Gulf News

Kim keeps a hawk eye on his military

Disciplini­ng the establishm­ent’s top officials is the latest sign that the Pyongyang leader is trying to tighten his grip on party elites and armed forces

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orth Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, is disciplini­ng the leadership of his country’s most powerful military organisati­on, the latest sign of his efforts to tighten his grip on party elites and the armed forces amid a nuclear standoff with the United States, South Korea’s main intelligen­ce agency said on Monday.

Analysts and experts pay close attention to any signs of rumbling within the secretive regime in Pyongyang, seeking to determine possible implicatio­ns for the stability of Kim’s rule and for his nuclear and missile programmes. They have said that Kim appeared to be using his tactic of instilling fear in the elites in order to strengthen his control as the country braced for the pain that is likely to result from recently imposed United Nations sanctions.

During a closed-door parliament­ary briefing on Monday, South Korea’s National Intelligen­ce Service told lawmakers that the North’s General Political Bureau was being “audited” by the country’s leadership for the first time in 20 years. The military organisati­on’s director, vice-marshal Hwang Pyong-so, and his deputies, were “punished”, according to lawmakers who briefed reporters after the session.

The General Political Bureau oversees the political life of North Korea’s 1.1-million-strong People’s Army, monitoring the loyalty of its officers. Hwang had been widely considered the No 2 man in Kim’s totalitari­an regime.

The intelligen­ce agency did not reveal how it obtained its informatio­n, but it did not use the phrases “purge” or “execution”, indicating that Hwang was reprimande­d, but may still hold his job. He has not been seen in public since October 13, according to the South Korean news media, which monitors the North’s state-run outlets.

South Korean intelligen­ce officials said the General Political Bureau was being audited for “impure attitude” and that the move was spearheade­d by Choe Ryong-hae, a top official of the ruling Workers’ Party, who gained more influence during a party meeting in early October. Intelligen­ce officials in the South now believe that Choe is the head of the Department of Organisati­on and Guidance, the party’s most powerful agency, which Kim uses to control the country’s political and military elite.

The rise of Choe and Pak “reflects North Korea’s intention to focus on the economy and how to overcome internatio­nal sanctions, now that it has succeeded in testing a hydrogen bomb”, Cheong Seong-chang, an analyst at the Sejong Institute, a South Korean think tank, wrote in a recent analysis. North Korea claimed to have detonated a thermonucl­ear device in a nuclear test on September 3. North Korea has not conducted any missile tests since September 15, raising cautious hopes in the region that it might be moving to ease tensions and open talks with Washington.

One factor in the recent disciplina­ry action, an analyst said, is that Kim often pits his top lieutenant­s against one another to keep them in check and ensure their loyalty. Choe’s rise at the expense of Hwang was also seen as reflecting Kim’s attempt to use the party to curb the influence of the military, which had eclipsed the party in influence under his father’s rule.

Kim never tolerates any of his top aides accumulati­ng enough power to challenge him. In 2013, he executed Jang Song-thaek, his uncle, who had been widely considered the No 2 in his regime, for plotting to unseat him. Choe Sang-Hun is Seoul correspond­ent for the New York Times.

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