Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
North Korea and the Trump-Kim summit: Don’t ignore human rights
North Korea and the Trump-Kim summit: Don’t ignore human rights
Feb 11, 2026 7:47 AM

The changes in U.S.-North Korean relations over the past year have been drastic enough to give any casual observer whiplash: North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump have gone from openly exchanging threats of nuclear war to agreeing to the first ever meeting between a North Korean head of state and a sitting U.S. president, set to be held Tuesday in Singapore.

While the progression from threats of war to overtures of peace and possible denuclearization should be applauded, the dismal human rights situation in North Korea should not and cannot be ignored and should be included as part of any ongoing negotiations.

Peace is necessary, but not sufficient for flourishing

Despite Kim’s recent push to improve his global image in a so-called “charm offensive,” we should not be distracted from the deeper truth that lies beneath the facade of diplomatic goodwill: North Korea remains a repressive autocratic regime that maintains horrific political prison camps, monitors, arrests, tortures, and kills Christians and those of other mits worldwide cyber-attacks, and flouts international sanctions by engaging in illegal trade, human trafficking, and drug smuggling.

Christians and other concerned observers should e the recent de-escalation of tensions on the Korean Peninsula and fervently pray and hope for peace, but that peace should e at the cost of leaving the North Korean people in their dire situation. The absence of war does not mean that people are flourishing. True flourishing can e through the empowerment of free markets and a political system that upholds the rule of law and respects religious freedom, which provides the basis for all rights. One needs only look at South Korea parison to confirm these undeniable facts.

A tale of two Koreas

South Korea, which maintains a republican government with democratic elections and a robust market economy, has the 15th largest GDP in the world, above that of Canada or Australia. About 29 percent of people in South Korea are Christian, and those in the South are free to live, travel, and believe as they see fit.

Conversely, North Korea maintains munist dictatorship led by a hereditary cult of personality with a centrally-controlled economy. It ranks 118th in the world for GDP, below that of war-torn Syria and Yemen. Only about one percent of North Koreans are Christian. The nonprofit Open Doors has rated North Korea as the single worst persecutor of Christians in the world.

North and South Korea share an ethnic background, language, and cultural heritage. The major difference between the two is the form of government under which their people have been ruled since the Korean peninsula was liberated from imperial Japanese control in 1945.

The road to true flourishing

Nuclear weapons are rightly a major focus of the ongoing negotiations between the United States and North Korea. President Trump should not jeopardize the talks or weaken the United States’ bargaining position by focusing on human rights for fear of losing the progress that has been made.

Instead, denuclearization should be a starting point from which further dialogue and engagement can take place. It will not be an overnight process, and concessions will have to be made, to believe otherwise would be to ignore history. But using denuclearization as an end in itself and stopping there, rather than using it as a means to the greater end of opening up North Korea to further reforms would be great folly.

A North Korea that opens itself to international trade and relationships by giving up some or all of its nuclear capabilities will soon discover what the West has known for centuries: when goods and ideas flow across borders, tanks and boots do not. Lasting peace can only be achieved if North Korea opens itself up, and human rights, grounded in the Judeo-Christian tradition are the lynchpin of this process.

To lose sight of the ultimate goal of a free and flourishing Korean Peninsula by ignoring the North’s human rights record and appalling treatment of those of faith would be to lose sight of the very foundations of our own values and prosperity as well.

If you’d like to dig deeper on religious freedom and the human rights situation in North Korea, read “Fighting for totalitarianism’s victims: An interview with Suzanne Scholte” from Religion & Liberty.

