Mr. Lee and Mr. Jang, welcome.
Mr. Lee, we've worked with your Committee for Human Rights in North Korea for, I would say, nine or 10 years at this point. You referenced the UN commission's report, which you have with you here today. Ms. Sgro and I received copies last night at your forum. Do you have enough copies available to leave for the remainder of the committee? If not, could you table the report at the end of the committee so we could have the benefit of it?
You mentioned the responsibility to protect but you referred to it as R2P. For our audience watching, I just wanted to clarify that was “responsibility to protect” on the part of the United Nations. I have no real question for you, sir, at this point.
Mr. Jang, you spoke last night and today about the risk of regime collapse in North Korea. I'm not so sure that people really understand the significance of the risk to the population of North Korea. In 2007 I visited South Korea. I was in the DMZ and we saw up close North Korean army guards. They were emaciated. They were very small, clearly not well fed, and as most people know, a country will feed its army first. So it was an indicator of how terrible things were in North Korea for the population.
But if there were a regime collapse, I don't think the world would be prepared for it, sir. Are you bringing these warnings everywhere you travel?