KIM IL SUNG
ON THE KOREAN PEOPLE’S STRUGGLE
TO APPLY
THE JUCHE IDEA
Talks
to the Delegation of the American Popular Revolutionary
Alliance of
Peru
June
30 and July 1 and 5, 1983
I
would like to give a warm welcome to the
delegation of the American Popular
Revolutionary Alliance of Peru on a visit to
our country.
Allow
me to express my gratitude to you for taking
the trouble to cover a long distance to
visit our country.
We
are meeting you today for the first time,
but we feel as if we were meeting old
friends for our similar political views and
attitudes that are long standing.
I am
very happy to meet you, Comrade General
Secretary Alan, and other leading cadres of
your Party like this and avail myself of
this opportunity to acquaint myself with you
and establish favourable
relations of friendship between our two
Parties.
This
meeting of ours will be an important
occasion in promoting the relationship
between our two Parties favourably and
increasing intimacy between the leaders of
our two Parties.
Let
me reiterate a warm welcome to your visit to
our country on behalf of our Party Central
Committee, the entire Korean people and on
my own.
I am
grateful to you, Comrade General Secretary
Alan, for having said so many kind words for
us.
Comrade
General Secretary, you said that the masses
of the people are the masters of their
destiny and makers of history and,
therefore, it is none other than the
Latin-American people who are the masters of
the struggle to achieve the liberation and
independence of Latin
America and also the masters
of the struggle for the unity of this
continent. I consider that such view and
conviction of yours are excellent. I fully
support your viewpoint.
The
masses of the people are the masters of
their destiny and makers of history.
History is made and society develops through
the role played by the masses. They can
prevail over any imperialism and build a new
society to meet their aspirations and
demands in any adversity.
From
the very first days of the revolution to
this date we have always relied firmly on
the strength of the masses in our struggle,
strongly convinced that if we depend on them
in our activities, we can solve any problems
arising in the revolution and construction.
We
relied on the strength of the masses in our
armed struggle against Japanese imperialism
in the past; we relied on it in repulsing
the US
imperialist invasion of our Republic after
liberation; we relied on it in postwar
reconstruction. During the Fatherland
Liberation War, American imperialists
reduced our country to ashes. After the war
they clamoured that
Korea
would not be able to rise again even in 100
years. However, we grappled with postwar
reconstruction, convinced that we would rise
again even on the ashes as long as we had
territory, the people, the people’s
government and. the Party leading the
people. Despite the US
imperialist clamours, our
country completely healed its war wounds
only in a few years, and in less than 20
years after the war it rose up as a mighty
socialist power. It is thanks to the great
strength of the people that our country rose
so quickly on the ruins left over by the
war.
If
the masses bring their creative ability and
wisdom into full play, deeply conscious that
they are the masters of the revolution and
construction, there is nothing impossible
for them to do. This is a priceless truth
we obtained while guiding the revolutionary
struggle and the work of construction.
If
you insist on me letting you know our humble
experience, I will do so.
I am
hugely delighted to meet such wonderful
comrades-in-arms as you who have common
views and ideas with us.
I
would like to offer my warm thanks to you,
comrade head of the delegation, and other
guests for expressing wholehearted agreement
to the Juche idea and actively supporting
our people’s struggle for the triumph of
this idea.
Comrade
head of the delegation, you have just now
pointed out that one cannot develop one’s
country independently if one depends upon
imperialists and capitalists. You have
grasped a highly important matter.
At
present the rulers of some countries are so
affected by flunkey-ism and fear of
technology that they do not believe in the
strength of their peoples, the strength of
their nations, but pin hopes only on
developed countries. They cannot build
independent new societies that way.
A few
years ago a delegation from a certain Asian
country visited our country. I met them
after they had visited a number of places in
our country. The head of the delegation said
that in his country even tiny factories were
run by foreigners, but here in Korea
all the factories, great or small, were run
by the Koreans themselves; and he added that
this was quite mysterious. So I told him to
the following effect: The Asian people are
talented and diligent by nature; still today
the handicrafts made by Asians are much
better than those made by Europeans, which
shows the excellent ability of the Asian
people; Asians became backward in recent
centuries because they failed to carry out
the industrial revolution; in the past the
feudal systems which had suppressed social
progress were so strong in Asian countries
that they failed to carry out the industrial
revolution while European countries were
making it; if the Asians are to catch up
with the countries which have already
carried it out, they must first discard the
tendency to rely on others, instead of
believing in their own strength and the
strength of their nations.
If
one draws on one’s people’s strength
properly, one can do anything without the
help of others.
In
our country we made even electric
locomotives on our own by means of drawing
on the strength of the people. When we were
going to make our first electric locomotive,
a European ambassador to our country claimed
that Korea
would not be able to make it, and suggested
that we had better buy the electric
locomotives produced by his country. But we
decided to make them by our own efforts. At
the time I assigned young technicians with
the task of designing an electric
locomotive and encouraged them and solved
all problems they raised. Finally we
succeeded in producing electric locomotives
on our own. In our country the
electrification of the railways was stepped
up in a big way by using the electric
locomotives of our own make.
We
constructed all modernistic buildings such
as this Kumsusan
Assembly Hall by our own efforts by
enlisting the strength of the people. At
present our people’s architectural skill is
very high. They developed it while building
many things anew on the debris after the
war.
Our
experience shows that if one is to develop
one’s country by one’s own efforts without
relying on others, one must fast train many
native cadres.
Immediately
after liberation our country was very short
of its own cadres as a consequence of
Japanese imperialist colonial rule. There
were only dozens of university graduates,
and most of them had specialized in law or
literature; there were few who had graduated
from technological colleges. The Japanese
had not imparted techniques to the Koreans.
As a consequence, there were few people who
were capable of managing and operating
industry after liberation.
We
proposed the training of our own cadres as a
top priority task in the construction of a
new society and exerted great efforts for
this task.
In an
endeavour to
train our own cadres we set up a university
before anything else in the teeth of every
hardship. When we were trying to do this
immediately following liberation, some
people asked how we could build a university
without any asset. We did not waver in the
least, however. We brought in teachers and
intellectuals from all over the country,
some of the intellectuals even from the
southern half of Korea.
Meanwhile, our peasants had done their first
farming on the land distributed to them and
donated some of the rice to the state, which
we used as funds to erect the buildings of
the Mangyongdae
Revolutionary School and the university.
This Mangyongdae Revolutionary School is an
institution to give education to the sons
and daughters of the comrades who died while
carrying out revolutionary activities with
us.
After
the establishment of the university we
opened several more universities. Even
during the Fatherland Liberation War when
the country was hard pressed, we carried on
the training of Korean cadres.
Thanks
to our Party’s correct educational policy,
our country has more than 180 institutes of
higher learning today although there was
none before; the number of technicians and
specialists has now grown into 1,200,000,
whereas there were only dozens of them right
after liberation.
Intellectuals
play an important role in the revolutionary
struggle and the work of construction. Since
we have a huge army of 1,200,000
intellectuals, we can do anything once we
decide to.
You
asked how we authored the Juche idea and
formulated it theoretically. I will explain
it briefly.
Embarking
on the revolutionary struggle I regarded the
masses as masters of the revolution and
expounded an idea that we should carry out
the revolutionary struggle by our own
efforts, relying on the masses. Guided by
this idea we relied on the masses in the
more than 20 years of hard-fought battles
against Japanese imperialists, in the
building of a new country after liberation
and in the three-year Fatherland Liberation
War against the aggressors of US
imperialism, in the postwar reconstruction
and also in the socialist revolution.
Through different stages of the protracted
revolutionary struggle we had the
correctness of the Juche idea tried and
tested.
Our
efforts to author the Juche idea and apply
it to the Korean revolution were coupled
with the struggle against flunkeyism.
Flunkeyism
has long historical roots in our country.
Geographically,
ours is a peninsula country situated between
large countries. It is surrounded by China, the
Soviet Union and Japan.
Across the ocean is the United
States
which is hostile to us.
The
Koreans are a sagacious nation with a long
history. Our country had a long developed
culture, it was advanced in everything. You
would understand this well if you should go
to our history museum. Our country has
beautiful mountains and rivers and abounds
in natural resources. Therefore, the great
countries adjacent to us had long had a
covetous eye on it and tried to draw it
under their influence. The US, too,
had long tried to swallow Korea
and spread Christianity here.
Historically
speaking, many flunkeyists
emerged out of the feudal rulers towards the
end of the Ri
dynasty, the last feudal state in Korea.
