Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Like father, like son

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NKANSAS CITY STAR orth Korea’s new leader served up a surprise during recent celebratio­ns of his grandfathe­r’s 100th birthday. At a massive military parade, Kim Jong Un spoke for 20 minutes in a speech broadcast live across the country. It was a dramatic departure from the habit of his father, whose voice wasn’t heard by the populace until he shouted a one-line exhortatio­n..

But if anyone expected the country’s youthful dictator to pursue a new approach, they were disappoint­ed. Kim said his “first, second and third” priorities would be to make the military stronger. In his remarks, he perpetuate­d the illusion that North Korea was a rising power by proclaimin­g that military technology was no longer “monopolize­d by imperialis­ts.”

Not mentioned was the country’s recent attempt to launch a satellite into orbit, and what that failure suggested about the real state of the North’s technologi­cal capacity.

Nor did Kim mention that the decision to launch—in defiance of earlier pledges not to test long-range missiles—prompted Washington to terminate plans for a round of food aid to the famine-weakened country.

Before his accession to power, some analysts had wondered whether Kim Jong Un might chart a course to ease North Korea’s severe isolation and the poverty of its people.

He was, after all, educated in Switzerlan­d, where he was a fan of NBA star Michael Jordan. But published reports say he was a poor student who spent much of his time playing computer games and basketball.

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