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Analysis: U.S. student arrest renews scrutiny of N. Korean tours

ASSOCIATED PRESS / JUNE 2015

Passengers are seen boarding an Air Koryo plane bound for Beijing, at the Pyongyang International Airport in Pyongyang, North Korea.

TOKYO >> An American university student’s arrest in North Korea has rekindled questions about whether a small but steady trickle of U.S. tourists who go to the country are unwittingly offering themselves up as valuable pawns in a political game with Pyongyang that can have serious repercussions for officials back in Washington who have to bail them out when things go wrong.

U.S. tourism to North Korea is legal and virtually all Americans who make the journey return home without incident.

But the detention of Otto Warmbier (WORM-bir), a 21-year-old University of Virginia economics major who had chosen to spend his New Year’s vacation in North Korea, comes at a particularly difficult, or opportune, time, depending on how you choose to interpret it.

Just days after he was arrested, North Korea conducted what it said was its first H-bomb test. As Warmbier sits in detention, the United Nations Security Council is mulling a new round of what are expected to be heavy sanctions in response to that test.

According to Warmbier’s tour agent, Young Pioneer Tours, he was almost on his plane home when officials pulled him aside, took him into a special room at the Pyongyang airport and placed him under arrest for allegedly committing an as-yet-undisclosed hostile act against the state.

He is still under lock-and-key, possibly in the relative comfort of the Yanggakdo, a tourist hotel where his group had stayed that has previously been used to keep detainees until they are deported or more formal legal measures are taken. North Korea says he is under investigation and acted with the “tacit connivance of the U.S. government and under its manipulation.”

That is an ominous detail for North Korea to offer.

Initial announcements by North Korea rarely say much about the actual crime, and linking it to the U.S. government in their first statement to the world through state-run media is highly uncommon. Though not a tourist, one more American, missionary Kim Dong Chul, believed to be a naturalized citizen of Korean descent, is reportedly in North Korean custody along with a Canadian-Korean missionary who is serving a life sentence.

“We can’t comment on Mr. Warmbier’s case at this time as we don’t feel it would be in his interests, but every arrest that has occurred has, to our knowledge, been with context,” Troy Collings, one of the directors of Young Pioneer Tours, said in an email Wednesday.

Without more information on the charges, it’s impossible to gauge North Korea’s motives for throwing the book at Warmbier or speculate about how difficult his release might be.

Despite the headlines and attention they garner, especially compared with problems involving Chinese visitors, who are far more numerous but rarely if ever jailed, actual arrests of U.S. tourists in North Korea are extremely rare. And while North Korea might be lowering the bar for cases it chooses to pursue, arrests are by no means random — virtually all have come after violations of well-known North Korean regulations on how tourists must conduct themselves.

But the real problems kick in over what happens next. That’s when things tend to get political.

North Korea and the United States are still technically at war and have no diplomatic relations. So gaining an American’s freedom can and often does require a senior U.S. official or well-known statesman to fly to Pyongyang, hat in hand, to personally bail the detainee out.

That’s great for North Korea, where it’s portrayed as a magnanimous humanitarian act and U.S. capitulation. For Washington, it’s an unwanted distraction and forced detour from its efforts to isolate North Korea by refusing to deal with it in any kind of substantive bilateral negotiation.

Without banning it outright, the U.S. State Department has long warned against travel to North Korea. But, post nuclear test, the U.S. is now reportedly seeking a ban on tourism and restrictions to keep North Korea’s flagship airline, Air Koryo, from flying into and out of airports abroad. Most tourists board their flights to Pyongyang from Beijing.

As yet, none of the major North Korea travel agencies are canceling upcoming trips. One of the year’s biggest tourist draws, the Pyongyang marathon, is just months away.

They are, however, concerned about the fallout from Warmbier’s arrest.

China-based Young Pioneer stressed in a news release that Warmbier was the first of the 7,000 people it has taken to North Korea over the past eight years to face arrest. Uri Tours, based in New Jersey, told the AP that it has also only had one such case — American Matthew Miller, who ripped up his tourist visa on arrival in what he has said was a deliberate attempt to get arrested.

Beijing-based Koryo Tours, the biggest agent specializing in bringing Westerners to North Korea, was not immediately available for comment.

“We serve about 1,000 travelers per year on average to the DPRK,” Uri Tours CEO Andrea Lee said in an email from Shanghai, using the acronym for North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. “About 40 percent of our travel clients are American. We have been operating in the country for nearly 15 years, and the only one incident we’ve had was the case of Matthew Miller.”

In the past, North Korea has held out until senior U.S. officials or statesmen came to personally bail out detainees, all the way up to former President Bill Clinton, whose visit in 2009 secured the freedom of American journalists Euna Lee and Laura Ling. Both had crossed North Korea’s border from China illegally.

It took a visit in November 2014 by U.S. spy chief James Clapper to bring home Miller and Korean-American missionary Kenneth Bae, who had been incarcerated since November 2012.

Jeffrey Fowle, another U.S. tourist detained for six months at about the same time as Miller, was released just before that and sent home on a U.S. government plane. Fowle left a Bible in a local club hoping a North Korean would find it, which is considered a criminal offense in North Korea.

Still, Lee said Americans are not treated differently from other tourists.

“Critics claim that tourism is an avenue for the DPRK government to arrest Americans as political hostages. However, this has not been our experience,” she said. “We’ve taken many American tourists and with the exception of Matthew Miller, they’ve all returned safely with positive feedback.”

Talmadge has been the AP’s Pyongyang bureau chief since 2013.

8 responses to “Analysis: U.S. student arrest renews scrutiny of N. Korean tours”

  1. koolau says:

    Why do people tour places like North Korea who are hostile towards Americans? You would think there are much more attractive places to tour than North Korea, especially knowing that incidents like this have occurred in the past. Better yet, why does our government allow it, which now puts itself in a negotiating position spending time, effort, and tax dollars? Obama doesn’t even have North Korean prisoners to exchange.

    • Papakolea says:

      Agree 100%. Our government should not allow tourism to N. Korea. But if someone is dumb enough to go there, they have to understand that they’ve temporarily given up the rights and freedoms that they enjoy as Americans. You only photograph what the local government allows you to photograph; no Facebook; no Twitter, no Instagram.

    • WizardOfMoa says:

      Well said koolau, well said!

  2. SkipShrauder says:

    Stupid American……

  3. Keonigohan says:

    It’s OPEN SEASON for AMERICAN KIDNAPPINGS or haven’t you heard. Obama made this possible..blame the WH DUMMY.

  4. Usagi336 says:

    Why would any American want to visit a country that is technically still at war with the U.S.?

  5. Mei mei says:

    don’t need to be an analyst to figure this out… just don’t go there.

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