The Boston Globe

Kim marks anniversar­y with parade of missiles

Russian, Chinese delegates show deepening ties

- By Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was joined by senior Russian and Chinese delegates as he displayed his most powerful nuclear-capable missiles in a military parade marking a major war anniversar­y with a show of defiance against the United States and deepening ties with Moscow as tensions on the peninsula are at their highest point in years.

Kim attended Thursday night’s parade with Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chinese ruling party official Li Hongzhong from a balcony looking over a brightly illuminate­d Kim Il Sung Square, named after Kim’s grandfathe­r, the founder of North Korea.

Edited footage from North Korean state TV on Friday showed streets and stands packed with tens of thousands of mobilized spectators, who roared in approval as waves of goose-stepping soldiers, tanks, and huge, interconti­nental ballistic missiles wheeled out on launcher trucks filled up the main road. People were brought from around the country to the capital, Pyongyang, to fill the crowd, according to state media.

The parade began with warm-up events that featured ceremonial flights of newly developed surveillan­ce and attack drones, which were first unveiled by state media this week as they reported on an arms exhibition attended by Kim and Shoigu.

The main event began with Kim arriving at the square in a limousine escorted by a formation of motorcycle­s. Kim saluted honor guards and military officials and walked down a red carpet to enter a building where Shoigu and Li greeted him at the balcony, as troops below chanted “protect Kim Jong Un with our lives!”

Organizers broadcaste­d messages in Russian, Chinese, and Korean while introducin­g Kim’s guests to the crowd, drawing cheers and applause.

As the parade proceeded, Kim was constantly talking and exchanging smiles with Shoigu and Li, who respective­ly stood to his right and left at the balcony’s center.

Kim and Shoigu repeatedly raised their hands to salute the parading troops. The broadcast did not show Kim making a speech.

Kim’s biggest weapons were saved for the end, when his troops rolled out new ICBMs that were flight-tested in recent months and demonstrat­ed ranges that could reach deep into the US mainland, the Hwasong-17 and Hwasong-18. Some analysts say the missiles are based on Russian designs or know-how.

North Korean Defense Minister Kang Sun-nam spoke, describing the parade as a historic celebratio­n of the country’s “great victory” against “US imperialis­t aggression forces and groups of its satellite states.”

He condemned the United States for its expanding military exercises with South Korea, which the North portrays as invasion rehearsals, and also holding new rounds of nuclear contingenc­y planning meetings with Seoul.

The allies describe their drills as defensive, and say the upgrades in training and planning are necessary to cope with the North’s evolving nuclear threat.

“We solemnly declare that if they attempt military confrontat­ion as now, the exercise of our state’s armed forces will go beyond the scope of the right to defense for the United States of America and (South Korea),” Kang said, repeating previous North Korean threats of nuclear conflict.

“The US imperialis­ts have no room of choice of survival in case they use nuclear weapons against the DPRK,” he said, using the initials of his country’s formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Clouds over Pyongyang in recent days made it difficult for satellites to monitor preparatio­ns for the parade, which took place at night.

North Korea’s invitation of Russian and Chinese delegates was a rare diplomatic opening since the start of the COVID19 pandemic. Experts say Kim is trying to break out of diplomatic isolation and boost the visibility of his partnershi­p with authoritar­ian allies to counter pressure from the United States.

The parade followed meetings between Kim and Shoigu this week that demonstrat­ed North Korea’s support for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and added to suspicions the North was willing to supply arms to Russia, whose war efforts have been compromise­d by defense procuremen­t and inventory problems.

North Korean state media also highlighte­d a message sent by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who thanked Kim for “firmly supporting” his war efforts in Ukraine. Putin said that interests between Moscow and Pyongyang were aligning as they counter the “collective West in its policy to stand in the way of establishi­ng a genuinely multipolar and just world order,” according to the Kremlin’s version of the letter.

Kim also held a luncheon and dinner banquet for Shoigu and his delegation following a second day of talks about expanding the countries’ “strategic and tactical collaborat­ion and cooperatio­n” in defense and security, the North’s official Korean Central News Agency said.

“Given Russia’s need for ammunition for its illegal war in Ukraine and Kim Jong Un’s willingnes­s to personally give the Russian defense minister a tour of North Korea’s arms exhibition, UN member states should increase vigilance for observing and penalizing sanctions violations,” said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.

He added, “China’s representa­tion at North Korea’s parading of nuclear-capable missiles raises serious questions about Beijing enabling Pyongyang’s threats to global security.”

 ?? AFP PHOTOS/KCNA VIA KNS ?? Above, North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, guided Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu to a banquet hall in Pyongyang. At left, a ballistic missile was paraded in Kim Il Sung Square.
AFP PHOTOS/KCNA VIA KNS Above, North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, guided Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu to a banquet hall in Pyongyang. At left, a ballistic missile was paraded in Kim Il Sung Square.
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