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http://www.espn.com/olympics/winter...their-first-joint-olympic-team-march-together
As the article states, this has been done before in 1991 (for the World Table Tennis Championships and the World Juniors for soccer).
As a cynical dick military planner type, I'm wondering a) does KJU really think 60+M South Koreans would accept his rule as "Absolute Leader", and b) if he doesn't, why on earth would he agree to a path toward unification, when in reality that would likely mean exile for him at the least and war crimes tribunals at the worst? And if he is just fooling around, what's the diversion diverting from?
Still, more peace is generally good. Not 100%, though (ask Neville Chamberlain aboutMoravia Czechoslovakia)
The rival Koreas agreed Wednesday to form their first unified Olympic team and have their athletes parade together for the first time in 11 years during the opening ceremonies of next month's Winter Olympics in South Korea, officials said.
The agreements still require approval from the International Olympic Committee. But they are the most prominent steps toward rapprochement achieved by the Koreas since they recently began exploring cooperation during the Olympics following a year of heightened tension over the North's nuclear weapons program.
As the article states, this has been done before in 1991 (for the World Table Tennis Championships and the World Juniors for soccer).
As a cynical dick military planner type, I'm wondering a) does KJU really think 60+M South Koreans would accept his rule as "Absolute Leader", and b) if he doesn't, why on earth would he agree to a path toward unification, when in reality that would likely mean exile for him at the least and war crimes tribunals at the worst? And if he is just fooling around, what's the diversion diverting from?
Still, more peace is generally good. Not 100%, though (ask Neville Chamberlain about