At the time the flunkeyists were
divided into pro-Qing (China
under the Qing
dynasty—Tr.), pro-Russian and pro-Japanese
factions. The pro-Qing
faction, with the Qing’s
backing, tried to introduce the Qing’s
ideology and culture into our country, and
the pro-Russian faction tried to draw in the
forces of Russia
with Russian support and the pro-Japanese
faction the forces of Japan
with Japanese backing. Originally, Japan
developed under the impact of our culture.
But, as Japan
quickly developed through the industrial
revolution, there appeared among our people
the tendency to look up to Japan
and seek Japanese backing.
While
other countries were making the industrial
revolutions, our feudal rulers were
engrossed in factional strife under the
manipulation of great powers, and would not
develop their country. At the time there
were reformists2 in
our country, too, who attempted to carry out
bourgeois reforms and the industrial
revolution, but failed under the suppression
of the feudal rulers. Hence, our country
could not develop and became backward; at
the time our people began to have an
inimical habit of unreservedly regarding
everything done by the great countries, as
good and fine.
After
all, our country was ruined because of the flunkeyists. In
1910 it became a complete colony of Japan
and was under the colonial rule of Japanese
imperialists for 36 long years. After their
occupation of Korea,
these imperialists pursued a vicious
colonial policy towards her. But the Korean
people did not yield to them.
The
Korean people rose in resistance to their
colonial rule and struggled to liberate the
nation. But factions appeared in the ranks
of the anti-Japanese struggle and harmed
greatly the national-liberation struggle.
Nationalists
divided themselves in different groups and
got engrossed in bickering, turning to big
powers, instead of thinking of struggling by
drawing on the forces of the popular masses.
Some of them tried to achieve Korea’s
independence with the backing of China,
others with the help of the Soviet Union,
and still others who had been to Japan for
study harboured
illusions about Japan and hoped her to make
a “present” of Korean independence. Some
people agreed to Wilson’s
“doctrine of self-determination of nations”
and worshipped it.
The
communists who professed an anti-Japanese
national-liberation struggle, too, split
into various groups and engrossed themselves
in factional strife, without trying to
conduct the revolution by relying on the
masses of the people. Each of these factions
declared itself to be the “orthodox party”,
visiting the Communist International to gain
recognition. A revolution is an undertaking
which should be done of one’s own accord,
not with the recognition of somebody else.
Why did they travel about to get recognition
when they could naturally have won the
recognition of the Communist International
if they had made a successful revolution for
their own country?
Viewing
critically this situation of the nationalist
movement and the initial communist movement
in our country, I keenly felt that the
struggle should be waged on the strength of
our own people and that our own problems
should be solved on our own responsibility.
My father, too, had much revolutionary
influence on me conceiving this idea.
My
father was one of the forerunners of the
anti-Japanese national-liberation movement
in our country. In the autumn of 1917 there
occurred the sensational “case of 105” in
which 105 persons who had been struggling
for national liberation in our country were
arrested at a time by the Japanese
imperialist police. Most of these arrested
people were members of the Korean National
Association. My father, the organizer of the
Korean National Association was also
arrested at the time and spent more than a
year in prison. Although he was physically
weak when he was released from the prison,
he resumed the national-liberation movement.
While he was continuing the struggle against
the Japanese imperialists, he was arrested
again by their police, but he ran away
during his escort. He passed away in 1926
when I was 14 years old because of the
aftereffects of the torture he had undergone
in prison and of the frostbite at the time
of his escape from the escorting police.
My
father thought that it would be impossible
to win national independence if the
anti-Japanese national-liberation movement
suffered factional strife and that national
independence could be achieved only by
uniting the masses of the people and
fighting on their strength. He was opposed
to factions in this movement and asserted
unity.
After
my father’s death I entered a school run by
the Korean nationalists in northeast China.
I studied there, but I did not like the
content of nationalist education given by
the school. Originally, this school was set
up under the guidance of my father to train
the cadres for an independence army.
I
made up my mind to pave a new road of
revolutionary struggle and formed the
Down-with-Imperialism Union (DIU)3 with
the patriotic youths of the school and
started the revolutionary struggle. Later,
the members of the DIU
played a hard-core role in the struggle
against Japanese imperialism.
After
the formation of the DIU,
I organized the Anti-Imperialist Youth
League, the Young Communist League of Korea
and many other communist youth
organizations.
When
I started the revolutionary struggle, some
of my comrades advised me to go to Moscow
and study at the university run by the
Communist International. They asked this
because they wanted me to give good
leadership to the revolutionary movement
after a greater deal of study, but I
declined. I did not go to Moscow, thinking that
it would be better to learn while struggling
among the people than studying at Moscow.
Our people, not people at Moscow or Shanghai,
were my teachers.
In
1932 we organized an army against Japanese
imperialism, but we had no experience in an
armed struggle at the time. Nevertheless, we
launched an armed struggle, acquiring and
enriching our experience through the
struggle. In the struggle the armed ranks
grew, and the revolutionaries and young
patriots became closely united. My comrades
respected me and I loved them. The soldiers
of the Korean People’s Revolutionary Army
treasured and loved one another in this way,
waging an arduous armed struggle against the
Japanese imperialists for 15 long years.
We
did not receive foreign aid in our fight
against the Japanese imperialists. Even if
we wanted some aid in the procurement of
weapons, there was no one to turn to for
such aid. We armed ourselves by capturing
weapons from the Japanese imperialists and
fought the enemy with the support of the
people.
The
Japanese imperialists launched intensive
“punitive operations” with a large force of
one million troops in an attempt to wipe out
the Korean People’s Revolutionary Army,
while at the same time manoeuvring in
every possible way to starve the KPRA men.
The enemy set up “concentration villages”
and forbade the people’s free exit from the
walled “villages” in order to prevent the
people from approaching the KPRA units. The
enemy locked up even the provisions within
the walls and controlled their exit. But the
people sent provisions to the KPRA units in
various ways. In autumn farmers removed the
vines from their potato fields pretending to
harvest the potatoes and then informed these
units of the fields, telling them to harvest
the potatoes. The farmers also hid their
harvested maize in woods and told the units
to take it away. Support for our People’s
Revolutionary Army came not only from
workers and farmers but also from all
sections of the patriotic people including
intellectuals.
During
the anti-Japanese armed struggle, I put up
the slogan, “As fish cannot live without
water, so the guerrillas cannot live without
the people,” and got the KPRA fighters to
have kindred relations with people. The KPRA
could win victory in the long struggle
against Japanese imperialism because it had
close bonds with the people and enjoyed
their active support.
Through
the anti-Japanese revolutionary struggle we
came to know well how great the people’s
strength was and became convinced that the
revolutionary struggle would win when it was
carried on by believing in their strength
and relying on it.
After
the liberation of our country in 1945 we
lost no time in tackling with the work to
found the Party. We formed the Central
Organizing Committee of the Communist Party
of North Korea in October 1945 and
proclaimed the founding of the Party to the
world. Later we set the policy of developing
the Communist Party into a mass party of the
working people to meet the needs of the
prevailing situation and the revolutionary
development in the country, and put this
policy into effect in a short time.
Right
after liberation, there were not many
qualified communists in our country; the
working class was still young and people had
no correct understanding of communism. The
Japanese imperialists had long conducted a
misleading propaganda against communism
among our people, so quite a few of them
took communists for stooges of the Soviet Union.
Under
these circumstances, if the Party was to
take deep roots among the broad masses of
working people, it was necessary to develop
the Communist Party into a mass party by
widely admitting to it not only qualified
communists and advanced elements of the
working class but also the fine elements of
the peasantry and the working intellectuals.
Thus in 1946, we developed the Communist
Party into the Workers’ Party to embrace all
the advanced members of the working masses.
Since then our Party has steadily developed
as a united party of the working masses.
The
emblem of our Party is inscribed with a
hammer, a sickle and a brush, which stand
for the workers, peasants and working
intellectuals making up the Party.
In
the Fatherland Liberation War, we felt even
more keenly the need to hold fast to the
banner of the Juche idea against dogmatism
and flunkeyism.
After
liberation we sent many students to foreign
countries to build a new Korea
and called back home quite a few Koreans who
had been active abroad. Flunkeyism and
dogmatism found expression among them. Those
who had studied abroad as well as those who
had returned home from abroad preferred
foreign things to ours, trying to copy
foreign things mechanically. When fighting
the enemy during the war, they proposed to
apply foreign methods, without taking into
consideration the specific situation of our
country. We were opposed to such a tendency.
