The Mercury News

Kim looks to cement power in homeland

- By Anna Fifield The Washington Post

SINGAPORE >> Kim Jong Un has chalked up a lot of firsts since taking power at the end of 2011: His country’s first hydrogen bomb test. Its first launch of an interconti­nental ballistic missile. And the first crossing of the demilitari­zed zone by a North Korean leader since the Korean War.

He will rack up another one Tuesday in Singapore, when he becomes the first North Korean leader to meet with a sitting U.S. president. It will be the most important day to date of his expectatio­n-defying reign.

“This is an epoch-making moment,” said Ken Gause, an expert on North Korea’s leadership at CNA, a research group based in Virginia. “Even if this is just a meet-and-greet, it’s going to be a huge event simply because the president of the United States and the head of North Korea actually sat at the same table.”

Both leaders have a penchant for making bold decisions and a love of the limelight. Yet both want this meeting to be more than just a photo op.

For President Donald Trump, it offers an opportunit­y to prove his self-described masterful negotiatin­g skills and score a diplomatic victory after a year of “maximum pressure” on North Korea.

As for Kim, his objectives are clear, and eminently relatable for the American president.

“Kim Jong Un wants to make North Korea great again,” said Kim Il-guk, who raised money for the regime before escaping from the North in 2014. “He wants to get rid of the internatio­nal sanctions so North Korea can make more money and become a great country.”

When Kim Jong Un succeeded his father more than six years ago, he inherited a totalitari­an state known mainly for its brutal repression, widespread malnutriti­on and bellicose propaganda department.

Kim, then just 27, had no leadership qualificat­ions other than being born into the cult establishe­d by his grandfathe­r after World War II with the backing of China and the Soviet Union. Many analysts, in Washington and Seoul, thought North Korea’s days were numbered.

But Kim has not just survived, he has arguably thrived. He has presided over astonishin­g advances in nuclear and missile technology and had potential rivals for power killed, including his uncle and his half brother. And

this year, he has embarked on a charm offensive that has global leaders — from China, South Korea, Japan, Syria and Russia — seeking to meet him.

But Tuesday brings the jackpot: A meeting with the head of the world’s No. 1 superpower that will legitimize Kim as a leader — an equal, even — in a way that eluded both his predecesso­rs.

“This unpreceden­ted meeting with the U.S. president will make Kim Jong Un feel very proud, having achieved something his father and grandfathe­r didn’t,” said Joo Seong-ha, who escaped from North Korea and now writes about the country for South Korea’s Dong-A Ilbo newspaper.

And although “maximum pressure” may have helped bring Kim to the negotiatin­g table, the other reality is that he is coming to the summit from a position of relative strength, said Kenneth Dekleva, a former State Department diplomat and psychiatri­st who has profiled leaders including Slobodan Milosevic and Vladimir Putin, as well as the two most recent North Korean leaders.

“Kim is strong, confident and very well-prepared — including the technical details of denucleari­zation — for the upcoming summit. He has in effect staked his reputation on having a successful summit,” Dekleva said.

It would be “folly” to look at Kim’s relative youth and inexperien­ce and underestim­ate him, he said, noting that Trump once memorably called Kim a “smart cookie.”

The North Korean leader is following a plan he laid out early in his tenure.

In 2013, he announced a “dual-track” policy to advance both the nuclear program and the economy, a shift from the “military first” approach of his father.

To prove his military chops, he first focused on the nuclear program, pouring his country’s meager resources into building increasing­ly long-range missiles and what is widely acknowledg­ed to be a hydrogen bomb.

After a year of alarming tests, Kim announced in November that his weapons program was complete. That was the signal he was ready to turn to the economy.

And so he did. Starting on New Year’s Day with an olive branch to South Korea, Kim has embarked on a strategy designed to portray him as the responsibl­e leader of a nuclear-armed state, just like the leaders of the United States, China and Russia.

The goal: To boost the economy by getting rid of the internatio­nal sanctions imposed as punishment for last year’s provocatio­ns, or at least getting Beijing to stop implementi­ng them. About 90 percent of North Korea’s trade goes to or through China.

“This is his top priority,” Kim Seok-hyang, professor of North Korean studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul, said of Kim’s focus on the economy. “In 2012, Kim Jong Un promised his people that they would never be hungry again. But he has not been so successful at that so far.”

Malnutriti­on remains chronic, with the World Food Program estimating that 40 percent of the population is undernouri­shed. But Kim’s pledge to end hunger is not about caring for his people. In the tradition of his dynasty, he has shown blind disregard for North Koreans’ well-being, channeling money into the nuclear weapons program rather than providing medicine for hospitals, books for schools or electricit­y for homes.

For Kim, this appears to be an existentia­l issue. He is now ready to take care of his people solely because he wants to take care of himself.

Like his father and grandfathe­r before him, he wants to die a natural death in office.

His father, Kim Jong Il, was 53 when he took control of North Korea, so all he really had to do was to hold on for 20 or so years (he lasted 17). He didn’t need to change anything, said Andrei Lankov, a Russian historian who studied at Kim Il Sung University in Pyongyang and periodical­ly visits North Korea.

But Kim Jong Un was 27 when he was bequeathed the country. Now 34, he could have as many as 50 years in power ahead of him. Kim Il Sung lived to 82.

“He can’t afford to do nothing,” Lankov said. “For that reason, he is trying to revive the economy. He wants to keep people’s stomachs full of food and their hearts full of fear.”

Kim Jong Un has endeavored to show that North Korea is becoming a modern country through showcase projects concentrat­ed in the capital, including high-rise apartment towers, amusement parks and sushi restaurant­s.

But that doesn’t mean he’s about to embark on Chinese- or Vietnamese-style reforms that could loosen his grip on the regime. Instead, he wants “reforms without openness,” Lankov said.

“He wants to reduce the gap with North Korea’s neighbors so that people will give him a chance to stay in power,” he said. “Chances are not high that he will die a natural death at age 75, but he needs to try.”

For a young person, it makes sense to take this risk.”

 ?? KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY — KOREA NEWS SERVICE ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un wants to come out of the summit looking like the responsibl­e leader of a nuclear-armed state.
KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY — KOREA NEWS SERVICE North Korean leader Kim Jong Un wants to come out of the summit looking like the responsibl­e leader of a nuclear-armed state.

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