Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Kim’s sister emerges as successor

NKorean leader’s sibling leads charge against South Korea

- By Choe Sang-Hun The New York Times

SEOUL, South Korea — When North Korea decided to join the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea and kick off a giddy period of rapprochem­ent on the peninsula, its charm offensive was fronted by a smiling face: Kim Yo Jong, the only sister of the North’s top leader, Kim Jong Un.

Now, as Kim threatens to extinguish the fragile détente with a new cycle of bellicose actions and military provocatio­ns, it’s his sister who is again speaking for the nation, this time heaping scorn on South Korea — a signal of her deepening clout in the hereditary regime.

“It was sickening to listen to his speech,” Kim Yo Jong said of the South’s leader, Moon Jae-in, in a statement Wednesday, referring to his message this week calling for peace on the Korean Peninsula. “He seems to be insane, though he appears to be normal outwardly.

“So I decided to prepare a bomb of words to let it known to our people,” she said.

In North Korea, few leaders other than Kim Jong Un can issue first-person statements like that.

But Kim Yo Jong, 32, who is her brother’s top spokeswoma­n and policy coordinato­r, wields far more power than is suggested by her age and meager titles: first deputy department­al chief in the ruling Workers’ Party and an alternate — not a regular — member of its Politburo.

Her influence in a hierarchy studded with aging generals and party secretarie­s derives from the “revolution­ary blood” coursing through her body. She is a granddaugh­ter of Kim Il Sung, North Korea’s founder, who is still revered as a godlike figure in the North.

That makes her a potential candidate — even in the North’s deeply patriarcha­l culture — to replace her brother, who is believed to be 36, should he die or become incapacita­ted.

Kim Yo Jong’s systematic rise adds a sense of continuity to North Korea’s succession plans, analysts said.

In North Korea, future top leaders must build credential­s as someone who can stand up against South Korea and the United States.

“What we see right now is North Korea working out a contingenc­y succession plan in case Kim Jong Un’s health goes bad,” said Yoo Dong-ryul, a North Korea specialist at the Korea Institute for Liberal Democracy in Seoul.

“The problem with Kim Yo Jong as successor is that she is a woman and is still too young,” he added. “So her brother is helping her lead the offense against South Korea and establish her leadership so she can dissipate any reservatio­ns the hard-line stalwarts in the military and party might have about her.”

Kim Jong Un’s long absences from public view in recent months have spurred speculatio­n about whether he was seriously ill, what might happen to the North’s nuclear arsenal and who would succeed him if he became incapacita­ted. If he had to give up power, none of his three children — all believed to be preteens — are old enough to take over.

Kim has an older brother, Kim Jong Chol, who is said to have been considered by their father to be too effeminate to lead the highly militarize­d country. He has never been seen in public with his younger brother.

In 2017, Kim had his half brother, Jong Nam, assassinat­ed in Kuala Lumpur. He also executed his uncle Jang Song Thaek.

Kim has another uncle, Kim Pyong Il, 65, who was recalled home last year after decades of serving as a low-key ambassador to Eastern European countries. But after being away for so long, he has no power base in Pyongyang. Kim’s aunt, Kim Kyong Hui, Jang’s wife, is ailing.

All this leaves Kim Yo Jong the most likely hereditary successor if her brother dies before his children grow up, analysts said.

Since last week, North Korea’s state news media has depicted her as the orchestrat­or of a rapid-fire series of statements and moves that have raised tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

On Tuesday, the North blew up the inter-Korean liaison office in the border city of Kaesong, and a day later, the North Korean military threatened to resume drills along the disputed western sea border with the South.

Kim Yo Jong’s offensive claimed a first political casualty in South Korea on Wednesday. The unificatio­n minister, Kim Yeon-chul, stepped down, taking responsibi­lity for the deteriorat­ion in relations with the North, which has followed the South’s failed efforts to mediate between North Korea and the United States.

The North’s turn toward animosity with the South — and, by extension, the United States — may reflect a desire to unify the country in the face of an economy further hobbled by the coronaviru­s pandemic and of a deepening need to push for concession­s on internatio­nal sanctions, said LeifEric Easley, a professor of internatio­nal studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul.

Placing Kim Yo Jong up front in North Korea’s growing confrontat­ion with Seoul and Washington may also give Kim “diplomatic flexibilit­y” if he wants to change course, Easley said.

Whatever the motivation behind the growing tension, it has made one thing clear: Kim Yo Jong’s consolidat­ion of her position as the true No. 2 in her brother’s government, said Lee Seong-hyon, an analyst at the Sejong Institute, a research center in South Korea.

“As she leads the offense against South Korea like a general, it silences those old hard-liners in the Politburo who may think she cannot be the leader,” Lee said.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN/AP ?? A man in Seoul, South Korea, views a news program showing Kim Yo Jong, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s sister.
LEE JIN-MAN/AP A man in Seoul, South Korea, views a news program showing Kim Yo Jong, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s sister.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States