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DECEMBER 25, 2000 - JANUARY 1, 2001 VOL. 156 NO. 25/26
Asian of the year By ANTHONY SPAETH ALSO Person of the Year: Winner Takes All It was the closest and wildest U.S. presidential election in history. At the end of it all, the man left standing is George W. Bush, whose marathon victory makes him Time's pick as the No. 1 headliner of 2000 He is surely the weirdest leader in the world. The jumpsuit he wears in public camouflages a life of luxury in a nation bordering on starvation. He works in an impenetrable shadow of secrecy: we know almost nothing about what he does or how he does it. His country is the ultimate Big Brother nightmare, a cold war creation of "Great Leader" Kim Il Sung, the staunch Korean nationalist-communist, with the approval and support of Beijing. When the elder Kim died in 1994, North Korea was bequeathed to his son, "Dear Leader" Kim Jong Il, who maintains a rogue state becauselet's face ithe is a born rogue.
Neither the north nor the south sees the rapprochement as a speedy road to reunifying a peninsula sundered for half a century. Seoul knows it can't afford to absorb the poverty-stricken north for now. Kim Jong Il's game is to score enough foreign aid to keep his regime afloat. He also tends toward extortion. In 1994, Kim agreed to freeze his nuclear weapons program in exchange for aid from the U.S., Japan and South Korea. Now Washington is trying to persuade him to give up his long-range missile program and to stop selling the technology he has already developed. The fact that Kim can deal rationally belies decades of propaganda portraying him as a dissolute wacko with a penchant for pornography. Much of that came from Seoul, and Kim Dae Jung recently ordered his government to "revise" its public portrayal of the Dear Leader, who at home is increasingly being referred to as the Great Leader. According to Hwang Jang Yop, Kim's former mentor and the biggest heavyweight to have defected from North Korea, Kim is a clever man with a ruthless talent for staying on topso much so that his late father was scared he might violently dispose of his three step siblings. Not a nice man to be around, perhaps, but this was the year we got to know Kim Jong Il a little better. Reported by Massimo Calabresi/Washington, Stella Kim/Seoul and Donald Macintyre/Tokyo Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com TIME Asia home Quick Scroll: More stories from TIME, Asiaweek and CNN
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