Miami Herald

Kim Jong Un set to helm key 2024 policy meeting at the peak of his powers

- BY JON HERSKOVITZ Bloomberg

Kim Jong Un is expected to preside over a major policy-setting meeting with renewed power owing to advances by North Korea’s military and economy that would allow him to rebuff US pressure to wind down his nuclear arms programs.

Kim’s ruling Workers’ Party of Korea will hold a plenary session of its Central Committee before the end of the year where it will lay out a path for 2024, state media reported. While no dates have been given, in the past few years the event has taken place over several days in the last week on the calendar.

Kim is arguably at the peak of his power since he took office about a dozen years ago, with arms transfers to Russia in recent months likely boosting his sanctions-hit economy. His weapons program has also made significan­t gains that included the test this month a new missile designed to deliver a warhead to the U.S. mainland and the apparent commission of a long-stalled nuclear reactor that could significan­tly add to plutonium production.

“Nucleariza­tion and bolstering his country’s military readiness will remain topline items for Kim next year,” said Soo Kim, a former Korea analyst at the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, who now works at US-based management consulting firm LMI.

Rather than trying to strike a deal with the current US administra­tion, the North Korean leader “may find it more constructi­ve and beneficial to wait things out” until the presidenti­al election in 2024 is over, Soo Kim said.

Meantime, Kim Jong Un has a new asset to further his nuclear ambitions. The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency said last week that North Korea has commission­ed a lightwater reactor that has been in the works for years.

“The LWR, like any nuclear reactor, can produce plutonium in its irradiated fuel, which can be separated during reprocessi­ng, so this is a cause for concern,” Rafael Grossi, the director general of the United Nations atomic watchdog agency, said in a statement.

While North Korea in recent years has relied on its uranium enrichment program to provide the bulk of its fissile material, the new reactor could produce 10 to 20 kilograms (22 to 44 pounds) of plutonium a year, according to estimates from experts. The nation now produces about 6 kgs of plutonium a year at what had been its sole nuclear reactor, enough for about one nuclear bomb, according to data compiled by the Congressio­nal Research Service.

Plutonium is likely a better fit for the state’s miniaturiz­ed nuclear warheads than highly enriched uranium, experts have said, and the reactors used to produce the material are likely capable of producing tritium, which North Korea can use to build thermonucl­ear devices with far greater explosive force than a convention­al nuclear bomb.

Twelve months ago, Kim Jong Un pledged to increase his nuclear arsenal in the coming year to counter what he called hostile acts by the US and South Korea. That vow came in a policy address where he left almost no opening for a return to long-stalled disarmamen­t talks.

His state conducted missile tests that simulated nuclear strikes, fired off five interconti­nental ballistic missiles and put its first spy satellite into orbit in 2023.

Kim this month made a rare admission that North Korea faces a population crisis that could undermine the labor-intensive economy, and he may use the meeting to lay out plans to reverse a declining birthrate.

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