Lodi News-Sentinel

North Korea leader Kim Jong Un presides over military parade

- Jon Herskovitz and Jeong-Ho Lee

North Korea staged its first militaryst­yle parade since Joe Biden became U.S. president, with leader Kim Jong Un presiding over an event where displays of his state’s weaponry were scaled down from previous exhibition­s.

There were no ballistic missiles rolled through the streets and national unity was highlighte­d in the event broadcast Thursday on North Korea’s state television to mark the anniversar­y of the country’s founding. It took place as the state battles one of its worst food shortages since Kim took power about a decade ago.

Kim didn’t speak but he waived, smiled and gave a thumbs up as thousands of goose-stepping paramilita­ry and public security forces marched through central Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, fixing their gazes to the balcony where the leader was watching.

The event opened with military marching bands, fireworks, and sky divers soaring through the air with North Korean flags affixed to their ankles. Unlike the last two parades, there were no major weapons systems on display.

Kim is struggling with an economy that has shrunk since he took power about a decade ago, thanks largely to sanctions imposed to punish the country for its nuclear weapons push. North Korea is also facing the most serious food shortage in Kim’s rule and he may have been using the event to help rally support at home.

The fact that North Korea held a parade to celebrate the anniversar­y of the state’s founding on what is considered a non-major anniversar­y year, “is unusual and underscore­s how much the country needed to bring the people together for a celebratio­n and instill a sense of pride in them,” said Rachel Minyoung Lee, a nonresiden­t fellow with the 38 North Program at the Stimson Center.

“Pyongyang clearly wants to keep its diplomatic options open for now, and that is why it toned down on the parade by making it a homeland security-centered parade rather than a military parade with big weapons,” she said.

Kim was greeted with thunderous applause as he appeared on a balcony overlookin­g the square in a light-colored, closely tailored suit, looking thinner than he did a few months ago. But the North Korean leader has so far shown no interest in sitting down with the Biden administra­tion, which has said it’s open for discussion­s and indicated it could offer economic incentives in exchange for disarmamen­t steps.

Kim has warned cadres in recent months to step up measures to protect against the coronaviru­s. North Korea says it has not confirmed COVID-19 cases — a claim doubted by the U.S., Japan and others — and has refused internatio­nal shipments of vaccines. The only people wearing masks were a few spectators away from the event among a small group taking photos on their mobile phones.

“It seems like the parade was largely for an internal audience, rather than sending diplomatic messages to Seoul or Washington,” said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, who has advised the South Korean government. North Korea paraded “less provocativ­e” military units such as reserved-force-like ‘Worker-Peasant Red Guards,’” he added.

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