On April 10, 2026, South Korean President Lee Jae-myung sparked controversy by sharing a social media video that compared wartime killings to the Holocaust and alleged that Israeli forces had tortured, and thrown from a rooftop, a Palestinian.
Because the incident had occurred in 2024, Lee’s intervention appeared oddly timed, disconnected from immediate Korean national interests.
The contrast became clearer the following month.
On May 20, after Israeli forces detained South Korean activists aboard a Gaza-bound flotilla, Lee reacted within hours.

In a televised cabinet meeting, he publicly questioned the legality of Israel’s actions, called for the review of an arrest warrant against Benjamin Netanyahu and declared that “under no circumstances can international humanitarian law be compromised; human dignity must be upheld as an absolute and paramount value.”
Following the address, the presidential office reinforced this stance, declaring that “the safety and sovereignty of our citizens are paramount and are the very reason for the existence of the state and government.”
Seoul’s selective humanitarianism
The issue is not that Seoul intervened quickly on behalf of South Korean citizens abroad, but that the principle appears inconsistently applied.
In December last year, Lee was asked by a foreign reporter about South Korean nationals detained in North Korea. His response was strikingly casual: He said he was hearing about the matter for the first time and would need to look into it.
The presidential office confirmed the following day that six South Koreans have been held by Pyongyang since 2013–2016 on espionage and other charges.
To this day, there has been little public indication that the detainees have been released or that Seoul has made their release a sustained priority.
The Chosun Ilbo editorial board captured the contradiction succinctly on May 22, 2026: “One cannot help but ask whether this principle is being applied equally to our citizens held in North Korea.”
South Koreans detained by an ally while participating in political activism received immediate presidential attention in a televised cabinet meeting. South Koreans held in North Korea have not generated even a visible public campaign for their release.
Beijing’s red line
Seoul’s double standard reflects a broader drift across the democratic world, where human rights are increasingly treated not as a consistent principle of foreign policy but as a negotiable political instrument.
The implications become clearer when authoritarian regimes themselves identify what they fear most.
Ahead of the Trump–Xi summit, the Chinese Embassy in Washington published what it called the “four red lines” in US–China relations: Taiwan, democracy and human rights, China’s political system and China’s development rights.
Most commentary focused on Taiwan. But the more revealing inclusion was “democracy and human rights.” In effect, the Chinese Communist Party publicly acknowledged that sustained human rights pressure threatens regime security itself.
Repression as regime security
Human rights matter strategically not only because repression is immoral, but because authoritarian regimes themselves treat information control as essential to regime survival.
I argued previously in Asia Times – in February 2025 and again in April 2026 – that authoritarian repression should be understood not merely as a moral issue but as part of regime security architecture.
China is not North Korea. But, under Xi Jinping, slowing economic growth, demographic decline and political centralization have increased Beijing’s dependence on coercive social control.
The “wolf warrior” turn in Chinese diplomacy and repeated crises around Taiwan increasingly appear connected to those domestic pressures rather than entirely separate from them.
To his credit, Donald Trump reportedly arrived in Beijing prepared to raise the cases of imprisoned Hong Kong media figure Jimmy Lai and Christian pastor Ezra Jin.
These cases matter. But Beijing has historically treated such disputes as manageable irritants rather than enduring pressure on regime legitimacy.
What the Chinese leadership fears is something broader and more durable: a sustained American posture that treats human rights conditions inside China as a permanent structural issue in the bilateral relationship rather than a bargaining chip to be traded away.
The HRNK paradox
The consequences of this drift are increasingly borne by the institutions that make serious human rights policy possible in the first place.
A UN accredited NGO, the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK), has long been one of the leading authorities documenting North Korean crimes against humanity.
Its satellite imagery analysis of prison camps and mapping of the regime’s information environment have been cited by the UN, the US State Department and governments across the democratic world.
Yet on December 1, 2025, HRNK issued an extraordinary public appeal. “Defunded by the US government under the previous and the current US administrations, HRNK is facing an existential crisis,” the organization warned.
With funding for its satellite imagery work having disappeared in March 2023, HRNK made it clear that, without immediate outside support, it would be forced to close.
Satellite documentation of prison camps is not symbolic activism. It creates the evidentiary foundation for sanctions, strengthens deterrence narratives and preserves the factual record upon which any future accountability process would depend.
Allowing HRNK to collapse would represent a self-inflicted strategic error by the United States.
The expanding toolkit
At the same time, the technological toolkit for penetrating closed regimes is evolving rapidly.
North Korean defector groups have long used balloons to send outside information into the North, while HRNK has relied heavily on satellite analysis.
Advances in low-cost drone technology are also expanding the range of potential information-penetration methods available to activists and intelligence services alike.
Unlike balloons or satellites, drones combine mobility, persistence and real-time observation. They can deliver SD cards containing outside information, can document prison facilities and can expose elite corruption in ways traditional censorship struggles to contain.
What the regimes fear
As HRNK President Greg Scarlatoiu explained, the strategic value of outside information lies not only in exposing North Koreans to the outside world but also in revealing “the corruption of the inner core of the Kim family regime” itself.
Information campaigns become dangerous to authoritarian systems precisely when they undermine the myths sustaining elite legitimacy.
The reaction from authoritarian regimes is revealing.
In an April 30, 2026, Foreign Affairs interview, Victor Cha noted that North Korea responded to Seoul’s remarks on drone incursions despite remaining silent on virtually every other issue since South Korea’s new government took office.
Beijing’s response has been less dramatic but equally instructive. Effective May 1, 2026, Chinese authorities banned the purchase, rental and operation of consumer drones in Beijing without official approval.
Official explanations focused on leadership security. But the restrictions also reflect a broader authoritarian concern: Drones can expose elite spaces and elite behavior in ways traditional censorship struggles to contain.
Two regimes, one willing to discuss only the issue of drones and the other willing to ban them outright in its capital, are effectively announcing what they fear most: the uncontrolled flow of information.
Redrawing the line
A fundamental problem requires a fundamental response. Washington should restore human rights to the center of its national security strategy and support the information-penetration technologies authoritarian regimes now fear most.
Seoul, meanwhile, must decide whether the principle that “the life and safety of our citizens is more important than anything else” applies only when politically convenient.
The question is whether democracies are prepared to treat human rights and information freedom as strategic assets rather than merely rhetorical ideals.
Hanjin Lew is a South Korean political commentator specializing in alliance politics and East Asian security affairs.

