the materials, you mean the contents that's being sent. Yeah. And of course, it was broader than just dealing with balloons or leaflets. I mean,
it was really any movement related to the North that covered not only even printed materials,
but electronic materials as well. Okay. But that's off a piece with,
I guess, that's been in place for decades, right?
I mean, if a South Korean talks to a North Korean or if a South Korean has a phone call
with a North Korean or if a South Korean meets a North Korean in a third country or if a South
Korean sends an email to a North Korean, that also has to be pre-approved and vetted.
Yeah, I think one of the public misperceptions that happened beginning in 2020 was that up until that
time that balloon launchers had a relatively free hand and were unrestricted
in their activities and that simply was not true you know our involvement in
balloon launching is extended now more than two decades and during that point
in time I can't recall a single time where there was not involvement on
the part of those groups that I mentioned previously.
Police, military and intelligence.
Yeah.
And so the, all of those groups were enforcing existing ordinances to
the best of their understanding.
So of course we had this, this kind of, um, omnibus national security law,
which made it so that anytime things were perceived
to be dangerous the government through various channels could intervene with
launchers and attempt to halt launching for some period of time. So in 2020 what
was portrayed to the public was that balloon launchers were you know traipsing
through people's gardens and launching with impunity and having very little
consequences for the the work that we were doing. Well and creating security security
security risks for the people who live in the neighborhoods given that North
Korea threatened to to shell those areas that had been launch areas launch sites.
At that time when you and I talked last time one of the things that I talked
about was the importance of distinguishing between launchers the
materials that are used,
the motivations for the launch, and I still think that those are important distinctions to make
today. I think that law enforcement related to balloon launching should be welcomed by all
launchers. I think questions of safety are extremely important and are best addressed
at the level of municipalities. So you don't, when you or your group does a launch,
you're not trying to hide from the police
or shake them off?
Not at all, no, no.
And I think that the, but one distinction I would make also
is that there are groups who, when they do a launch,
an important part, according to how they see
the purpose of the launch, is to invite the media,
share photos and so forth.
That raises in my opinion, real questions regarding
if not the motivation of the launch,
the advisability or wisdom of it.
Reason why is that any time that you release photos
that show what you're launching, where you launched from,
and you tell the time that you launched and the number of balloons that you're launching, where you launched from, and you tell the time that you launched and
the number of balloons that you're launching, you're essentially providing a
roadmap to the North Korean government to very quickly identify where those
balloons went and to very knowledgeably look for the materials among their
citizens that you claim to have launched. That in my view is troublesome. That's problematic if the goal
is to provide North Korean citizens with unmediated information, a view of the world that's not
controlled by their government. If that's the case, then the best launch is the launch
that goes undetected. So in your case, in the case of your group,
Voice of the the martyrs Korea
You're more likely to invite the police to come and watch and not invite the media not in the opposite of the other group Yeah for more than two decades. We've had really good relationships
with the groups who have been involved in in enforcement and
And gained a lot of respect from those groups because of how we do what we do.
And again, I don't say this commenting on what we are or are not presently doing,
but I would say this is that launchers have to make a choice on the type of gas they're going to use.
Hydrogen, which is cheap and flammable, or helium, which is expensive, but safe.
Launchers get to choose between vinyl farm plastic balloons
which are cheap, but...
These are the ones we normally see.
Typically we'd see in the media reports.
But create environmental problems.
Right, because vinyl's not good.
Right, or balloons that are biodegradable
and leave no trace.
These are the ones that you use.
Those are the ones that we use, yeah.
And so...
What are they made, what's biodegradable?
Typically, even your off-the-shelf weather balloons, which are the kind by
the way, that you see now in the pictures from North Korea. North Korea is
launching, using the weather balloons. They're circular rather than sort of vertical.
Cylindrical. So those ones typically, the way that they operate is that
they ascend to an altitude at which the
pressure differential causes the balloon to pop and those balloons disappear into ribbons. I mean
they just and the material then biodegrades. North Korea is launching in such a way that the
weight of the balloons keeps them low enough that they don't pop and so that's why we're able to
see them here in South Korea because the goal is to create as large a noticeable footprint as possible, right?
If you're going to go to the trouble of sending human waste or farm animal waste, then you
want it to be detected.
You don't just want it to disappear in a forest in the middle of the night.
So let's talk about these North Korean payloads that have been sent.