At the time of the Second World War,
hundreds of tanks were employed at a time to
attack the enemy in wide plains of Europe, but such a
tactic did not conform to our country’s
terrains. Our country had not many tanks,
and even if we had had many, we could not
have used many of them at a time to attack
the enemy in our terrain conditions. Our
country has few plains but many mountains.
As
the Supreme Commander of the Korean People’s
Army at the time, I stressed that we had to
fight by Korean tactics to conform with our
terrains, instead of employing foreign
tactics. We developed the guerrilla tactics
created in the anti-Japanese armed struggle
to meet the needs of a regular war and
worked out various new tactics suitable for
our specific situation.
I
would like to cite an example to illustrate
the seriousness of dogmatism and flunkeyism
during the wartime.
Once
I visited a rest centre of the People’s Army
during the war and there I saw a picture of
a bear crawling in the Siberian forest
covered with white snow. Of course, that
picture was fine. But it was of little value
in educating People’s Army soldiers. I told
the officials who accompanied me: The
picture will not have a good influence on
People’s Army soldiers in their rest centre,
although the matter would be different if it
was on international art exhibition. We are
not fighting in a foreign land; we are
fighting a bloody war just in our land
against the US
imperialists. So we must hang up even a
piece of picture necessary for imbuing
People’s Army soldiers with love for their
native land and for each tree and each plant
of grass in the country. What is the use of
hanging up a picture of bear crawling
through the Siberian forest? Our country has
beautiful seas and scenic Mts. Kumgang and
Myohyang;
then isn’t it good for the soldiers’
education if we put up pictures of beautiful
scenery of our country?
The
Koreans will have to live in Korea
and not in a far-off foreign country even
after communism has emerged victorious
throughout the world. It is important,
therefore, to educate the people to love
always their country. It was particularly
urgent to imbue the people and soldiers with
ardent love for the country in the days of
the Fatherland Liberation War.
On my
return from the rest centre I stressed the
importance of equipping all Party members
and people firmly with our Party’s
revolutionary ideas and the patriotic
spirit.
In
the Fatherland Liberation War our Party
repudiated dogmatism and flunkeyism and
educated the entire people and People’s Army
soldiers in patriotism and worked out
various tactics suitable for our conditions,
which enabled us to defeat the US
imperialists equipped with modern arms, with
our backward ones.
The
necessity of opposing flunkeyism and
establishing Juche in our country posed as a
more urgent problem in the postwar period.
Therefore, I made a speech to Party
propagandists and agitators in 1955 on
thoroughly establishing Juche in ideological
work. At that time, I told them that of
course we should not become narrow-minded
nationalists but we should not forget our
country and nation and that in drawing a
picture we should do for the benefit of our
people and in singing a piece of song we
should sing one they like. From then on we
put a strong emphasis on the question of
establishing Juche.
After
the war we established Juche in all domains
of the revolution and construction and did
everything in our own way. As for the cooperativization of
private fanning, too, we did it not in a
foreign way but in our own way, to suit the
actual conditions in our country. As a
result, our agricultural cooperative
movement was carried out quickly and
smoothly.
When
we cooperativized
agriculture I told the officials: We should
learn from good foreign experience, but chew
it and see whether or not it suits the
specific situation of our country and the
interests of our revolution; if it is
acceptable to our “stomach” we should
swallow it, but if not, we should spit it
out. Even afterwards, we stressed that of
things foreign we should accept those which
our people demand and should not those which
they do not demand and that even in case of
adopting them we should not adopt them
mechanically but assimilate them to suit
the actual conditions of our country. We
have always educated our officials and
working people in the Juche idea in this
way.
As we
established Juche and did all work in our
own way in the past, everything went off
satisfactorily in our country.
Still
today we resolve all problems in our own
way, on the basis of the Juche idea. We
develop industry in the Juche-oriented way
and carry out construction in the
Juche-oriented way. We are also developing
agriculture in the Juche-oriented way to
suit the specific situation of our country.
Many
of our agricultural specialists studied
abroad in the past. But we made sure that
they did not apply the farming methods they
had acquired to the reality of our country
as they were, because there were differences
between the actual conditions of our farming
areas and those of other countries. The
foreign farming methods they studied do not
suit our specific situation. If we introduce
the farming methods which do not fit in with
our situation we cannot farm well.
Once
our universities of agriculture taught
students with the text books used at foreign
agricultural universities which were
translated into Korean. But, today we teach
our students with new textbooks written to
meet the requirements of the Juche farming
method.
If
you see the performances by our artists you
will realize that we sing songs in our own
way and also develop operas in our own way.
True,
the world has many fine musical works such
as Tchaikovsky’s. But, however fine they may
be, foreign pieces do not well suit the
feelings of our people. Our people like the
art national in form and socialist in
content. We oppose both the tendencies to
ignore our own things and copy foreign
things mechanically and restore the obsolete
things of the past as they are. We adhere to
the principle of developing literature and
art national in form and socialist in
content.
In a
word, Juche industry, Juche agriculture,
Juche construction and Juche literature and
art are quickly developing in our country
today.
If we
are guided by the Juche idea, everything
goes off well.
Comrade
head of the delegation, you said that the
Juche idea is not a mechanical copy of
Marxism but its creative development which
suits the reality of today. I think you are
right.
In
fact, we did not apply Marxism to our
reality as it is. If one applies it
mechanically, one cannot win the
revolutionary struggle.
Marx
advanced his revolutionary theories on the
basis of the analysis of capitalist society
while working in developed capitalist
countries like Germany and
England.
He considered that revolution would break
out continuously in the major capitalist
countries of Europe
and predicted that communism would triumph
soon on a worldwide scale. But there is not
a single country where communism has been
realized, though over a century has passed
since Marx and Engels made
public The Communist
Manifesto. Capitalism still
remains in England.
Capitalists
are very cunning. They leave no stone
unturned to maintain their position. They
rear labour
aristocrats among the working class and put
them up to disorganize the ranks of the
working-class movement. Here lies one of the
major reasons why revolution does not break
out in the developed capitalist countries
now.
We
should not consider that once the ranks of
the working class increase, a revolution
will break out of itself, nor should we
consider that we can make revolution only
with the working class. In former colonial
and semi-colonial countries which did not go
through the normal stage of capitalist
development, workers are not so many,
whereas the peasants and handicraftsmen form
the overwhelming majority of the population.
In these countries the revolution can emerge
victorious when even the peasants and
handicraftsmen are organized.
Shortly
after liberation the workers were not so
many and the peasantry occupied 80 per cent
of our nation’s population. Therefore, we
regarded the peasantry as the motive power
of our revolution like the workers and
rallied them behind the Party. In some
countries intellectuals were not regarded as
part of the motive power of the revolution,
because they belonged to the propertied
classes. But we recognized their important
role in the revolutionary struggle and
rallied them around the Party. Once the
anti-Party factionalists opposed our Party’s
policy with regard to intellectuals.
However, we shattered their moves and
carried out this policy.
We
rallied workers, peasants, working
intellectuals and handicraftsmen and
carried out the revolutionary struggle and
the work of construction. Our brilliant
achievements in the revolution and
construction substantiate the correctness
of our Party’s policy.
Marx’s
works do not specify the method of the
revolution for each country. Communists in
each country should use their own brains to
seek the means and ways for accomplishing
the revolution to meet the interests of
their people and the actual conditions of
their country. The party of a country knows
well about the national reality. You know
better than anybody else about the Peruvian
revolution, and we about the Korean
revolution. As for the theoretical and
practical problems arising in the revolution
and construction of each country, its party
can offer the correctest
conclusion.
There
can be no immutable formula in making
revolution. There are formulas in
mathematics, but not in making revolution.
If there is any formula that must be
observed in revolution, it is that one
should think everything with one’s own
brains and deal with it by one’s own
efforts. There can be no other formula. We
reached this conclusion through our
protracted revolutionary struggle.
He
who takes a dogmatic attitude towards
Marxism and foreign experience is not a
genuine Marxist. He is a bogus Marxist.
In
the past, there were sham Marxists in our
country, too. They set foot on Korean soil
but kept their heads in foreign countries.
Such
people may try hard to profess themselves to
be Marxists, but they are mere
phrasemongers. They are fond of fooling
people with revolutionary words. In the
past, whenever they made speeches, the phony
Marxists in our country used many words
people could not understand, such as
“hegemony”, “proletariat” and
“intelligentsia”, pretending to know much.
