Los Angeles Times

North Korea putting on a show of strength

- By Steven Borowiec and Jonathan Kaiman jonathan.kaiman@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Borowiec reported from Seoul and Times staff writer Kaiman from Beijing.

SEOUL — North Korea, relatively small nation that it is, will do its best Saturday to convince the world — and particular­ly the United States — that it’s not to be trifled with.

North Korea plans an exceptiona­lly large display of its military power to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the ruling Workers’ Party of Korea. Soldiers and citizens will gather in Pyongyang, the capital, for the main event: a parade featuring goose-stepping soldiers, ballistic-missile launchers, long-range selfpropel­led guns and slogans celebratin­g the party’s power.

Pyongyang organizes carefully choreograp­hed displays of military might to drum up patriotism and push the narrative that North Korea needs a strong military to withstand outside forces who wish it harm, analysts say.

“This large display is a way of demonstrat­ing that North Korea is defying internatio­nal pressure,” said Bruce Klingner, senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation in Washington.

Public gatherings are planned in cities around the country, and Daily NK, a Seoul-based news website with sources in North Korea, reported this week that North Koreans were put to work cleaning and decorating for the occasion. They also were ordered to give money to local officials, ostensibly to chip in for the costs of the celebratio­n, the website reported.

Saturday’s military parade is expected to be one of North Korea’s biggest. Satellite images released this week by 38 North, a North Korean affairs website affiliated with Johns Hopkins University, showed that organizers have been gathering troops and equipment for the parade at an air base near Pyongyang for six months. By August, there were more than 500 tents, 600 trucks and 170 armored and other military vehicles at the air base, 38 North reported.

In the long lead-up to the big day, experts have speculated that North Korea would launch a rocket. The U.S. and United Nations consider such events a veiled way of testing ballistic missile technology amid fear that Pyongyang could seek to mount a nuclear warhead on a missile.

North Korea has not conducted a nuclear test since its third, in early 2013, leading to speculatio­n about when the next test could come. Since then, North Korea has regularly issued strongly worded statements arguing that the developmen­t of nuclear weapons is its right as a sovereign state.

But anxiety over a possible launch has faded. Late last month, 38 North released satellite imagery that showed none of the signs of preparatio­n at the launch site that are usually detected a week or two in advance.

North Korea successful­ly launched a long-range rocket in 2012 but also has tried and failed twice. Earlier in 2012, a launch intended to mark the centenary of founder Kim Il Sung’s birth ended with the rocket breaking up and crashing into the sea.

This time, experts say, Pyongyang may have decided to play it safe and avoid risking the embarrassm­ent of a launch gone wrong.

“They likely judged the risk of failure to be too high,” said Kim Bo-geun, a North Korea analyst at the Hankyoreh Unificatio­n Institute in Seoul. “A failed launch around such an important day, when they’re trying to appear strong, would be a huge loss of face.”

One thing that hasn’t changed is North Korea’s wariness of the United States. Combat in the Korean War, which pitted the China-backed communist North against the U.S.-supported capitalist South, ended in 1953 with an armistice but no peace treaty. Pyongyang still considers the U.S. an enemy and sees American military bases in South Korea as an active threat.

The Workers’ Party of Korea has had an uninterrup­ted grip on power in North Korea since the country was founded in 1948.

The party is led by the Kim family dynasty, which is now in its third generation with young leader Kim Jong Un. He took the helm in 2011 after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il.

Although China remains by far North Korea’s most important ally and trading partner, their relationsh­ip has become frayed in recent years, with Beijing appearing to lose patience with Pyongyang over its refusal to give up its nuclear program.

Unlike a recent parade in Beijing to mark the defeat of Japan in World War II, Pyongyang’s gathering is not expected to draw any heads of state.

Chinese President Xi Jinping “extended warm congratula­tions” to Kim on the party’s anniversar­y, the official New China News Agency reported Friday, but Beijing dispatched Liu Yunshan, a high-ranking member of the Communist Party’s Politburo standing committee, to attend the parade.

 ?? Ed Jones ?? A GUIDE waits for visitors at North Korea’s War Museum in Pyongyang. The capital is gearing up for a lavish celebratio­n of the ruling party’s 70th anniversar­y.
Ed Jones A GUIDE waits for visitors at North Korea’s War Museum in Pyongyang. The capital is gearing up for a lavish celebratio­n of the ruling party’s 70th anniversar­y.

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