Several hundred in, I forget how many rounds now,
maybe four or five rounds in the last few weeks, carrying a lot of wrapping paper, packaging,
often, not even North Korean packaging, but Chinese packaging, from which you can't really
learn much about anything interesting about the North Korean economy, toilet paper, poop
or manure or excrement to South Korea.
Do you believe that this was in direct response to your own groups activities? I would never make an effort to try to understand
interpret the actions of the North Korean government. What I would say is these are quick and dirty
balloon launches that exhibit a relatively
basic level of technology that are designed to make as big an impact as possible to draw as much attention
to this issue as possible. Now by the North Korean government's own
identification on the launchers are in response to the activities of
the the South Korean government's
refusal to Halt launches within the country North Korea doesn't draw that distinction between the activity of the South Korean government and launchers within South Korea.
Let's come to that distinction in a moment, but going back to, okay, so in early 2021, this new law went into effect.
How is it now that balloon launch groups in South Korea are able to send balloons into North Korea unchecked. Well, the unchecked, that's a relative term. I would say that the 2020-2021 law was never used as the basis for enforcement.
The provisions that are described in that law would involve a building out or a
structuring of that process. But before that could happen,
the law was challenged and essentially overturned.
And so it doesn't mean though
that launchers continue their work on check
because for more than two decades now, of course,
the laws that come from local municipalities
as well as the authority that the military
and intelligence agencies have to interdict launches
remains in effect.
So we're back to a sort of pre-2021 system.
I think so, although certainly that's never a static state.
I mean, over two decades,
enforcement becomes more or less strict,
and that's typically related to the level of tension
between the countries.
Now you asked the question,
is North Korea responding to, for example,
our launches as our group?
And what I would say is that there are launchers for whom the effort
to do high-profile, easily detected launches becomes very important. I believe that North
Korea is responding to those groups much more than they are the groups who launch quietly,
whose goals are to remain undetected. The nature of trying to remain undetected is,
of course, you never know the degree to which your launches are observed by the North
Korean government. But for example there was an article that came out yesterday
talking about a group that described itself as secretive and reclusive but in
the article they detailed all of their technology. They spend upwards of a
thousand dollars on a balloon which is... That seems a of money it seems like a lot of money noted that their success rate was about 50 to 60
percent success rate being crossing the military demarcation and into North
Korea or apparently as I understood it from the article though I can't claim to
know for sure getting further away from the border region so they were saying
that their goal seemed to be reaching the rest of North Korea. Right. So not just Kangwon province or South Hwanghae province.
But using 3D printers and using, you know, modified vinyl plastic balloons and so forth.
But again, the thing that was surprising to me is that you're either reclusive or you're not.
You're either trying to do secret launches or you're not.
I think the article was rather uncritical in examining claims of the group to say, well, what is an acceptable rate
of getting materials into North Korea? How should balloons be used? I think part of the reason for
my speaking to you today is that I think that there is a lot of continual misinformation that
comes up about balloons. For example, although it's possible technologically to use
balloons to reach the northern reaches of North Korea, it's generally inadvisable.
Why? Because there are much less expensive,
more effective ways of reaching North Koreans inside North Korea in all of the areas that are
away from the border. So generally, balloons are most useful in the southern third of
North Korea which is much more restrictive in terms of population flow.
Of course you go anywhere in North Korea you have to have permission to travel
from city to city but of course the closer you get to the the border regions
the more restrictive you find travel. Hence whether it be underground North
Korean Christians or other groups balloon launching has generally been
focused on that region not because of technical limitations, but simply because of efficiency.
There are many other ways to be able to reach North Koreans inside North Korea in the areas
that are away from the border.
That's why balloon launching has been done along the border.
Now we've reached a point from technology that that groups who employ technology well can do launches relatively inexpensively and at a very high rate of success.
That means that you have to be willing only to launch on those nights where it's possible to launch.
can you know? Well really on an hour by hour basis you're looking at changing conditions. I mean you think about how accurate weather forecasts are in the
Korean Peninsula generally. I mean you know we rarely get the forecast right
from morning to evening. Yeah. But my point is is that the level of
technology makes it so it's possible to do balloon launches that are relatively
low cost, relatively covert, to be able to do it in ways that don't endanger
people in South Korea or North Korea
and that don't call attention to the launch itself. So this latest slew of launches both
from the north to the south and from the south to the north are not representative of the cutting
edge of technology. They're really representative of trying to use balloon launching to make political points.