So I severely criticized them.
People
neither listen to such empty talks of bogus
communists nor follow them.
You
say that you are now organizing the masses
in keeping with the specific conditions of Peru.
If you do so, everything will go well. I
think you are right in doing so.
Now,
on the policies pursued by our Party today
and the situation of our country.
Our
Party has so far been guided by the Juche
idea in its struggle, and won great
victories in the revolution and
construction. The Juche idea has now become
the firm faith of our people.
Proceeding
from this reality of our country, we set out
the task of modelling the
whole of society on the Juche idea at the
Sixth Party Congress.
Modelling the
whole society on the Juche idea means
building a communist society by maintaining
this idea as a guideline and applying it.
In
order to build communism we must thoroughly
transform men and society as required by the
Juche idea and capture both the ideological
and material fortresses of communism. By
capturing the material fortress alone we
cannot build communist society. It is men
who build socialism and communism.
Therefore, without remoulding
their ideological consciousness through a
vigorous struggle to capture the ideological
fortress, we cannot take the material
fortress, either. Likewise, when we conduct
economic construction well to seize the
material fortress we can successfully
capture the ideological fortress, too. That
is why we adhere firmly to the principle of
occupying both the ideological and material
fortresses in the building of communism.
In
order to capture these fortresses we must
carry out the ideological, technical and
cultural revolutions. Only when we push
forward these three revolutions and occupy
the two fortresses, can we build communism.
The
most important of the three revolutions is
the ideological revolution.
The
ideological revolution is a revolution to
educate and remould all
people to be communists. We should not
exclude those people with bad social
backgrounds in the ideological revolution.
Attaining the goal of communism advanced by
Marx and Engels is
no easy job. Communist society is a
developed society where all people work
according to their ability and receive
distribution according to their needs. To
build communist society we must educate and
remould not
only people with good social backgrounds but
all the rest of members of society into
communist men.
To
turn people communist we must revolutionize
and working-classize
them.
When
people are hard pressed they have high
revolutionary zeal and work well. But when
they are well-off their revolutionary zeal
cools off gradually and they do not work
hard. Therefore, to make them continue with
the revolutionary struggle well we must
vigorously endeavour to
revolutionize and working-classize
them.
To
revolutionize and working-classize
people we must arm them firmly with
independent ideological consciousness and
the collectivist spirit of working and
living, one for all and all for one. Thus we
will get all members of society, whether
engaged in mental or physical labour, to
work honestly for the country and the
people.
In
the past period our Party has intensified
the education of the working people in the
Juche idea and collectivism. The result is
that today all our working people clearly
understand their duties and work in good
faith for the country and the people, for
society and collective.
To
revolutionize and working-classize all
members of society it is important to have
them lead their lives in definite
organizations.
Organizational
life is a powerful means for the ideological
remoulding of
people. Through their organizational lives
people enhance their collectivist spirit and
sense of discipline, strengthen solidarity
and acquire consciousness of fulfilling
their revolutionary duties. Therefore, only
through intensified organizational life can
we revolutionize and working-classize
people.
We
must also get women to take part in
organizational life. It is difficult for
husbands to educate their wives. But their
organizations can educate women well. If
women do not stay at home but go out into
the world, work and participate in
organizational life, they will have
opportunities to be criticized and educated
there, so as to be revolutionized and
working-classized. If
women get educated through organizational
life, they respect their husbands more
deeply and manage their homes more
meticulously and, in the end, their families
become more harmonious.
Organizational
life is essential to school children, too.
Once
I visited a primary school. I asked a 9
year-old pupil if she had been criticized
while leading Children’s Union
organizational life. She said that she had
been criticized at a CU meeting for having
failed to sharpen her pencils at home and
write down well what her teacher said. I
asked her how she had felt when she was
criticized by her classmates. She replied
that she had felt very bad. She said that
she feared the criticism at the CU
organization more than that of her teacher
and that from then on she had never failed
to sharpen many pencils at home for her classwork at
school. That day I talked with another
pupil. She said that she had been bad at
mathematics but got good marks with the help
of her CU organization. The organization had
assigned the task of helping her to two
pupils good at mathematics.
In
our country today all members of society
lead organizational lives in definite
bodies; Children’s Union members in their CU
organizations, members of the League of
Socialist Working Youth in their LSWY
organizations, trade union members in their
trade union organizations, Women’s Union
members in their WU organizations, members
of the Union of Agricultural Working People
in their UAWP organizations and Party
members in their Party organizations.
In
this way, we step up the revolutionization and
working-classization of
the whole society by way of constantly
educating all its members and intensifying
organizational lives among them.
Also
important in the three revolutions is the
technical revolution.
This
revolution is, in plain terms, a revolution
to free from back-breaking labour
working people who have been liberated from
the oppression of capitalists and landlords,
and develop the productive forces to
steadily promote the people’s material
welfare.
The
main goal of the rural technical revolution
is to eliminate the distinctions between
agricultural and industrial labour and
make the farmers work eight hours a day like
workers. It is important to free peasants
from arduous labour. We
are carrying out the rural technical
revolution forcefully to eliminate the
distinctions between agricultural and
industrial labour and
thus enable all the peasants to work eight
hours, study eight hours and rest eight
hours a day.
We
are also actively introducing mechanization
and automation in production processes so as
to eliminate heat-affected and harmful work
and facilitate transport, loading and
unloading and other exhausting work.
The
technical revolution is a revolutionary task
to be carried out over a long period of
time. We intend to eliminate the difference
of mental and physical work by thoroughly
carrying out the technical revolution.
The
cultural revolution is an important
component of the three revolutions.
Only
when people possess rich cultural and
intellectual attainments, can they work
better and become more courteous and
virtuous.
We
have so far directed much effort to the
carrying out of the cultural revolution and
registered signal successes in all fields of
cultural development. In our country 3.5
million children are now growing at
nurseries and kindergartens and those
studying at schools of all levels from
primary school to university total 5
millions. If all these children and
students are put together, their number
reaches 8.5 millions. This accounts for one
half of our population. In our country many
people study under a study-while-working
system, along with those learning in regular
schools. So people of many countries of the
world call our country a “land of
education”.
Our
country has 1.2 million technicians and
specialists, or one out of every seven of
the total working population. This is a very
high ratio by world standards.
Our
people’s cultural and intellectual level is
now very high. They can judge merits and
demerits in foreign culture. As their
cultural level is high, neither drunkard nor
thief is to be found in our country.
Our
Party’s important policy in the cultural
revolution today is to raise the cultural
and intellectual attainments of all our
people to those of the university graduate,
that is, to intellectualize the whole of
society. The intellectualization of the
whole society is an essential requisite for
eliminating the distinctions between mental
and physical labour.
I
published the Theses
on Socialist Education in
1977. If we intellectualize the whole of
society by fully putting into effect the
theses, our country will develop still more
rapidly.
You
asked about our educational system. In our
country there is a study-while-working
system along with the regular educational
system. The study-while-working system
includes university-level and junior factory
colleges. These university-level factory
colleges are in large factories and
enterprises. The workers go there to study
after the day’s work.
They
differ little from regular universities.
Every day working people go there and study
for four hours after working at their
factories for eight hours.
Graduates
of these factory colleges obtain
qualifications for engineer. Their level is
as high as that of regular university
graduates. The level of graduates of factory
colleges in large machine or chemical
factories is very high, because they
studied, while having practical training
directly at production sites.
Today
in our country economic construction is well
forward.
The
Sixth Congress of our Party put forward the
ten long-term objectives of socialist
economic construction for the 1980s. At the
end of the 80s we will turn out 100,000
million kwh of
electricity, 120 million tons of coal, 15
million tons of steel, 1.5 million tons of
nonferrous metals, 20 million tons of
cement, 7 million tons of chemical
fertilizers, 1,500 million metres of
fabrics, 5 million tons of seafoods and
15 million tons of grain in a year and
reclaim 300,000 hectares of tideland within
the next 10 years. When these objectives are
reached, our country will rank well among
the advanced countries of the world in
economic progress.
We
have ample conditions for attaining these
long-term objectives. We have the firm
foundations of the independent national
economy. Our independent national economy
has tremendous potentialities. If we had no
solid economic foundations we would dare not
think of setting such high long-term
objectives.
