“Of course, from the viewpoint of some normal criteria Korea obviously looks horrible, there is not doubt about that, but it has a dynamic, it changes, it develops and apparently it also develops a certain perspective on the problem, which is the same as ever, all this is a game of superpowers for the arrangement of that region, whether it is South Korea or North Korea, the same as was the case with North and South Vietnam and there is also the position war between China and Russia and America, right. Surprisingly Europe is as if present there a little bit, too, but it is too for her. But for those countries it is a crucial region, so to speak, this is well known. Depending on how much these three crucial players will be able to agree on something, then the progress in the region will proceed correspondingly, and it seems, or it is my hope, that some outcome, some agreement of those states, superpowers, should be reached. At the same time, of course, there is the issue of the unification of the peninsula, and I am strongly critical of that, and perhaps a bit in a paradoxical and surprising way, because I still keep pointing to the unification of Germany, but these are processes which are politically unavoidable and which probably cannot be prevented, and it would happen - the unification of Germany. But basically, they are complicating the adaptation processes of one party or the other, I would say. I think and hope this would not happen in Korea. And it sounds paradoxical and perhaps silly that the democratic South Korea and the despotic North Korea… and I do not wish their unification. I think that by unifying, the adaptation process on part of North Korea would only get complicated. I simply wish them the best, and I do not wish for them the unification of Korea, because simply from the technical point of view, it would make matters complicated and overnight there would be 25 million people from North Korea who would become second-class citizens. And what had happened in the German Democratic Republic was not healthy and it doesn’t help the country, I would say. So I warn against this model wherever I go. Nevertheless, it seems that if they were kept separated and their interests would be... America in peace and China in the north, in the best scenario, and the Chinese model of this crazy socialist capitalism, you know, which is immensely successful and it seems to be… but again, I remind this everywhere, that Vietnam was unified because the North conquered the South. They all thought that it would happen the other way round – that the advanced, pro-American South would take over the undeveloped and insanely communist North, but it turned out that it had happened the other way round and that it was probably good for the country. It is crazy, I know, I know it’s a thin line. When somebody talks about it, I always add that in reality there are very few people who truly understand that region and there are only the interests of those countries there. They all forage whatever they can there, and we, with the luxury of the distance from there, can only wonder how it is going to turn out. Sometimes the people who live there become a toy in hands of those superpowers, which is the worst that can happen to them. Now it seems hopeful to me and the reason why I think so is that something had meanwhile happened in North Korea and above all that something had happened on the level of America-Russia-China. Especially between America and China, I would say.”