And I think this is the challenge that we need to recognize is that there's nothing
inherently dangerous about balloon launching itself.
It's when balloon launching is employed to achieve political goals that it inevitably
creates problems.
So you have, you know, North Korea saying, well, we've got to halt all launches.
And South Korea's original response was, well,
we're not doing any launches.
I mean, we're just, you know, believing in freedom of expression for our citizens.
And so North Korea continues.
And now we're at the point of doing loudspeakers.
Right.
This is coming back to the point you made earlier that you believe it's useful
to differentiate the use of balloons by governments from the use of
balloons by private groups.
Oh, well, I would say that the use of balloons for... that's a good distinction, sure.
Governments and private groups and then among private groups, I think you have to distinguish
between groups for whom balloon launches have value as an advocacy or theater or publicity
tool to draw attention to their cause and groups for which balloon launching has only a technical or strategic purpose. So and you put yourself in this in a
second group? And I think yeah absolutely. Just without naming anyone but do you
do you know of any other groups that have a similar approach to balloons as
I think that's the the beauty of it right is is that the groups that do that
are the ones whose names never surface in the news. They truly are reclusive and quiet about what they do.
The goal isn't to draw attention to the launching of the balloons or especially to advertise
what's being launched and where launches are being done.
Those in my view go against the obvious goals of balloon launching, which is to as safely
as possible for people in the South and in the North
deliver materials that allow North Koreans to have unmediated access to the world that's not restricted by their government.
So the other group then, you know, other groups I should say who are more interested in the spectacle, in the theater of balloon launches,
would you like to see more government enforcement of their activities? Well I think I wouldn't, you
know, of course it's hard to judge motivation so it's hard to know how much
of their work is, you know, how much value they associate with getting
materials into North Korea versus the publicity that's created. I do think
that that enforcement is best done by the public,
not the government, in the sense of what the public is willing to support. Obviously,
a real motivation for groups publicizing their work is to be able to raise funds,
both from private sources and from governments. That being said, I believe very strongly that the history of enforcement of balloon launching
has been done very well and responsibly by municipalities.
So as a person who's been involved in balloon launching for 20 years, I think that what
I would say is that there are very few incidents that can be pointed to, which were where problems were caused by balloon
launches that were done according to reasonably safe public standards.
There may be one or two incidents that people could point out, but for the most part, balloon
launching ends up being much more offensive in its rhetoric than it does in its actual
practice.
Do you have an absolutist position on the importance of unrestrained and
Unmediated communication between citizens and how do you mean an absolutist position?
Well, okay
You've talked before in the when you first came on the podcast and also offline in our private communications that you are very much
a believer that unmediated communication between citizens of different countries is a good thing. And when I say absolutist, I think, well, what about during
wartime?
Right. So it's a universal human right recognized, whether by the United Nations or I would say
even as a Christian within the context of individual faith communities. But let's talk
for a moment just at the level of
the universal human rights that it is a human right for human beings to be able to communicate
with each other without the mediation or interference of governments. And states of emergency or states
of exception ought to really concern us when governments say, yeah, well, that's true in
general, but now is not a good time.
Essentially, we've been in a state of exception now on the Korean Peninsula, you know, since the 1940s,
where communication, ordinary communication between North Korean and South Korean people cannot take place without mediation.
The presumption is that such communication compromises national security.
Now given that that's one thing that we can say North and South Korean governments both actually agree on,
maybe there's a point to that. You know, the fact that we have since 1953 here on the Korean
Peninsula been in a state of war, although it has been, you know, you can call it an artificial
peace or a frozen war or whatever you want to call it, we're still in a wartime situation here. And that's something that both Koreans agree on,
is that there should not be unmediated, unfettered, unchecked communication between citizens on both
sides of the border because it can be a security risk. Right. But the responsibility always falls
to the state to demonstrate or prove that the communication is compromising to national security.
In other words, the presumption is always
in favor of the individual.
And so when law institutionalizes the mediation of contact,
then that becomes bad law.
And I think that's what we saw in 2021
was the creation of a law that ultimately
was not sustainable.
I mean, I think it's interesting,
the basis of it being overturned was freedom of
expression.
I think that law could have been overturned on a number of accounts,
notably related to the difficulty in enforcing it. As I say,
I don't think the question is ever whether freedom of expression trumps public
safety. It doesn't,
but neither does public safety preclude human communication.
