Korean studies scholarship's analysis North Korean People's Liberation Front claims that it has support and contacts within disaffected officers of the Korean People's Army, but analysts are not convinced of this. They also claim to have contacts within the
police of North Korea.
Hankuk University of Foreign Studies professor
Namkung Young says that members of the organization know the North Korean situation well, but they should be more realistic with their goals. Furthermore, he noted that South Korean support for the organization could increase tensions between the two governments. A U.S. military analyst was unaware of any independent sources supporting the claims that the North Korean military would be discontent enough to attempt a coup. North Korea analyst
Andrei Lankov of
Kookmin University warned that if the group would be allowed into the
South Korean military, it would be seen legitimately as a provocation by the North, and that ideologically high motivation might make them too unpredictable. In the past, both Koreas trained defectors as infiltrators. According to Lankov, there are concerns that defectors and refugees may include spies.
Park Dae-gook, a former North Korean army officer, argued that serving as soldiers would be the best way to prove loyalty to South Korea, and that defectors would have psychological advantage over the South Korean military.
Yonsei University professor
Jung Hoon Lee was sceptical about North Korean People's Liberation Front's ability to destabilize the North Korean government, whatever plans they used. However, he conceded that North Korean People's Liberation Front's decision and timing, in 2012, to launch a political party was significant due to power being
moved from
Kim Jong Il to his successor
Kim Jong Un. Secondly, a
provisional government formed outside North Korea could give impression of alternatives.
Positions of the North Korean People's Liberation Front Jang Se-yul supported the claims that the North Korean state was behind the
Sony hacking incident. He cautioned that the U.S. should take the North Korean
cyberwarfare threat more seriously. North Korean People's Liberation Front member
Kim Seong-min believes that three
companies of ex-military members could be serving in the South Korean military, if South Korea allowed them to officially join the military. Approximately 3,000 — out of 20,000 defectors — North Koreans with a military background live in South Korea. North Korean People's Liberation Front plans to topple the North Korean government by working together with other anti-regime groups and contacts within North Korea. Defector and member
Park Dae-gook complained that South Koreans are suspicious of defectors, thinking that they may again betray their new homeland, and reaffirmed defectors' will to enlist in the South Korean military.
North Korean reactions The regime takes Choi Jung-hoon's activities seriously. In 2014, a North Korean agent posing as a defector was caught by South Korean security services. Her task was to lure Choi Jung-hoon to China to be assassinated. His younger brother was executed for anti-regime activities in November 2000. North Korea has repeatedly threatened defectors and activists involved in the balloon releases. The North Korean government has also been accused of sponsoring
counter-protesters. ==Leadership and prominent members==