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www.groovekorea.com / February 2014 36 D o not be fooled by the stunned silence  that followed in its wake; the purging,  trial and execution of Jang Song-thaek  that took place in early December 2013  should not have come as a surprise to anyone.  Ignore the sensationalism of the headlines,  too: The act made perfect sense within the  brutal logic of the political structure in which  it took place. North Korea is governed under an authori- tarian system. Although it is extreme even by  the grim standards of the genre, it is not sui  generis. Power dominates everything in all  types of authoritarian polity; the allocation of  power is what decides successes and failures,  rises and falls. Wealth is a secondary benefit  of the successful co-option of political power.  Put simply, money is not the goal of politics  in the North Korean system. On those occa- sions when it is allowed to become the goal in  a way that cannot be ignored or finessed into  political insignificance, danger follows close  behind. When former Work ers’ Party International  Secretary Hwang Jang-yop told one of his  intimate, well-guarded Tuesday afternoon  “Democracy Lectures” that the ruling creed in  North Korea is “not to have more power than  the leader, and not to earn more than their sal- aries,” he was not speaking in riddles. Indeed,  Hwang never spoke about the North Korean  regime in riddles. Rather, he was telling the  world about the nature of power in North Ko- ThE nORTh KOREA COLUMn Edited by Matthew Lamers (mattlamers@groovekorea.com)ers@groovekorea.c+om) InsIGhT Kim Jong-un’s Christmas power grab Column by Christopher Green / Illustration by Michael Roy