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A Cash Chokehold on North Korea Gets Tighter

HONG KONG - The noose is tightening on North Korea. And for the leaders in Pyongyang, two developments in recent days suggest that the country's ravenous thirst for foreign currency, which fuels its military ambitions, may be much harder to satisfy.

As my colleague Keith Bradsher reported Tuesday, the state-controlled Bank of China is shutting down transfers to North Korea's Foreign Trade Bank, a vital source of funds for the government, an action that could further financially hobble a regime that is already dealing with a tightening web of international sanctions. Particularly noteworthy was that the bank did not take such an action quietly, instead issuing a statement that drew widespread notice as a possible sign of Beijing's toughening stance against North Korea, its longtime ally.

The action comes a week after the doors closed, perhaps for good, on the Kaesong Industrial Complex, a joint operation in which South Korean businesses employed North Korean workers on North Korean soil, pumping yet more precious hard currency into the North's economy.

With an outdated industrial infrastructure and a poorly functioning agricultural sector that cannot feed its own people, North Korea's need of foreign currency cannot be overstated, and in recent decades the failures of its economy have forced it to rely on the benevolence of other nations to survive.

Blaine Harden, a former Washington Post reporter, wrote in his recent book “Escape from Camp 14″ about Pyongyang's perennial reliance on outside help, noting that a country that owes its very existence to military support from China now relies on it for financial survival.

“North Korea would have lost the Korean War and disappeared as a state without the Chinese,” Mr. Harden noted about Chinese intervention in the Korean War as Pyongyang stood on the brink of defeat in 1950. He added that after the collapse of its financial benefactor the Soviet Union in the 1990s and the subsequent end in 2008 of the “sunshine policy” that channeled aid from South Korea, “Pyongyang has become increasingly dependent on China” for trade, food aid, and fuel.

Under North Korea's “military first” strategy, the nation's financial resources are channeled primarily to its military, allowing it to make advances in nuclear and ballistic missile ambitions at the expense of the welfare of its people. With the foreign currency spigot running drier, the regime may be forced into a corner.

Recent weeks have in fact seen a relative lessening of the North's outbursts of bellicosity. A widely anticipated missile launch expected around the time of the birthday of the nation's founder, Kim Il-sung, did not come to pass last month. On Tuesday came word that North Korea appeared to have moved its missiles away from its launch site on the country's east coast while reducing its military alert level.

These developments all raise the question of whether the North is paying closer attention to the concerns of a more exasperated Beijing, although the history of North Korean behavior does not offer much hope for moderation.

 

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 8, 2013

An earlier version of this post said that North Korea's need for foreign currency could not be understated. It should have said overstated.



IHT Quick Read: May 8

NEWS The Obama administration, resolving years of internal debate, is on the verge of backing a F.B.I. plan for a sweeping overhaul of surveillance laws that would make it easier to wiretap people who communicate using the Internet rather than by traditional phone services, according to officials familiar with the deliberations. Charlie Savage reports from Washington.

The Nigerian military's harsh tactics have curtailed militant attacks in the north, a stronghold of Boko Haram, but at a huge cost and with likely repercussions. Adam Nossiter reports from Maiduguri, Nigeria.

Trained to battle Israel, Hezbollah's Lebanese Shiite guerrillas are pushing into a very different fight, against fellow Arab Muslims in Syria trying to topple President Bashar al-Assad. Anne Barnard reports from Beirut.

China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Tuesday criticized a Pentagon report that explicitly accused China's military of staging attacks on the computer systems of the American government and military contractors. Keith Bradsher reports from Hong Kong.

A Spanish court on Tuesday dropped a subpoena for Princess Cristina, the younger daughter of King Juan Carlos, in an embezzlement case that has tarnished the monarchy. Raphael Minder reports from Madrid.

The state-controlled Bank of China said on Tuesday that it had ended all dealings with a key North Korean bank in what appeared to be the strongest public Chinese response yet to North Korea's willingness to brush aside warnings from Beijing and push ahead with its nuclear and ballistic missile programs. Keith Bradsher reports from Hong Kong.

The European Union's halting effort to create a more unified banking system, which many experts consider necessary for avoiding future financial crises, received fresh impetus on Tuesday. James Kanter reports from Brussels and Nicholas Kulish from Berlin.

Roberto Carvalho de Azevêdo of Brazil will be the next leader of the World Trade Organization, a Brazilian official said Tuesday, and will take the reins at a time when the group is fighting to remain relevant. David Jolly reports from Paris.

ARTS In a homecoming sweetened with poetic justice, a collection of drawings and paintings by Aboriginal children living in a settlement camp in the 1940s and 1950s will be returned to Australia. Felicia R. Lee reports.

SPORTS Chuck Blazer, who was provisionally banned from all soccer activities on Monday, is just the latest FIFA executive to leave or be banned after allegations of misconduct. Rob Hughes writes from London.



Soccer Coach’s Departure Trumps British News

LONDON â€" In a week that saw the state opening of Parliament and an intensified debate over membership in the European Union, another news item dominated Thursday’s headlines in Britain â€" the retirement of a veteran soccer coach.

