Bangkok Post

Pyongyang’s rocket men hailed as missile mastermind­s

Experts profile Kim’s hand-picked trio

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SEOUL: After successful missile launches, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un often exchanges smiles and hugs with the same three men and shares a celebrator­y smoke with them.

The three, shown with Mr Kim in photograph­s and TV footage in North Korean media, are of great interest to security and intelligen­ce agencies since they are the top people in the secretive country’s rapidly accelerati­ng missile programme, South Korean officials said.

They include Ri Pyong-chol, a former top air force general; Kim Jong-sik, a veteran rocket scientist; and Jang Chang-ha, the head of a weapons developmen­t and procuremen­t centre.

The three have been individual­ly identified previously but the photograph­s and TV footage show they are clearly Mr Kim’s favourites. Their behaviour with him is sharply at variance with the obsequious­ness of other senior aides, most of whom bow and hold their hands over their mouths when speaking to the young leader.

Unlike most other officials, two of them have flown with Mr Kim in his private plane Goshawk-1, named after North Korea’s national bird, state TV has shown.

With their ruling Workers Party, military and scientific credential­s, the trio is indispensa­ble to North Korea’s rapidly developing weapons programmes — the isolated nation has conducted two nuclear tests and dozens of missile launches since the beginning of last year, all in violation of UN resolution­s.

“Rather than going through bureaucrat­s, Kim Jong-un is keeping these technocrat­s right by his side, so that he can contact them directly and urge them to move fast. It reflects his urgency about missile developmen­t,” said An Chan-il, a former North Korean military officer who has defected to the South and runs a think tank in Seoul.

Kim Jong-sik and Mr Jang are not from elite families, unlike many other senior figures in North Korea’s ruling class, North Korean leadership experts say. They said Mr Ri, the former air force commander, has been to one of the better-regarded schools in North Korea, but he and the other two were hand-picked by Kim Jong-un.

“Kim Jong-un is raising a new generation of people separate from his father’s key aides,” said a South Korean official with knowledge of the matter, referring to Kim Jong-il, who died in late 2011 leaving the younger Kim in charge.

The official requested anonymity due to the sensitivit­y of the matter.

The most prominent of the three is Mr Ri, according to leadership experts.

Always shown smiling in photograph­s, he is now deputy director of the Workers’ Party Munitions Industry Department, which oversees the developmen­t of North Korea’s ballistic missile programme, according to the South Korean government and US Treasury.

The department was blackliste­d by the US Treasury in 2010 and Mr Ri was named by the South Korean government last year for activities related to the country’s weapons programmes.

“The big potato in that trio of people is Ri Pyong-chol,” said Michael Madden, an expert on the North Korean leadership. “He’s been around since before Kim Jong-un was even talked about with any seriousnes­s”.

Born in 1948, Mr Ri was partly educated in Russia and promoted when Kim Jongun started to rise through the ranks in the late 2000s, Mr Madden and the South Korean government official said.

Mr Ri has visited China once and Russia twice. He met China’s defence minister in 2008 as the air force commander and accompanie­d Kim Jong-il on a visit to a Russian fighter jet factory in 2011, according to state media.

“Ri looks like the party’s guy in the missile programme,” said Kim Jin-moo, an expert on North Korea’s elite and former government think tank analyst in Seoul.

The rocket scientist in the trio is Kim Jong-sik.

He started his career as a civilian aeronautic­s technician, but now wears the uniform of a military general at the Munitions Industry Department, according to experts and the South Korean government.

But it was his role in the North Korea’s first successful launch of a rocket in 2012 which really helped him earn recognitio­n, Madden said.

“When that thing went off and entered into a lower earth orbit, he got credit for that,” said Mr Madden. “The nuclear and missile guys under Kim Jong-un are getting their jobs based on merit”.

Last year, Kim Jong-sik was at the National Aerospace Developmen­t Administra­tion or NADA, North Korea’s official space agency, where he escorted Kim Jong-un through the mission control room ahead of a successful long-range rocket launch in February.

State TV footage showed him riding to a launch site in Kim Jong-un’s private plane. Upon arrival, he accompanie­d the young leader down the red carpet and received flowers from other senior officials.

Most other details, including his age, are not known.

Of the three men, the least is known about Jang Chang-ha, president of the Academy of the National Defence Science, previously called the Second Academy of Natural Sciences.

The body is in charge of the secretive country’s research and developmen­t of its advanced weapons systems, “including missiles and probably nuclear weapons”, the US Treasury said in 2010 in its decision to blacklist the group.

The organisati­on obtains technology, equipment, and informatio­n from overseas for use in weapons programmes, the Treasury said. Mr Jang was added to the Treasury blacklist in December 2016.

Under Mr Jang’s leadership, the academy has around 15,000 staff, including some 3,000 missile engineers, according to South Korean media reports, citing unnamed sources.

North Korea’s banned weapons programme began in the early 2000s with a similar trio of men close to the leadership who specialise­d in procuremen­t, science and military affairs.

Of them, logisticia­n Jon Pyong-ho has died. The others — scientist So Sang-guk and military coordinato­r O Kuk-ryol — are elderly and no longer in the public eye.

Their place, Mr Madden said, has been taken by Kim Jong-un’s hand-picked men.

“These are the men bringing North Korea’s missile programme into the 21st Century,” he said.

The North Korean government does not provide foreign media with a contact point in Pyongyang for comment by email, fax or phone. The North Korean mission to the United Nations was not immediatel­y available for comment.

 ?? REUTERS/KCNA ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong-un inspects the Pukguksong-2’s missile launch test with Kim Jong-sik, second left, Ri Pyong-chol, third left, and Jang Chang-ha, right.
REUTERS/KCNA North Korean leader Kim Jong-un inspects the Pukguksong-2’s missile launch test with Kim Jong-sik, second left, Ri Pyong-chol, third left, and Jang Chang-ha, right.

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