There's always room for both. And that's the nature of negotiation. That's the nature of the
importance of civil society, which has waxed and waned over the years in South Korea and has yet
to take firm hold in North Korea. But the role of civil society is to continually insist
on the ability of human beings to communicate
without the mediation of government.
And to make sure that that doesn't become criminalized
simply by its mere existence.
To me, I think some of the saddest situations that we see
relate to the inability, for example,
of families to communicate, which has become, not just become, it's been from the inception,
politicized, that only families can communicate under the most limited of circumstances because
the political dimension around it becomes more significant to preserve than the inalienable
right of human beings to communicate. I think that should be examined
I think it's always important and always the role of civil society to raise those questions
Whether it's done from a secular or a religious context
I think both should be welcome and I think in the case of with balloon launching the same thing is true
I think that balloon launchers should never be afraid to
Be involved in speaking in the
public sphere but being held accountable for their speech. So I think the concern
that I have with some of the launchers is that they interpret their judicial
victories to be an absolute guarantee of their right to engage in launching
activities according to the dictates of their own conscience. I certainly don't
read it that way nor do I think should it be interpreted that way. So how does your organization, Voice of the Martyrs
Korea, how do you balance that right to unmediated communication and freedom of expression with
safety and security? Well our responsibility is of course on the one side, right? In other words,
the we are first and foremost responsible to our partners in North Korea who are the underground Christians who face restriction on the basis of their profession of their beliefs.
So always we're thinking in terms of their situation and working outward from there.
That said, we recognize the importance of maintaining those communications and achieving
those mutual goals that we have with them in ways that recognize the concerns and respect those concerns and respond to those
concerns of the general public. And so that's why even though it's more expensive, it's important
to use helium. It's important to care for the environment. I think a good example of that
is that for a couple of years we were testing rice bottle launches. These are using the PVC bottles and near Incheon there's areas where those can
be launched. We use GPS tracking on all of our work in order to determine where
does the stuff go. Is that just a quick question there? The rice in those bottles,
is that rice for cooking and eating or rice for planting as seeds? Well each
each group would do it differently.
The ones that you were testing.
Yeah.
So, so for us, generally we're not, we were not using those.
They're called rice bottles, but we weren't using them for conveying
humanitarian materials.
We're always launching Bibles.
That's what we launched, but you might include materials for ballast.
So we, we would include rice for the sake of testing to see based upon if you add more or less
how that impacts where the stuff goes.
What we found was that they were not reliable means of getting materials to North Korea.
So we stopped.
What they were was reliable means of raising money from the general public because this
very attractive idea that for almost no money that you could launch these materials and
then they were washing up in mass on the North Korean shore. And that's simply fictional. I mean, that didn't
happen. So even recently now there's been a return to balloon launching and I think real
and legitimate concerns have been raised for issues like litter, you know, that those materials wash
it back on the shore. So when we were testing, what we would do is we would do
the test and then we would gather all the materials,
we clean up after ourselves, and then we'd go back
the next week and we'd collect everything
that washed back up.
So we built a good relationship with local residents.
That's important.
So even though in our situation, our primary constituents,
our Christians in North Korea, we have to be attentive
to the legitimate
concerns that people raise about issues of safety.
In my view, I think more than two decades has demonstrated that technology exists to
make launching effective and safe.
When those standards are set aside, whether for publicity or for cost or for the sake
of achieving a symbolic value,
I think groups should be held accountable not under new laws, but under the existing laws.
I mean, littering is littering. It's not trumped by freedom of speech. So if you're launching
materials and half your materials are launching in South Korea, why would you not be held responsible
for at least the cost of cleanup? Why should you be exempt from litter ordinances? Those in my view are a really common-sense
questions to raise and I don't think any balloon launcher should see themselves
as above those local ordinances. Now Eric, do you send only religious literature
into North Korea? Yes. Through various means, not just the balloons but other means.
Why? Why not send things that might not be so heavenly minded,
but at least that'd be of earthly good? That's a great question, and let me answer it like this.
You'll find today a number of groups who believe in the unmitigated good of getting what they call
information into North Korea. Right, and there could be prices of markets,
could be weather information,
it could be Wikipedia in Korean downloaded onto a USB disc.
Right, and so you have this, in my view,
largely unexamined from a communications model,
idea that the more information you send in, the better.