Since
the Sixth Party Congress we have taken one
measure after another at plenary meetings of
the Party Central Committee to carry out
these long-term tasks.
We
first discussed great transformations of
nature to reclaim tideland and acquire new
land at a plenary meeting of the Party
Central Committee and are working
energetically to reclaim 300.000 hectares of
tideland.
Our
country lacks in arable land. Out of our
total cultivated area only 1.5 million
hectares, excluding the orchards, industrial
crop areas and slope fields in highlands, is
capable of raising crops safely at the
moment. Last year we yielded 9.5 million
tons of grain on this cultivated land of 1.5
million hectares.
Today
our per-hectare crop yield has reached a
very high level. Our per-hectare rice yield
is the highest in the world. We produce 7.2
tons of rice per hectare. When the farming
method is improved in future the yield will
be still higher.
If we
are to increase the grain output remarkably,
we should steadily improve our farming
method, at the same time as expanding the
acreage of the arable land. That is why we
decided to reclaim 300,000 hectares of
tideland. This will enlarge the cultivated
land as much and alter the map of our
country.
The
land acquired through the reclamation of
tideland is very fertile. We will be able
to gather in even ten tons of rice from each
hectare of the paddy fields reclaimed. The
ten tons per hectare will make it possible
to produce 3,000,000 tons of rice on 300,000
hectares of tideland. If tideland is
developed into paddy fields, it will be
convenient to mechanize farming.
It
will be no big problem to reclaim 300,000
hectares of tideland in our country.
At
the moment we reclaim tideland by building
dams on the zero line, and if we build them
further out where the depth is 2 to 3 metres, we
will reclaim 500,000-600,000 hectares of
tideland, instead of 300,000 hectares. At
present a certain country walls off the sea
at the depth of 80 metres to
acquire new land and, in comparison with
this, it is nothing to do it at the depth of
2 to 3 metres. We
are going to reclaim 300,000 hectares of
tideland at the first stage and more in the
future, after having accumulated experience.
What
is important in utilizing the reclaimed
tideland for farming is to solve the water
problem. To this end we are building the Nampho
Barrage.
The Nampho
Barrage is colossal in scale. Perhaps, there
is no such a large barrage in the world. I
was told that not long ago the diplomatic
corps in our country visited the
construction site of the Nampho
Barrage. They were amazed to see it, saying
that such a large barrage can be built in Korea
and nowhere else. It will stop the seawater
going up the Taedong River and keep
its lower reaches filled with water, which
will be sent to the rice fields of the
tideland. The construction of the Nampho
Barrage will be completed in 1985.
We
have already built two barrages on the Taedong River, one being
the Mirim
Barrage and the other the Ponghwa
Barrage. And now we are constructing another
two barrages further up the Ponghwa
Barrage. When these five barrages are all
completed, large ships will sail up and down
the Taedong River.
At
the Hamhung
Plenary Meeting of our Party Central
Committee held in August last year, we
discussed the problem of attaining the goal
of 1.5 million tons of nonferrous metals. In
an eager response to the decision of the
plenary meeting our working people are now
striving hard to hit this goal.
South
Hamgyong and
Ryanggang Provinces play
an important role in attaining the goal.
Recently we built in South Hamgyong Province a new
plant capable of dressing 10 million tons of
nonferrous metal ores. This is one of the
world’s largest ore-dressing plants. We
built it for ourselves in a matter of one
year. We are trying it out now, and it works
well. We are going to put it into commission
on the occasion of the 35th anniversary of
the founding of the Republic. Construction
of such a large, modern ore-dressing plant
in a single year is a demonstration of the
enormous capabilities of our working class
and the might of our industry.
Nonferrous
metals are our important source of foreign
currency. We plan to increase the output of
lead, zinc, copper, gold, silver and other
nonferrous metals in the future to meet
their domestic demands and export the
surplus to earn foreign currency.
The
Seventh Plenary Meeting of the Sixth Central
Committee of our Party held some time ago
discussed the problem of attaining the
production goals of 1,500 million metres of
fabrics and of chemicals.
From
now on we will make great efforts to hit the
target of chemicals in accordance with the
decision of this meeting.
What
is important in attaining this goal is to
increase fibre
production. If we are to produce 1.500
million metres of
fabrics, we need 270,000 tons of fibres. But
our country with a limited area of
cultivated land cannot afford to plant
cotton in a big way, so we have to solve the
fibre
problem by an industrial method.
For
the solution of this problem we are
developing the vinalon
industry.
Vinalon is
an excellent chemical fibre
invented in our country. It is tougher than
cotton wool. Principal raw materials for it
are limestone and anthracite, both of which
are abundant in our country. Limestone and
anthracite are very useful and valuable
resources. These are our treasures, so to
speak.
The
doctor who invented vinalon in
our country is working now as director of
the Hamhung
branch of the Academy of Sciences.
Originally a south Korean, he went to Japan
before liberation, where he made researches
in vinalon, and
returned to south Korea
after liberation. Meanwhile, the Seoul “regime” in south Korea,
an instrument of the United
States,
did not want to develop national industry,
engrossed in introducing American capital.
The inventor of vinalon
brought the matter of developing the vinalon
industry to the south Korean puppet
authorities more than once, but the puppet
government turned down his suggestion.
Through the agency of democrats in south Korea
he sent to us a letter saying that he would
come over to our Republic, to serve the
country and the people because the
government of our Republic was patriotic,
whereas the south Korean “regime” was a
puppet regime. So we brought him and his
family. Even under the difficult
circumstances of war we provided him with
all possible conditions for successful
researches. We offered him the necessary
research funds, bought him laboratory
equipment and, after the war, built even a
pilot plant for him. Drawing on the success
in his researches in vinalon, we
built a large, modern vinalon
factory in Hamhung.
In
our country there is a vinalon
factory with the capacity of 50,000 tons,
and we are now planning to build a bigger
one with the capacity of 100,000 tons.
Our
country has a factory which produces fibre from
reed. Its production capacity at the moment
is 10,000 tons but we intend to increase it
to 20,000 tons in the future.
If we
produce 270,000 tons of fibres at
some time in the future, we will be able to
attain the goal of 1,500 million metres of
fabrics without difficulty. This much amount
will mean 83 metres of
cloth for everyone in our country. This is a
very high level.
We
plan to build a synthetic rubber factory
with a capacity of tens of thousands of tons
on the basis of the achievements in our
scientists’ researches. We are consuming as
much rubber every year. In our country
rubber is used mainly to make conveyer
belts, motorcar tires and various packings. We
intend to construct a synthetic rubber
factory with that capacity at first and, if
successful, to increase it.
We
are also planning to build another process
of manufacturing tens of thousands of tons
of vinyl chloride.
From
next year we will build a new chemical
fertilizer factory with a capacity of
several hundred thousand tons in keeping
with the decision of the Seventh Plenary
Meeting of the Sixth Central Committee of
our Party. We intend to construct this
factory, too, with our own efforts and
techniques. It is not very difficult to
build a chemical fertilizer factory.
Synthesis towers, compressors and pipes are
needed for its construction. We imported
compressors before because we could not
produce them, but now we are making them as
well as synthesis towers by ourselves.
Therefore, we can easily build it by our own
efforts.
We
are struggling to hit the target of 15
million tons of steel, and its prospects are
bright.
We
will make more vigorous efforts from next
year to raise the steel output to a 10
million-ton level at the first stage. We can
do it. Our country has large deposits of
iron ores. Moreover, recently our
scientists invented the method of
manufacturing iron with domestic fuel.
We
have so far produced iron with imported
coking coal. If we were to continue to rely
on coking coal alone, we would not be able
to develop the iron industry on a large
scale. So I emphasized time and again to our
scientists the need to study the method of
turning out iron with domestic fuel. At
first they did not get down to the research
work, saying that it would be impossible to
produce iron with our own fuel. So I told
them: the iron industry used coking coal as
fuel because it had been developed first in
those countries abounding in coking coal,
but if our country with no deposits of
coking coal had been the first to develop
the iron industry by the industrial
revolution, it would not have used coking
coal in iron production; the method of using
coking coal as fuel cannot be the only way
to produce iron; and if the researches in
the Juche-oriented method of iron production
were to succeed, we must first wipe out
flunkeyism. After that, our scientists
displayed their creativity and thus invented
the method of turning out iron by using the
fuel which is inexhaustible in our country.
Now we can say that we have definite
prospects for attaining the goal of 15
million tons of steel.
