
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visits Samjiyon City, North Korea in this undated photo released on November 16, 2021 by North Korea鈥檚 Korean Central 好色先生TV Agency (KCNA). KCNA via REUTERS
SEOUL 鈥 After 10 years in power, North Korea鈥檚 once youthful Kim Jong Un is now one of the world鈥檚 more experienced leaders, and will look to defy the West for decades to come with his nuclear arsenal, analysts say.
Unlike most of his counterparts, with no concerns over elections or term limits and age on his side 鈥 he is only in his late 30s 鈥 Kim can expect to remain in office for decades, as long as his health holds up.
It is a far different perspective to a democratic politician worrying about headlines every day, and Kim already has more experience in power than most heads of state he will deal with in the future.
The arc of his first 10 years points to the trajectory to come, analysts say, from isolation to nuclear development to sharing the diplomatic stage with the world鈥檚 most powerful leaders.
鈥淣orth Korea will maintain its confrontational status with the United States and harass it by tactically challenging it while making sure it doesn鈥檛 cross the line to completely derail its relations,鈥 Kim Jin-ha, researcher at the Korea Institute for National Unification, told AFP.
For more than six years after inheriting power when his father and predecessor Kim Jong Il died on December 17, 2011, Kim did not leave his isolated country or meet any foreign heads of state.
Initially seen by some as a figurehead for North Korea鈥檚 generals and Workers鈥 Party bureaucrats, he brutally established his authority, executing his uncle by marriage Jang Song Thaek for treason.
He was also accused of the assassination at Kuala Lumpur airport of his elder half-brother Kim Jong Nam with a nerve agent.
At the same time, Kim oversaw rapid progress in North Korea鈥檚 banned weapons programmes.
He conducted four of its six nuclear tests and the 2017 launches of ballistic missiles that can reach the whole of the US mainland, defying increasingly severe UN Security Council sanctions along the way.
For months, he traded fiery rhetoric with then US president Donald Trump, raising fears of an armed conflict on the Korean Peninsula.
Then he declared the country鈥檚 nuclear arsenal 鈥渃omplete鈥 and came knocking on the door of the outside world.
聽鈥楩ortuitous alignment鈥
With the assistance of dovish South Korean President Moon Jae-in, in 2018 Kim became the first North Korean leader ever to meet a sitting US president at a headline-grabbing Singapore summit.
Soo Kim, an analyst at the RAND Corporation, said Pyongyang鈥檚 nuclear arsenal was largely what made the encounter possible.
鈥淣orth Korea鈥檚 development of its weapons programme, the credibility of the nuclear and missile threat, and the fortuitous alignment of leadership 鈥 Trump, Moon, and Kim 鈥 helped prime the conditions,鈥 she said.
With just one meeting, the chubby young leader charmed the American businessman and reality TV host 鈥 some 40 years his senior.
Trump boasted of forming a 鈥渟pecial bond鈥, even 鈥渓ove鈥, with someone he had once mocked as 鈥渓ittle rocket man鈥.
The same year, Kim chatted in the woods with the Moon and had several meetings with Xi Jinping of China 鈥 North Korea鈥檚 primary backer.
鈥淭he effect was tantalising,鈥 said Sung-yoon Lee, professor of Korean Studies at Tufts University.
鈥淭he cruel, funny-looking dictator had transformed himself into a reform-minded, peace-prone, responsible steward of nukes and gulags perhaps amenable to denuclearisation.鈥
The amicable mood was short-lived: a second Trump-Kim summit in Hanoi collapsed over sanctions relief and what Pyongyang would be willing to give up in return.
Trump quickly flew out of the Vietnamese capital and Kim took a 60-hour train ride back home empty-handed.
A follow-up meeting in the Demilitarized Zone that divides the Korean peninsula did nothing to break the deadlock.
鈥楥ommon adversary鈥
North Korea鈥檚 dynastic regime and the ruling Workers鈥 Party base their claim to a right to rule on nationalism, from asserting responsibility for the end of Japanese colonialism after World War II, to 鈥渨inning鈥 the 1950-53 Korean War, to defying the United States ever since.
Officials and analysts say Kim never intended to fully give up his nuclear arsenal, which North Korea has pursued for decades at vast cost in resources and isolation, and is still developing further.
鈥淗e can鈥檛 feed the people, but he鈥檚 able to maintain his regime鈥檚 political survivability鈥 with his weapons, said Soo Kim of RAND Corporation. 鈥淎nd this is more important to Kim.鈥
And with the United States set for long-term tensions with China, Kim will have an opportunity to follow the example of his grandfather Kim Il Sung.
North Korea鈥檚 founder adeptly exploited Cold War tensions between Moscow and Beijing to play one Communist state off against another.
The ties between Pyongyang and Beijing 鈥 forged in the Korean War when their forces fought South Korea and a US-led UN coalition to a standstill 鈥 were 鈥渁 love-hate relationship between two 鈥榝renemies'鈥, said Professor Lee of Tufts University.
鈥淣either adores the other, but recognises that the other is its closest ally in terms of strategy, ideology, history, and in taming the US, the common adversary.鈥
鈥楥onsiderable success鈥
Kim has only to look across the border to China to see how increasing prosperity over many years can bolster the popularity of a one-party state.
But 鈥 to Beijing鈥檚 frustration 鈥 while North Korea has acquired bombs and missiles, its state-led economy has been mismanaged for decades, even before sanctions, and its people suffer chronic food shortages.
With a vulnerable health system, last year it closed its borders after the coronavirus emerged in neighbouring China.
The self-imposed blockade remains in place, and while Pyongyang insists it has yet to see any cases of the disease 鈥 analysts doubt the claim 鈥 Kim has admitted resulting hardships and warned his people to prepare for the 鈥渨orst-ever situation鈥.
鈥淓conomically, North Korea is at the very bottom in the international order,鈥 said Park Won-gon, professor of North Korean studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul.
鈥淏ut with its nuclear arsenal, it is able to exercise its influence between two world powers, the United States and China,鈥 he added.
鈥淚鈥檇 call that a considerable success on Pyongyang鈥檚 part.鈥
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