And the result will be the empowerment
of North Korean people who will then be able
to make informed decisions and rise up and take action
which apparently they're not able to take now. So what I would say is that
that's a communications model that should be examined because the
unrestrained flow of information has a term psychologically it's called noise. If
we're not able to distinguish and differentiate what it is that we're receiving and a context for putting it in,
then unmitigated flow of information cannot be simply assumed to be
effective. So I think each group has to examine what they're sending and why. The
purpose of sending a Bible isn't to do heavenly good, but rather because the
Bible presents an alternative calculus to the value of human life.
That is, in North Korea, a human being is considered valuable on the basis of their
loyalty and usefulness to the North Korean government.
That's a songbun classification of which every citizen has.
And so from birth onward, North Koreans understand that human value is something to be granted
or rescinded
by the North Korean government.
The Bible, unlike other materials, presents a cogent alternative calculus and statement
of the inalienable value of human life.
It says that life is valuable because it's created by God and thus it cannot, any kind
of value can't be granted or withheld by governments. So just an interesting note is that whereas for example if you are
you know down at Seoul Station you might hear a preacher preaching from the New
Testament, Gospel of John, speaking about being born again. In North Korea the
materials that end up being of most commonly cited by North Korean people
are being useful are the book of Genesis, the original book of the Bible, which simply says that God creates human beings.
So one of the questions I think needs to be asked, and as I say, I think it's a good discussion to have even outside of religious context from the standpoint of a human rights or communications model strategy, what happens when we send in K-pop and Korean drama?
The idea we don't examine it is, is that good things will come from that.
But I think one of the things that's happened is the trivializing of the concept of freedom
and value.
I think it's interesting here today, North Korean defectors talk about freedom as the
ability to choose whatever flavor of ice cream they want.
That was a statement by a North Korean defector about two years ago.
I've not heard or seen such a statement.
So I have freedom to choose among various consumer goods.
And that's the message, right, of K-pop or Korean drama is it still presents a very stratified society.
I mean, you know, one of the NK News sister publications SK pro Korea pro
Yeah, Korea pro ran an article talking about the inflation
Standard of living that South Korean people see when they watch TV
Meaning they they see what's on TV and they say I am poor in relation to them. I have much less
So what's created is this economy of desire?
So is the pumping of information into North Korea and you know, any kind of information
Unmitigated good over the years. We've had groups including
Government groups say to us look you can send Bibles just let us include our materials in what you're doing
We'll even pay for it
We've always refused that of course because we have no we refuse to traffic with governments whatsoever on on their goals
We don't participate in that.
So for us, we only send one thing.
And the reason why is, is that we have a clear communication strategy that the,
that we, when we, when we send a Bible, for example, we don't put it in a sock.
We don't tuck in a dollar bill.
Why?
Because when groups send in materials that have utility value
beyond the content itself,
you create a risk for the recipient.
A person may not be interested in what you sent,
but they're interested in the sock that you sent it in.
They may not be interested in the Bible you sent,
but they want the dollar bill that's inside.
And so years ago, we changed,
we used to use, two decades ago we used to use these orange
balloons that were the size of like pillows right and we'd send them into
North Korea and what we found was that North Koreans were using them to wrap
pipes because the the the plastic itself was large enough to have the utility
value of keeping pipes from cracking in the wintertime. So we changed it. Now when
you look at what we send, the materials we send are only useful for the content they contain.
They're clearly marked as Bibles and any elementary school child in North Korea
even actually knows what a Bible is. That's well attested. Right, I don't get
that. So you're deliberately taking away an ancillary use, a secondary use of...
That's correct. Why? Because safety has to be an
overriding concern. If a person wants to get a Bible, then they need to clearly understand
the risk that's entailed in receiving those materials. But when launchers launch multi-purpose
launch materials, when they're sending money and socks and other things. The challenge
is that they're enticing North Koreans to gain access to those materials and the North Koreans
don't even realize that those those launchers have promoted exactly what they're sending in the media
so North Korea knows exactly what to look for. So I think not a lot of thoughtfulness goes into the
the material that's sent.
And so I think the purpose in sending Bibles,
on the one hand, you know, when people hear about
sending Bibles first of all, and we do that in both
print and electronic forms, our reason why is that
we don't want anyone endangered except for anyone
who consciously makes a choice to say,
this is something I want to have.
So you're saying that you're not trying to convert non-Christians to Christianity
with these Bibles, you're actually sending them to people who already know
what they are and who want them.