If you are interested in getting expert analysis on the latest developments in North Korea, I highly mend visiting 38 North, a blog maintained by the nonpartisan Henry L. Stimson Center.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Pushing Back Against the New Deal in Real Time
A new anthology of economists mentators pushing back against the New Deal in the 1930s sheds fresh light not only on what was going wrong then but what’s still wrong with our economic policy now. Read More… The American Institute of Economic Research has published an anthology of critics of the New Deal, New Deal plete with more than 50 mentaries and excerpts. The book is edited by contemporary economic historian Amity Shlaes, herself a prominent New Deal critic, whose...
The Constitution of the Fifth Republic at 65
Have the tensions between individual freedom of conscience and the principle of laïcité finally reached the breaking point? Read More… Nearly 20 people were killed in Paris during and immediately following the Islamist attack on satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January 2015. Then, in November of that same year, terrorists killed 130 and injured hundreds more in a series of coordinated attacks across Paris that included suicide bombers detonating explosives outside the Stade de France, indiscriminate shootings at crowded restaurants,...
Sr. Mary Kenneth Keller: Computer Programming Innovator
Early in puting revolution, a Roman Catholic nun trudged away to make information retrieval available to all, proving that one hidden life can have many extraordinary public effects. Read More… Emerging from the vibrant and innovative postwar years, the nascent discipline puter science in America was attracting top talent in mathematics, engineering, putational linguistics. Several schools were creating puter science” programs by the 1950s and early ’60s. In fact, the first ever doctoral degrees in this emerging discipline were awarded...
No, Chicago, We Don’t Need Government-Run Grocery Stores
After Walmart shuttered locations due to rising crime, the mayor of Chicago decided the answer was to … open their own grocery stores. What could go wrong? Read More… The city of Chicago is plagued by waves of violence, looting, and plunder dating back to 2020, which was deemed “the summer of looting” by the Chicago Tribune, spurred by the murder of George Floyd while in police custody amid COVID lockdowns. That summer, the Chicago police superintendent called for longer...
Are We Free to Think About Free Will?
Are we predestined to debate the free will vs. determinism question forever? Or can we shed light on the nature of the human person such that this vexing question of why we do what we can finally be answered? Read More… Does God exist, or are we the mere by-products of evolution, simple accidents of the Big Bang? Do we have free will, or is everything predetermined, robbing us of true moral agency? A recent book by philosopher Paul Herrick,...
Laudate Deum: Or, Is the Catholic Church Just Another NGO?
Is there a way to balance economic growth and sound environmental stewardship? If only Pope Francis would take his own advice. Read More… If there is anything we have learned about Pope mentaries on issues ranging from economics to the environment, it is that they invariably add up to a by-now predictable mixture. Parts of this mélange consist of often profound insights and wisdom. But it also reflects straw man arguments, the random assembling of pieces of data plucked out...
The Wheel of Time: A Postmodern LOTR?
The highly successful series of fantasy novels is slowly being adapted into TV entertainment. Is it heroic fantasy intended to instill moral courage in the face of evil, or merely more streaming content? Read More… The Wheel of Time is a series of 14 novels by Robert Jordan, which debuted in 1990. You may never have heard of them, but they’ve sold 100 million copies and add up to more than 4 million words. (The Bible is well short of...
Are the Liberal Arts Elitist?
If our liberal arts colleges are to survive, they should try to instill an appreciation for rather than attempt the destruction of our cultural heritage. Read More… We have interesting classifications of our institutions of higher learning. The Carnegie classification of major research universities distinguishes between R1 and R2 schools. The well-known U.S. News & World Report Rankings separate national universities from regional ones, and also from national liberal arts colleges. Alongside the state university system, the Selective Liberal Arts...
The Right’s Racial Suicide
Did conservatives betray their ideals? Or were they never ideal to begin with? Read More… “To be conservative,” wrote Michael Oakeshott, “is to prefer the familiar to the unknown, to prefer the tried to the untried, fact to mystery.” His definition of conservatism, not as a set of policy aspirations but as a deeper sensibility, explains the conservative respect for tradition and view of history as a source of norms—that’s the positive side. The negative side is that there are...
Questioning Science after Darwin
David Berlinski has been provoking debate on a variety of subjects for decades. His new book is a sampler of his challenges to Darwinism, materialism, and the hubris of scientism. Read More… I can find no better way to summarize David Berlinski’s book Science After Babel than to say that it is classic Berlinski. The man himself defies a simple summary. He is a polymath and raconteur, as even his bio at the panying website explains. His Ph.D. in philosophy...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved