The point of insult is that rather than compare North Korea to Nazi Germany, Kirby could have offered an entirely Korean perspective on the problem -but to do that he would have to admit that the US invaded Korea in September 1945 as part of its anti-Japanese campaign, but almost immediately began to plan the destruction of the Korean Communist Party in what is now South Korea, and created the imaginary boundary between North and South at the 38th Parallel which has since become the de facto, but not the de jure boundary. Dean Rusk was the author of this fiction, which then became useful when the US claimed the 'North' had 'invaded' the 'south' which is complete nonsense. The US became involved in what was, like Vietnam after it, a civil war across Korea, and when you ask why did 600,000 Americans die you can't find a rational answer, unless you think defeating Communism was worth it -in which case the war, which has not ended, was a failure.
The abuse of human rights which took place when the US Air Force bombed the north into the stone age, used napalm in violation of international law, and committed the usual litany of abuse of prisoners -as indeed did the 'North' Koreans on American POW's- suggest that for the UN to complain about violations of Human Rights in North Korea he might want to change the date from which they began.
Today, North Korea's clique of rich, spoiled and often western-educated leaders, needs the border, just as it needs the state of war and the American military presence in the south to remain -to use it as a reminder to the people of the North that they are the target of American and Japanese aggression, that in time they will lose their free health care, their free education, their free housing. The Americans have shown no real interest in calling for a peace treaty between North and South and an end to the war -nor for that matter, does China want to see an enlarged and pro-American Korea on its eastern flank, while in reality many southern Koreans have no idea how the north could ever be integrated into a single state -this isn't East and West Germany.
Obama has not acted on Cuba, he has not acted on ending the war in Korea. The nervousness with which the US and its allies view the transition from dictatorship to democracy is understandable in the Middle East and North Africa, but also applies to Korea -there are solutions, but they are painful, and long term.
Bruce Cummings produces interesting -if challenged in the US- material on Korea, as here:
http://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=e...0korea&f=false