The
iron production method worked out by our
scientists is superior to that of using
coking coal. Producing iron with domestic
fuel can reduce the production cost much
lower than the cost of using imported coking
coal. Science is something mysterious when
one is ignorant of it, but not when one is
familiar with it.
Our
cement industry is also in a good situation.
Since our country abounds in good-quality
raw materials for cement, we will be quite
able to hit the target of 20 million tons of
cement.
You
asked me about the sizes of our cement
factories. There are many large, modern ones
as well as many small ones in our country.
The former alone produces several million
tons of quality cement every year, and a
large amount of it is exported. Cement
turned out by small factories in local areas
is used in the localities. A certain county
is producing cement by itself to build rural
modern houses. It is no problem to build
cement factories in our country.
I
hear that this year fish is not caught well
in Peru,
affected by abnormal weather, but our
country is now landing large quantities of
sardines. Because of the warm current, large
shoals of fish which like the warm water are
gathering in our waters.
We
land millions of tons of fish every year,
and prospects are bright for the development
of fisheries, too.
Considering
the present general situation in our
country, I think, the ten long-term
objectives for socialist economic
construction will be attained for sure
within the set time. Perhaps, nearly all the
objectives will be achieved by 1988.
We
plan to reach basically the major ones of
the objectives by 1985 and hold the Seventh
Congress of our Party in 1986.
You
asked me if we in Korea,
too, are affected by the capitalist economic
crisis. Our country is immune to this
crisis. I think perhaps ours is the only
country in the world which is not affected
by it. There has never been a price rise in
our country. It is constant and stable today
just as it was ten years ago.
If
the repercussions of the capitalist economic
crisis have ever been felt at all in this
part of the world, it was only when the
prices of machines and equipment went up in
consequence of the rise in the world price
of oil, for our country imported some
machines and equipment. But that was not a
big problem.
Since
we import oil from foreign countries, we are
advancing in the direction of developing
industries which depend on domestic raw
materials, instead of those using much oil.
A
certain country imports oil to produce
chemical fibres and
plastic goods and operate power stations,
too. It is true that the construction of an
oil power station would require less money
and time. In the past when oil was cheap,
some of our officials, too, suggested for
the construction of oil power stations. But
I did not agree to the proposal. If we had
built oil power stations in our country
which cannot produce oil and failed to
import it for some reasons, we would have
suspended the operation of many factories
and enterprises. Therefore, I objected the
idea of building oil power stations.
We
ensured that the power industry was
developed by using water resources and coal
abundant in our country, rather than oil.
That is why the power output in our country
is not affected by the world oil price, no
matter how high it is.
We
worked to base our industry on Juche, with
the result that our national economy
continues to make a stable growth,
unaffected by the worldwide economic
upheavals.
You
said you would like to learn from our
experience in farming. Our country is now at
its highest farming season.
Rice-transplanting is already over and
weeding is now under way. In our country
this year’s promise of the crops is fine as
a whole. Both rice and maize have grown
well. As we completed irrigation a long time
ago in our country, we can safely do farming
without suffering damage even from a long
spell of drought.
Our
country cultivates rice and maize on a large
scale.
Maize
is a good, high-yield crop. The method of
cultivating maize may be different from
country to country because of the
differences in their natural and
geographical conditions. It may be planted
in humus-cake nurseries before it is bedded
out or directly sown in the fields,
according to the specific conditions of a
country.
We do
not plant maize directly. If we were to sow
it directly, we would have to plant an
early-ripening strain in view of the climate
in our country. This would mean low
per-hectare yields. So we cultivate maize by
planting it in humus-cake nurseries before
transplanting. Maize seedlings grown in
humus cakes bear good fruit and are highly
productive.
The
humus-cake method of raising maize seedlings
may appear to require more manpower than the
direct sowing, but this is not really the
case. The former requires weeding once or
twice less than the latter, so it does not
need much more manpower.
If
maize farming is to be successful, the first
filial generation should be sown, the number
of plants per phyong
increased, a suitable amount of fertilizers
applied, and the maize fields irrigated.
This crop requires plenty of fertilizers and
water. Usually it needs 60 to 65 per cent of
the moisture of the field, but in the earing
season it demands 80 to 85 per cent. Only
when plenty of moisture is ensured during
the development of ears can they grow
larger.
I was
not a specialist in agriculture or industry
at the outset. But I had to learn farming
and industry in order to guide socialist
construction. Without knowledge one cannot
guide others. The people always require
correct leadership. Only when this
requirement is met, can the people create
new things without letup. Since they trusted
me and elected me President, I should work
faithfully for them and strive to guide them
in a correct way.
You
talk a lot about my frequent on-the-spot
guidance. Well, if one is to guide people
correctly, one should go into reality. If
one coops oneself up in one’s office,
divorced from reality, one may fall into
subjectivism and bureaucracy. These are a
harmful style of work that should be warned
against, among others, within a ruling
party. Subjectivism is a source that gives
rise to bureaucracy.
I
always strongly warn our officials that
subjectivism and bureaucracy are most
dangerous in guiding the revolution and
construction.
If
one wants to avoid falling into
subjectivism, one should go among the
popular masses including workers, farmers
and intellectuals and listen to their
voices. Only then can one map out a policy
to meet the demands of the people, and also
find out many things.
When
I waged the anti-Japanese armed struggle I
used to go down to KPRA units and listen to
the soldiers’ voices; after liberation, too,
I would often go to factories and farming
and fishing villages to hear the voices of
people in all walks of life; and I do so
still now.
Now,
I would like to touch on the south Korean
situation and the reunification question of
our country.
South
Korea is
not an independent state, it is a complete
colony of the United States.
It is a lie that Americans say south Korea
is an independent state. The United States
has occupied south Korea
for 38 years by force of arms and lords it
over.
The United States
is now keeping over 40,000 troops of its own
in south Korea
and holds all commanding powers over the
south Korean puppet army. The US
imperialists call their army in south Korea
and the south Korean puppet troops the
“Korea-US Combined Forces”, whose commander
is an American. It is also Americans who
dismiss and appoint the south Korean
“president”. If the man who holds the
“presidency” of the puppet regime is not to
their liking, the US
imperialists kill him to be replaced by
another.
To
camouflage their forces stationed in south Korea
the US
imperialists formerly called them the “UN
forces”. As a result of the dynamic struggle
the Korean people and the world’s
progressive people waged to take the “UN
forces’” helmets off the US occupation
forces in south Korea and drive them out, a
resolution was adopted a few years ago at
the UN General Assembly to dissolve the “UN
forces” command in south Korea and withdraw
all foreign troops from there. Nevertheless,
the United
States is working to
continue its military occupation of south Korea
under the pretext of the fictitious “threat
of southward invasion” from the north. The
US Congress is clamouring that
there is a danger of “southward invasion”
because the military forces of north Korea
are stronger than those of south Korea.
But this is a lie to mislead the people
around the world.
We
have already made it clear more than once
that we will not “invade the south”. As you
have seen on your current visit to our
country, we have built a great deal and are
still continuing to build. We do not want to
get these buildings destroyed in war. Our
people want peace, not war.
The
comparison of military strength in the north
and the south of Korea
enables you to see clearly that we will not
“invade the south”. At the moment in south Korea
there are stationed more than 40,000
American troops plus 700,000 south Korean
puppet troops, and there are more than 1,000
nuclear weapons deployed. However, the
numerical strength of our People’s Army is
but one half of that of the south Korean
puppet army. As for military equipment, the
US
troops in south Korea
and the south Korean puppet army are armed
with up-to-date American weapons, whereas
our People’s Army is equipped with arms of
our own make.
All
the facts testify that the American
authorities’ clamours
about the “threat of aggression from the
north” are totally unfounded, they are a
sheer lie.
The US
imperialists do not want Korea’s
reunification. They are manoeuvring to
divide Korea into two just as Germany is
divided into east and west, and are
launching a propaganda campaign to justify
their scheme. But there is no reason why our
country should remain divided into “two
Koreas”.
Politically,
the Korean question differs in nature from
that of Germany. Germany is a vanquished
nation in World War II which she had
provoked. But our country is neither a
provoker of a war of aggression nor a
vanquished country. Korea had been a colony
of Japanese imperialism till the end of the
Second World War and in the meantime the
Korean people had waged a forceful
national-liberation struggle against Japan.
Even after the reunification Korea will not
invade other countries or menace the
surrounding nations. No nation will be
threatened by one Korea. Neither China nor
the Soviet Union nor Japan will be
threatened by our country.
