The Phnom Penh Post

North Korea ‘military reshuffle’ raises eyebrows before summit

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SOUTH Korea is monitoring developmen­ts in the North’s armed forces, it said on Monday after reports Pyongyang replaced three of its top military officials ahead of a summit with the United States.

President Donald Trump is due to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on June 12 in Singapore, with Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal high on the agenda.

Reports said the reshuffle could be aimed at eliminatin­g resistance to the peace overtures.

Pyongyang’s armed forces, known as the Korean People’s Army, are immensely influentia­l in the North and a centre of power in their own right, symbolised by the way Kim is habitually flanked by generals on one side and civilians on the other when attending major ceremonial events.

Late last month the North’s state media revealed that Kim Su-gil had been appointed director of the military’s powerful General Political Bureau (GPB), replacing Kim Jong-gak.

According to the Yonhap news agency, which cited intelligen­ce sources, the chief of the general staff Ri Myong-su has also been replaced by his deputy, Ri Yong-gil.

Defence Minister Pak Yong-sik has been succeeded by No Kwang-chol, previously first vice minister, it added.

The wholesale reshuffle would be unusual if confirmed, Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry said.

“We will monitor related developmen­ts,” ministry spokesman Baik Taehyun told reporters.

According to researcher­s at NK Leadership Watch, the change at the top of the GPB “represents a continuati­on of tightening Party control over the KPA”.

The political bureau could be in a position to resist policy decisions by the leadership or try to profit from future South Korean economic aid, it said.

“Both of these things lend themselves to creating alternate power centres,” it noted.

But new GPB Director Kim Su-gil was a “highly trusted” lieutenant of leader Kim Jong-un, it added, who appointed him to the Pyongyang party committee – once a powerbase for his uncle Jang Song-thaek – after having the older man executed for treason in 2013.

Hardliners versus moderates?

Reports said the wider changes could be aimed at preventing objections in the North’s senior military ranks to any changes in the country’s nuclear policy.

The country remains technicall­y at war after hostilitie­s in the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, and Kim’s father and predecesso­r Kim Jong-il expounded a “Songun” or “military first” policy that is a foundation­al plank of the North’s ideology.

Pyongyang has long argued that it needs nuclear weapons to protect itself against a possible invasion by the US.

Yonhap cited the intelligen­ce source as saying No Kwang-chol, the new defence minister, was known as a “moderate”.

“The North appears to have brought in new figures . . . as the previous officials lacked flexibilit­y in thinking,” the source said.

But analysts said the changes were likely a response to an internal matter.

“It’s meaningles­s to divide North Korean officials into hardliners and moderates,” said Kim Dong-yub, a professor at the Institute for Far Eastern Studies at Kyungnam University.

The personnel change was probably intended to implement the new economy-centred policies, he said, and officials with a better understand­ing in the area had been appointed.

No had formerly overseen the military’s financial issues as chair of the Second Economy Commission, Kim said.

“It looks like they needed someone who can have a firm grip on the military and dynamicall­y push ahead with the new policies amid changes in US-North Korea relations,” he added.

 ?? ED JONES/AFP ?? Korean People’s Army (KPA) soldiers leave after paying their respects before the statues of late North Korean leaders Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il at Mansu hill in Pyongyang on April 15.
ED JONES/AFP Korean People’s Army (KPA) soldiers leave after paying their respects before the statues of late North Korean leaders Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il at Mansu hill in Pyongyang on April 15.

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