He is not just any soccer coach. He is Sir Alex Ferguson, an irascible Scot whose 26-year reign at Manchester United secured the English club’s position as one of the world’s most successful and popular teams.

If you are not a soccer fan, you may have missed Jack Bell’s articles at The Goal blog, in which Andy Roxburgh, the New York Red Bulls sporting director, praises the leadership qualities of his former teammate. Jack also reports on the feverish speculation about possible successors to fill the 71-year-old’s oversized boots.

But this is about more than soccer. It is about who will lead what has become a $3 billion global brand, which trades on the New York Stock Exchange and has an official fan base in more than 200 countries.

As English fans like to say, soccer is not a matter of life and death; it’s more important than that.

My colleague Sam Borden writes that tributes have been flowing in from far beyond Britain for the man who went to United in 1986 when the club that was struggling for a foothold in England, let alone the global stage.

“Ferguson’s style â€" intense, irascible, determined and single-minded â€" was not always popular with players (who might be dropped from the lineup before a big game),” Sam writes, “or the news media (who often were chastised for asking questions), but his results were undeniable.”

British television viewers have become accustomed to deciphering Ferguson’s cryptic comments on the game, delivered in the broad working-class brogue of his native Glasgow.

Since he announced his retirement on Wednesday, “Fergie” has been described as a Renaissance man, as comfortable in the company of politicians as among his players in the locker room.

“He also seems to be very well-connected and know everyone in the world of politics, horse racing, sport and wine,” according to Angus Deayton, a television presenter and Manchester United fan.

Prime Minister David Cameron posted his congratulations on Twitter, along with the hope that Ferguson’s departure would help the club he supports, Aston Villa.

Ed Miliband, leader of the opposition Labour Party of which Ferguson was a lifelong supporter, posted, “Proud man. Great manager. Staunch Labour Party supporter. Sir Alex Ferguson will never be forgotten.”

In a list of things that “not everybody knows,” the BBC reported that Ferguson had once run a pub, had started his working life as a toolmaker and served as a labor union official.

He once revealed that he had a fascination for American politics and the assassination of John F. Kennedy and that he kept a copy of the late President’s autopsy report at his bedside.

Ferguson is associated with coining a string of soccer slang terms, including “hairdryer treatment” to describe the way he dealt with wayward players and sports journalists.

“Players talk of the moment a switch is flicked in Fergie’s head, he presses his face close to you and emits a terrifying torrent of abuse,” according to the BBC.

His description of the final tense moments of a match as “squeaky-bum time” entered the Collins English Dictionary in 2005.

After a career in which he was described as possibly the greatest soccer manager of all time, the impact of his departure went beyond the sporting world.

When the news of his retirement hit the New York Stock Exchange, shares in Manchester United dipped by as much 4.5 percent.



IHT Quick Read: May 9

NEWS China took a modest step into Middle East diplomacy this week, hosting back-to-back visits from Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the Palestinian Authority, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. Edward Wong reports from Beijing, and Chris Buckley from Hong Kong.

With fair-trade coffee and organic fruit now standard on grocery shelves, consumers concerned with working conditions, environmental issues and outsourcing are increasingly demanding similar accountability from the makers of their T-shirts. The garment factory collapse in Bangladesh that killed hundreds has brought the issue to the forefront. Stephanie Clifford reports.

Iran’s 2009 presidential election was an exuberant and exciting spectacle that aroused a powerful surge of optimism in the populace but that ended with the trauma of a violent crackdown. This year’s vote, taking place under starkly different circumstances, promises to be far more subdued. Thomas Erdbrink reports from Tehran.

Amid the talk of change in Saturday’s elections, Pakistan remains a place where handouts can decide votes and lawmakers are sought out for protection. Declan Walsh reports from Multan, Pakistan.

Officials are investigating reports that Tamerlan Tsarnaev, a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings, may have tried to contact Islamist extremists during a trip he made to Russia last year. Ellen Barry reports from Makhachkala, Russia.

An appeals court in Milan upheld a conviction on Wednesday of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi for tax fraud, sentencing him to four years in prison and imposing a five-year ban on holding public office. Gaia Pianigiani reports from Rome.

On the Amalfi Coast of Italy, a family’s bid to keep its small business going mirrors the country’s debate about keeping local traditions alive in a global economy. Rachel Donadio reports from Amalfi, Italy.

Europe inched closer Wednesday to establishing a European banking union for the Continent’s largest lenders after the German cabinet approved legislation that would grant the European Central Bank oversight of such institutions. Melissa Eddy reports from Berlin.

ARTS Just months after opening in a former mining town, the Louvre-Lens museum has drawn more than 400,000 visitors. Ratha Tep reports.

The kind of time capsule of that every auction house expert dreams of opened the evening sale of Impressionist & Modern Art held Tuesday at Sotheby’s. It played no mean part in helping the auction house to sell 60 of the 71 works that came up for a substantial $230 million. Souren Melikian reports from New York.

SPORTS The sudden announcement on Wednesday that Alex Ferguson will retire in two weeks’ time after almost 27 years as manager of Manchester United has shaken its shares on the New York Stock Exchange, to say nothing of its effect around the sporting world. Rob Hughes reports from London.