From
the historical viewpoint, too, there is no
ground to justify our country’s division
into “two Koreas”. The Koreans are a single
nation of the same blood who have lived on
the same land, sharing the same culture and
using the same language for several thousand
years. Therefore, the Korean nation must by
no means be divided into two.
At
the Sixth Party Congress we put forward a
new proposal for national reunification in
order to frustrate the US imperialist scheme
for “two Koreas” and to reunify the country
as soon as possible.
The
new proposal is intended to reunify the
country by founding a Confederal
Republic through the establishment of a
unified national government on condition
that the social systems existing in the
north and the south of Korea are left as
they are, a government in which the two
sides are represented on an equal footing
and under which they exercise regional
autonomy respectively with equal rights and
duties.
Advancing
at the Sixth Party Congress the proposal for
establishing the Democratic Confederal
Republic of Koryo and
the ten-point policy to be pursued by the
unified state, we explicitly said that the
DCRK should be a neutral state. In other
words, we clarified that the DCRK should
become not a satellite of any country but a
completely independent and sovereign state,
a non-aligned nation which will not rely on
any external forces. That our country will
not be a satellite of any country after its
reunification means that it will neither be
a satellite of China and the Soviet Union
nor that of the United States and Japan. It
is most advisable for our country surrounded
by great countries to become a neutral
state after its reunification.
More
than 20 years have passed since we put
forward the proposal for accelerating
national reunification through the
establishment of a north-south Confederation
and it is nearly three years since we set
forth a new proposal to reunify the country
by founding the DCRK at the Sixth Party
Congress. But our country is not yet
reunified.
We
must check the division of our country into
“two Koreas” by all means and achieve
national reunification. Should we fail and
hand down the divided country to posterity,
we would be committing a crime against
history and the generations to come.
What
is important in reunifying our country is to
replace the Armistice Agreement with a peace
agreement and force the US imperialists to
withdraw from south Korea. If the Americans
conclude a peace agreement with us and
withdraw from south Korea, the Korean people
will be able to reunify the country
peacefully by their own efforts. Therefore,
we have proposed to the United States more
than once that negotiations be held to
replace the Armistice Agreement with a peace
agreement. The US authorities, however, have
not yet accepted our proposal for
negotiations.
The
US imperialists keep working to partition
our country into “two Koreas”, but of no
avail. All the Korean people are vigorously
struggling to check and frustrate the “two
Koreas” schemes of US imperialists and
achieve national reunification.
The
Revolutionary Party for Reunification and
democratic parties, university students and
other young people, workers, peasants and
democrats in south Korea all desire the
peaceful reunification of the country and
actively support our proposal for national
reunification. The only opponents of
national reunification are those who lead
the military fascist dictatorial regime in
south Korea. They are pro-American stooges
trained by US imperialists.
At
present south Korean people are being
awakened gradually. Democrats and other
south Koreans want to lead independent lives
free from the US imperialist yoke and oppose
the fascist repression of the puppet
government. In particular, with the Juche
idea being disseminated widely among youth
and students and other south Korean people,
their consciousness of national independence
and anti-US sentiment are mounting rapidly.
In
the past south Korean youth and students
took a wrong view of our Republic because of
false American propaganda, but they have now
realized that our Republic holds fast to
independence and that only the Government of
the Republic is a genuine people’s power
which serves the whole of the Korean nation.
Youth
and students and other south Korean people
are not opposed to our Republic, but
struggling against the United States and the
military fascist regime in south Korea.
Whenever the south Korean people turn out
in the anti-US, anti-fascist struggle, the
Americans repress them. It is none other
than the Americans that suppressed the
large-scale mass uprising which flared up in
Kwangju in
May 1980. At that time, Wickham, the
commander of the “Korea-US Combined Forces”,
got the south Korean puppet army to repress
brutally the patriotic people and youth and
students who rose in revolt.
In
spite of the severe repression by the US
imperialists and their lackeys, the struggle
of the youth, students and other south
Koreans keeps blazing up fiercely. Of late,
the south Korean youth and students’
struggle takes place almost every day. If
south Korean people are more awakened in the
future, the US imperialists and their
lackeys will hardly stand.
The
active support and encouragement of the
friends and progressive people the world
over is of great significance in
accomplishing our people’s cause of national
reunification. The World Conference of
Journalists against Imperialism and for
Friendship and Peace is going on now in
Pyongyang and the participants in the
meeting are unanimously supporting the
reunification of Korea.
We
will fight on vigorously to reunify the
divided country in accordance with the new
policy on national reunification advanced at
the Sixth Party Congress.
Of
course, it will take us some time to realize
Korea’s reunification, since the US
imperialists occupy south Korea and
tenaciously work to create “two Koreas”. But
the entire Korean people in the north and
the south are intensifying their struggle
daily for the independent, peaceful
reunification of the country and the world’s
progressive people are conducting a more
vigorous struggle to check and frustrate the
US moves towards “two Koreas”. Our people
are sure to accomplish the cause of national
reunification, positively supported and
encouraged by the world’s people.
Next,
I would like to dwell on the international
situation.
Today
the international situation is very complex.
At
present capitalist countries, particularly
the developed capitalist countries, are
undergoing serious economic crises,
including those of fuel and raw materials.
The economic crisis in the US, Japan and the
developed European countries has lasted for
a long time. Because of the serious economic
crisis unemployment is increasing and the
people are getting worse off in the
capitalist countries. It is said that now in
the US there are a great many unemployed. It
is said that in Japan, too, prices continue
to rise and the army of unemployed is on the
increase.
History
shows that whenever capitalist countries
were in an economic crisis, scrambles
occurred on a worldwide scale and a global
war broke out. The outbreak of both the
First and Second World Wars was due to the
economic crisis in the capitalist countries.
Whenever imperialists undergo an economic
crisis, they try to find a way out in an
aggressive war.
Now,
America’s Reagan government follows the
policy of confrontation which aggravates
the international tensions in order to get
out of the serious, chronic economic crisis.
Owing to the imperialist manoeuvres, the
international situation is getting extremely
tense, peace and security are being wrecked
in many parts of the world, and the danger
of a new world war is growing as the days go
by. This danger exists in Europe, in the
Middle East, in Asia and Southern Africa.
But today’s situation is different from that
when the First or Second World War broke
out.
After
the Second World War many countries in Asia,
Africa and Latin America freed themselves
from imperialist colonial rule and realized
national independence. There are many
countries which attained their national
independence, liberating themselves from the
colonial rule of either Britain, France,
Italy, the Netherlands or Portugal. This is
precisely the difference between the
international situations at the time of the
outbreak of the Second World War and at
present.
As I
have said, the present international
situation urgently demands the realization
of global independence.
To
put it in easy terms, global independence
means that all countries of the world
advance thoroughly on the road of
independence, without being subjugated or
enslaved to any great powers or dominationist
forces. Under the present circumstances
there can be many difficulties in making
the whole world independent. But only when
the whole world is independent, can a new
global war be prevented. Great powers do not
want to fight among themselves. Even if a
war breaks out among them, such a war will
be lukewarm and will not last long, if every
country adheres to independence by refusing
to move under the baton of imperialists and
big powers or take anybody’s side. If they
find no countries following them, the big
powers will have to fight among themselves
and give up fighting when they are worn out.
What
is important in achieving global
independence is to realize the independence
in Europe where are concentrated developed
countries.
At
present, a vigorous anti-war, anti-nuclear
peace movement is under way in Europe to
oppose the production and deployment of
neutron weapons and nuclear war. It is also
interesting to note that in recent years
Socialist Parties and Social Democratic
Parties have come into power one after
another in many European countries including
France.
I met
cadres of Socialist Parties and Social
Democratic Parties from many European
countries who visited our country and told
them about the problem of making Europe
independent. They all recognized the urgent
necessity of European independence.
After
taking power Socialist Parties and Social
Democratic Parties in many European
countries have held views different from
America’s on a series of international
questions and do not blindly follow the US
policy. It is quite welcome.
We
hope to see a completely independent Europe.
In other words, we hope the European
countries will pursue independent policies
against war, instead of seeking a war policy
in the wake of great powers.
It
would be more welcome if the capitalist
countries in Europe, while implementing
independent policies, respond to the demands
of the developing countries, the third world
countries, for the establishment of a new
international economic order. The European
capitalist countries would easily tide over
the present economic crisis and give a great
help to the developing and third world
countries in their efforts to build
independent national economies, if they
strove to establish a new fair international
economic order together with the latter.
