Las Vegas Review-Journal

Media choreograp­hy big part of Koreas summit

South’s president might consent to Kim’s wishes

- By Foster Klug The Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — Kim Jong Un will be in uncharted territory when the third-generation autocrat crosses over to the southern half of the Demilitari­zed Zone separating the rival Koreas on Friday, possibly on foot, and greets South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Cameras wielded by one of the most aggressive media contingent­s on the planet will fire live images of a man used to controllin­g every aspect of his public persona into the homes and onto the phones of millions of people around the world — though it’s not yet clear if it will be seen instantly in North Korea.

But as Kim navigates this minefield (figurative­ly; he’s not passing through that part of the DMZ) at the third-ever leadership summit between the rivals, he may actually have an ally of sorts in Moon.

Despite an announceme­nt that some bits of the summit will be shown live, and the possibilit­y of a joint news conference, Moon seems intent on keeping the North Korean leader at ease, and an aggressive local media at bay, while engineerin­g a summit meant to move the Koreas from what seemed like the brink of war last year to the engagement that the liberal Moon has always dreamed of.

This mindset could make it hard for Moon — keen on creating a legacy-defining moment that will set up Kim’s summit with President Donald Trump in the coming weeks — to resist whatever media controls the North demands.

“The South Korean government is so anxious and invested to ensure the Kim-trump summit happens, and isn’t a failure, that acceding to media choreograp­hy is a very small price to pay when Kim and Moon meet,” Vipin Narang, a Koreas specialist at MIT, said by email. “If Kim asks for it, I don’t see the South Koreans pushing back too hard.”

At home, thousands of people work to craft Kim’s image. Even when Kim traveled to China this month, the self-censoring Chinese media and the autocratic government in Beijing helped cloak the trip in secrecy.

While Kim may not be able to control every aspect of what happens on the South Korean side of the DMZ, Seoul seems eager to make sure things go smoothly, even preparing a banquet that includes dishes from Switzerlan­d, where Kim studied during his teens.

Seoul also planned three days of extensive, closed-door dress rehearsals, one of them involving North Korean officials, leading up to the summit Friday. The informatio­n the world receives will likely be closely controlled: Except for a group of pool reporters at the summit, whose access may be extremely limited, journalist­s will be sequestere­d at a media center well away from heavily guarded Panmunjom.

 ?? Ahn Young-joon ?? The Associated Press file Kim Jong Un, right, will be in uncharted territory Friday when the third-generation autocrat crosses over to the southern half of the Demilitari­zed Zone and greets South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
Ahn Young-joon The Associated Press file Kim Jong Un, right, will be in uncharted territory Friday when the third-generation autocrat crosses over to the southern half of the Demilitari­zed Zone and greets South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

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