The Denver Post

Kim’s status rising as global statesman

- By Kim Tong-Hyung and Foster Klug

There’s no question that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is in full control of his nation. But a recent change to the way he’s being formally described in the North Korean Constituti­on may allow him even more diplomatic leverage as he steps with increasing confidence onto the world stage for negotiatio­ns over his powerful weapons program.

Despite a flurry of unpreceden­ted summits between Kim and the world powers that surround him, the outcome of that crucial diplomacy is very much in question amid currently deadlocked nuclear disarmamen­t talks and an outburst of North Korean weapons tests in recent weeks.

North Korea on Friday said that its rubber-stamp parliament will hold its second meeting of the year on Aug. 29.

It follows weeks of intensifie­d North Korean weapons tests and belligeren­t statements over U.S.-South Korea military exercises and the slow pace of nuclear negotiatio­ns with the United States.

Kim has said he said he would seek a “new way” if Washington doesn’t change its hard-line stance on sanctions relief by the year’s end, though experts doubt he’ll fully abandon diplomacy and give away his hard-won status as a global statesman.

President Donald Trump on Saturday said that Kim wrote him a “beautiful” three-page letter in which he expressed desire to meet once again to “start negotiatio­ns” after U.S.-South Korea military exercises end, and also apologized for the flurry of short-range missile tests.

The North’s new constituti­onal changes, which show Kim’s further consolidat­ion of his already formidable powers, could allow him to act more clearly as a diplomat on the world stage, technicall­y signing a peace treaty with Trump, for instance, or giving speeches at the U.N. General Assembly, analysts say.

The changes, which were only made public recently on the country’s Naenara website, appear linked to an unusual political reality in the North: While Kim Jong Un is the undisputed leader, it is Kim’s grandfathe­r, national founder Kim Il Sung, who is enshrined as North Korea’s eternal president.

Kim has governed from his position as chairman of Pyongyang’s powerful State Affairs Commission, which was establishe­d in 2016 to replace his father’s military-based National Defense Commission as the country’s top decisionma­king institutio­n.

The constituti­on makes clear that Kim’s role as chairman of the new commission makes him the country’s supreme leader. But it now adds that he also “represents the country.”

This signals potential changes from previous decades, analysts say, when it was the president of the presidium of North Korea’s parliament — the Supreme People’s Assembly — who acted as the ceremonial head of state.

“You could argue that the head-of-state business is meant to put Kim on the same plane as Xi, Trump or Putin. It certainly elevates his stature,” said Joshua Pollack, a senior research associate with the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey, Calif., referring to Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Whatever the new changes mean, no one, inside or outside the country, is disputing Kim’s status as the ultimate decision maker, and despite the new constituti­onal descriptio­n, he has already been doing highlevel diplomatic work on the world stage, releasing statements with Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in following those respective summits.

The North’s new constituti­on is the “Kim Jong Un Constituti­on,” according to South Korea’s Institute for National Security Strategy, a think tank affiliated with Seoul’s main spy agency. It is clearly designed with Kim’s future role in diplomacy in mind, including negotiatio­ns with the U.S. and also potential activities on the U.N. stage, the think tank said.

 ??  ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un may get more leverage from his country’s constituti­on
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un may get more leverage from his country’s constituti­on

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