A non-Christian may decide that they want to read the Bible, but we want to make sure that they
know what they're picking up as a Bible. We don't want to dress it up or conceal
it or present it in any other form.
We want it to say Bible and to make it clear that that's what a person is picking up.
We don't want anyone to end up in danger because they accidentally picked up something that they didn't realize was dangerous.
So you would be opposed to, for example, sending a Bible with on the front cover the words, you know,
Kim Il-sung reminiscences with the century, for correct you you want it to be absolutely plain and obvious from the
get-go this is a forbidden text that you're picking up right you pick it up
you know what you're doing right I don't want to send it with a dollar bill in it
I don't want to send it to where it can be confusing where a person picks it up
and brings it home because of the fact that it was it was wrapped up in socks
that they wanted if you want to send socks, send socks, right?
But don't send a conglomeration of materials that could put a North Korean person unwittingly
in danger.
Now last year I interviewed another Christian, Tim Peters, whose group sends in small packages
of seeds with instructions on how to plant those seeds into North Korea.
I think, have you ever met him? Have you ever talked to him?
Sure, yeah. Tim's been around a long time.
Yeah, a long time. But he's thinking is exactly, it seems to me the exact opposite of yours.
It's don't send something in that could be dangerous. Send the only things with utility
and hope for the best.
Well, sure. I'm not sure I would juxtapose or see things with utility as different from dangerous things.
Typically, things that have utility in North Korea are very dangerous.
So I think that each group has to decide, whether Christian or secular, they have to
decide what they're sending and why, and the parameters of what makes it possible for those
materials to be sent in a safe a method and arrangement as possible.
For us, we send Bibles not simply for the purpose of achieving a heavenly good, but
because of the fact that we believe that they are the most effective means of creating an
alternative understanding of human value.
And when you talk to North Koreans who even choose not to become Christian. The Bible still is, one of the things that they'll identify
is having raised the question for them
to understand that there were different ways of thinking
than a life whose value is determined
by the North Korean government.
What I'm saying is that I'm not sure
that K-pop and Korean drama are as effective
at creating an alternative calculus of the value of human life because
They portray a society that's different than North Korea
But it's still driven by the same kind of class structures desires wanting what I can't have
Finding other people to be more valuable because they're more attractive than me
So I think we really ought to examine and question some of the assumptions that we have that, for example, any information is good information, more information is better information, more
balloons is better than fewer balloons.
I think that freedom of speech Trump Trump Trump safety.
I think those are all things that unfortunately, very, very little good thinking happens on
the margins of public conversation.
It doesn't happen.
Good law, good conversation doesn't happen at the extremes a lot of shouting happens there
But it's in the middle when we can actually talk and say look
Why are we doing what we do we can even disagree about what to send and why to send it?
I mean, you know Tim Peters and I have had those conversations in the past
But you've got to have a cogent reason for what you're sending and it has to be well thought out
Are you and your or your group talking to, you know, having this kind of dialogue
with with the political South Korean groups that send stuff into North Korea?
Well, of course, by very nature of being devoted to civil society,
the conversations that we're primarily having are just with ordinary people.
I mean, that's that's the value of this podcast.
You know, the MOU Ministry of Unification announced,
I think it was yesterday, according to
NK News, that they would be contacting launchers who were
not talking a lot. I thought that was really interesting
because I, you know, you'd have to ask the question, what would
be the interest in the conversation? What would be the
purpose of it? What would the point be? You know, our
standard remains the same, which is that we're subject to the
laws of whatever country that we're working in,
and we have to be willing to pay the consequences of violating those laws. That's the nature of
civil disobedience. I don't look to make contact with the MOU when they're more aligned with my
goals and then don't make contact when they're less aligned with my goals. I mean, our purpose
is to say as civil society, if we act responsibly,
then hold us accountable. I mean, even if laws are unjust, hold us accountable according
to your laws.
Well, in the last couple of minutes we have remaining to us, tell us a little bit about
what's the current state of the charges against you here in South Korea.
So all of the charges from the provinces were remanded to the sole prosecutor's office.
They did the investigation in the fall of 2020 extending into 2021.
And ultimately they decided not to press charges because of the nature of the
charges, there's a difference between charges being dropped and charges,
not being pressed.
Yes.
And so what I was told is, is that at whatever point in the future that I
commit similar violations that the prosecutor's office reserves the right
to be able to draw upon the previous investigation and charges that were made
in order to develop and impress their case. So it's not that the charge have
been dropped it's just that they're still pending they're kind of on ice
waiting for you to do something. I'm not sure I would say pending I I would say that they, you know, legally what you say is that they decided not to press charges.