Another
important thing in achieving global
independence is to realize the independence
of the third world countries.
The
voice for independence is now ringing even
more strongly from among the newly-emerging
peoples in Asia, Africa and Latin America. I
have met state leaders and many other people
from a number of Asian and African
countries, who all want to take the road of
independence.
You
must be well acquainted with the
Latin-American situation. It seems to me
that since the Falkland incident anti-US
sentiments have mounted in many
Latin-American countries and their tendency
to independence has increased. We hope all
Latin-American countries to advance
independently. If they get independent, the
US will be finally isolated in that part of
the world. A Korean saying has it that a
general without an army is no general. This
means that one cannot be a general by
himself. The US would be quite powerless, if
it goes alone.
In
order to advance along the road of
independence, the third world countries
should build self-reliant national economies
by carrying out the economic revolution.
They
would not be able to safeguard their
political independence already won unless
they built self-supporting national
economies and attained economic
independence. A country which failed to
attain economic independence cannot, in
fact, be regarded as a full-fledged
independent and sovereign country, though it
has its president and parliament. If
shackled to great countries economically
because of failure to achieve economic
emancipation and independence, it would be
subordinated to those countries politically,
too, and lose its say on the international
arena. A country shackled to great countries
economically has no alternative but to
follow their dictates. Otherwise, it would
receive their pressure in one way or
another.
At
present quite a few third world countries
have no economic potential enough to
guarantee their political independence. This
is the biggest problem. We consider that
only when they build independent national
economies and achieve economic independence,
will the third world countries be able to
free their peoples from the backwardness,
poverty, hunger and diseases left over by
imperialists and safeguard the political
independence they have already won.
The
most important problem the third world
countries must solve immediately in
attaining economic independence is to
develop agriculture so as to be
self-sufficient in food.
You
have said that many Latin-American countries
import most of necessary foods from the US
and that they should begin with solving
agricultural problems in order to throw off
the US economic shackles. You are right
there. At present the US is deliberately
pursuing the policy of preventing the
Latin-American countries’ investments in
agricultural development and of forcing them
to buy American cereals.
Only
when they develop agriculture and solve the
food problem, will the third world countries
be able to put an end to their economic
subjugation to imperialists and extricate
their peoples from hunger and poverty.
A few
years ago an African President visited our
country. He asked me how to free people from
hunger and poverty. I informed him of our
experience in fully solving the food problem
by developing agriculture under the slogan
that rice is socialism.
The
developing countries, the third world
countries, should realize the South-South
cooperation in order to achieve economic
independence through the building of
independent national economies.
The
third world countries should not pin their
hopes on imperialists and developed
countries but should join hands to seek
means of living. Imperialists will never
make a gift of economic emancipation to the
third world countries.
Developing
countries have demanded the establishment of
a new international economic order, but
developed countries have refused to comply.
Several
years ago the North-South Summit Conference
of 22 Countries was held in Cancun, Mexico.
The conference could achieve no success
because of the unjustified attitude taken by
the developed capitalist countries which try
to maintain the unfair old international
economic order. The summit conferences of
non-aligned states have had repeated
discussions on establishing a new
international economic order. However, the
declarations adopted at the conferences
remain declarations and few measures have
been implemented.
In
his lifetime Tito visited our country at his
advanced age of 85. At that time, I talked
with him on the problem of strengthening and
developing the non-aligned movement, and I
said: developed countries will not make a
gift of a new international economic order
to developing countries; therefore, exchange
and cooperation should be developed among
non-aligned countries; then the developed
countries might comply with developing
countries’ demand for a new international
economic order.
At
the Seventh Summit Conference of Non-aligned
Countries held in New Delhi some time ago,
the head of our delegation asserted that
non-aligned countries should take initiative
to adopt practical steps for convening a
South-South summit conference to conduct the
South-South cooperation briskly. We will
continue to strive for this cooperation.
We
believe the South-South cooperation will be
quite possible. Generally speaking, it is
decades since the third world countries
achieved national independence, and they
have been building a new society. So each of
them has more than one or two useful
techniques and experiences and has laid
definite economic foundations. If they
strengthen economic cooperation and exchange
the good experiences and techniques among
themselves relying on the economic
foundations already laid, they will be able
to develop their economies quickly even
without the help of developed countries.
Developing
countries and third world countries will
first be able to realize exchange and
cooperation in the agricultural sphere.
Agricultural
development does not require very high
techniques. If third world countries
interchange their techniques among
themselves, they can solve many problems in
developing agriculture.
At
the moment the US and other developed
capitalist countries sell the first filial
generation of maize to developing countries
at high prices. If the latter effect
exchange among themselves, they may not have
to buy the expensive seeds from the former.
Our country produces and plants such seeds
and we can impart this technique to other
countries. If developing countries exchange
and cooperate in the field of agriculture in
this way, they will be able to develop
agriculture and be self-sufficient in food.
The
third world countries can also cooperate
with each other in the industrial field. In
this field I think it necessary that we
should strengthen cooperation starting from
light industry which is of vital importance
in raising the people’s living standard. In
the fishing industry, too, the third world
countries can cooperate and exchange.
It is
not bad to exchange technicians among these
countries. At present, if they want to
invite a technician from a developed
capitalist country, they must pay him more
than 1,000 dollars a month, provide him with
a nice dwelling and car and grant him a
leave every year. But if they exchange their
technicians, they need pay a person only
100-200 dollars a month and just provide him
with meals.
At
present, groups of our agricultural
technicians and specialists are in Guinea,
Tanzania and other African countries,
rendering help in agriculture and the
training of agro-technical personnel. All of
them ask for nothing more than the same
board as given the peoples of the host
countries.
It is
good for the third world countries to
exchange technical specifications among
themselves. If they want to buy blueprints
for irrigation projects or machines from
developed capitalist countries, they will
have to pay much money. But, if they
exchange these technical specifications
among themselves, they need not pay much
money.
The
third world countries can cooperate with
each other not only in the economic field
but also in the educational field. They can
jointly build schools, share experiences in
educational methods and cooperate in the
training of native cadres.
In
the field of health these countries can also
exchange various techniques such as
pharmaceutical techniques and experience.
When cooperation and exchange are realized
in this field, the peoples in these
countries can be free from diseases sooner.
In
our country, by embodying the Juche idea, we
have realized independence in politics and
achieved self-reliance in the economy and
also in national defence. Our
experience shows that in order to build a
completely independent and sovereign state,
it is very important to build self-reliant
defence
capabilities, at the same time as realizing
political independence and achieving
economic self-reliance.
It is
also necessary for the third world countries
to cooperate with each other in building
self-reliant defences.
At
present, the price of weapons is set
arbitrarily by the seller. Developed
countries are making a lot of money through
sales of weapons. When the US and some other
developed countries are asked by small
countries for weapons, they do not comply
with the latter’s requests promptly. In case
they sell, they get exorbitant prices. But
they vociferate as if they are granting them
a great favour.
When the third world countries join efforts
to produce weapons for themselves, they
need not take off their hats to bow down to
developed countries, while paying masses of
gold for the weapons.
We
have developed the munitions industry and
produced a considerable amount of weapons
needed to defend the country. Our
experience tells that small countries can
manufacture weapons for themselves to
increase their defence
capabilities.
Not
only our country but other countries have
experience in the manufacture of weapons.
There are many third world countries which
have this experience. If they cooperate with
each other, they will make necessary
conventional weapons with credit, if not
sophisticated ones requiring high
techniques. When the whole world is made
independent, sophisticated weapons will
become useless.
We
will always help the third world peoples in
their struggle towards independence.
This
much about the general situation in our
country and the international situation.
The
visit to our country of your Party
delegation headed by you, Comrade General
Secretary, will contribute greatly to
bringing the relations between our two
Parties closer and promoting the friendly
relations between the two peoples.
I am
convinced that your Party under the
leadership of you Comrade General Secretary
will emerge victorious in the struggle to
build Peru
into an independent people’s country.
I am
very happy to have such fine
comrades-in-arms like you in the
Latin-American country of Peru.
Let us join hands firmly as comrades,
comrades-in-arms and friends, and fight
together for the sake of the two peoples and
all the oppressed people throughout the
world, for the prevention of another world
war and for global independence.
I
hope that our two Parties will have closer
relations and more mutual visits.
I
wish you to visit our country again.