Right.
But they reserve the right to draw upon those in the future.
I think that's why you have to always think in terms of the long game in this work.
You know, part of the issue of being a foreigner in Korea is by nature, needing to stay out of political protests and so forth.
I guess that's the perfect alibi that I have is the truth, which is that the nature of
our work is to stay completely apolitical.
And so our work is apolitical.
That it has political dimensions only happens when it's
recognized by the government and the government decides it wants to intervene or or interdict.
And as always, we respect and submit to the government's right to do that. I certainly,
you know, when I was charged, the defense that that I made in the investigation didn't have to
do with asserting my right to freedom of speech. I was totally willing to be subject to the laws that were in place. There were questions about the
appropriateness of times that my vehicle was stopped or that searches were done. Also,
there were real questions that came up at that time of the applicability of certain local ordinances to these issues.
In other words, to what degree does an ordinance on advertising apply to balloon launches?
So I always, now and in the future, stand ready to willingly face whatever charges come
up because I think that's appropriate.
It's part of being a citizen in any society.
So if our work is judged to be illegal and we're brought to
trial and I'm brought to trial for that and I'm found to have violated the law, then it's
my understanding that to be a person of integrity means that you have to be willing to accept
the consequences of that. I have the right to make a vigorous defense, but the kind of
defense I would make wouldn't be to pound the table and insist on my right to freedom of speech.
Just for a minute there, because we really are running out of time, could you summarize the experience you had of being interrogated when you were charged?
Yeah, you know, I think interrogated is a good word.
I mean, I think the thing that surprised me was I always thought, Jacko, that if whenever I got in a room with an investigator, if it could, if it was made apparent that for more than two decades that we had followed the
instructions of police, military, and intelligence agencies on site,
I want to emphasize that in others,
we don't have cooperation with those agencies outside of that.
We don't launch according to what they tell us to do or not to do.
It's just when you, you go out and launch, you follow the rules,
you let them know what you're doing, you answer their questions. My thought was is that if I could simply demonstrate
that that was the case and that the charges against me related to anti-North Korea literature.
And yet what we launch is the Bible, which is the version, interestingly, it's based
upon the version that was published by the North korean government in the early nineteen eighties and that the north korean government still recognizes in its religious freedom responses to you and reports and that freedom of religion is guaranteed north korea now of course that on the ground exigencies of that are very different but come back to your question from a legal standpoint my thought was.
different. But from a legal standpoint, my thought was if it was that I could just get into a room and say, look, this is what we're doing. We're not launching anything. We're not hiding anything.
We're not traipsing through anybody's tulip patch. That it would be a pretty pro forma matter. But
it wasn't. It involved being investigated by Interpol, by the same detectives who are investigating
murders and sex crimes. It was a long drawn out process, which included extensive surveillance on my wife and me
in evolve what in my view were not questions,
but assertions and in a investigative environment,
which wasn't designed to get at the truth,
but was designed to make political points.
That was what to me was surprising and uncomfortable
is that these the
police or prosecutors who are interviewing you in the room these are
investigators so yeah from the police station right although I also interact
with prosecutors yeah and so in that process it was an interesting time
because in my view it was disproportionate to the offense you know we
never ended up on TV or in the media bumping chests with police or
launching banners with Kim Jong-il in his underwear and so forth.
So the idea that we were doing anything that was provocative or creating tension with North
Korea, I still believe it's possible to make distinctions between launches and launchers
and launch materials and relative levels of safety.
But those were largely set aside
in my opinion in this investigation. And so I think in the end, justice was done in that charges
weren't pressed, they were not pursued. But yet here we are again at a point where I think the
activities of certain launchers are calling into question, I would say making it difficult for all of us who have been associated with getting materials into North Korea,
whether by balloon or by land, sea or air.
And typically, under various administrations, radio and other North Korean work hasn't been far behind that in investigation.
Wow, that's what we're going to have to end it today.
Thank you once again for coming on the show, Eric Foley,
your voice of the martyr's career and telling us about your experiences and your observations.
Thank you for the opportunity to express myself freely.
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Ladies and gentlemen, that brings us to the end of our podcast episode for today. Our
thanks go to Brian Betts and Alana Hill for facilitating this episode and to our post-recording
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