Introduction
Successful hereditary succession in communist regimes was unheard
of until Kim Jong-il inherited power from his father Kim Il-sung in 1994. Kim
Il Sung founded North Korea in 1948 and over the years the source and
legitimacy of his power morphed away from popular power and became based on a
kind of divine right, a right that separated his bloodline from any other and
made his descendants the only ones with the legitimacy to rule. Fast forward to
the death of Kim Jong-il on December 17, 2011, his son (Kim Il-sung’s grandson)
assumed the mantel of power for the next generation.
Kim Jong-un was only 28N1 and became the youngest
world leader to have nuclear weapons at his disposal. He was Kim Jong-il’s fourth
child and so wasn’t the clear choice to become Supreme Leader until relatively
soon before Jong-il’s death. In fact, he was such an unknown that prior to his
ascent, even the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency only had a single
picture of him as an eleven-year-old.
In the decade since Kim Jong-un became the Supreme Leader
and Marshall of the Republic, North Korea has become a fully-fledged nuclear
weapons state, he held the first-ever meeting between a North Korean leader and
a sitting U.S. president, he has placed the Worker’s Party of Korea back into
the center of governance (reversing the policy of his father), and the regime
embarked on billions worth of construction and tourism programs. All the while killing
relatives, enduring food shortages, maintaining a vast prison system, and is
currently struggling with the greatest economic downturn since the 1994-98
famine due to COVID-19.
Kim Jong-un has a family, laying the foundations for a
future fourth generation of Kim rule if he manages to maintain control for succeeding
decades. But the chances of a successful future lie in his actions during this
first decade.
The purpose of this multi-part series is to examine the
history, challenges, successes and failures of Kim’s first decade in power and
to probe whether or not a future decade is likely based on the performance of
the last.
A lot has transpired these ten years and new challenges such
as Kim’s health, abrupt changes in U.S. foreign policy, and other unforeseen
events can have a major impact on the future of North Korea. The last decade
gives us a template to consider how Pyongyang may react to such events and
reminds us that they always carry the risk of swamping the man and the
apparatus of state.
This series will be broken down into these primary themes:
· Kim entering leadership and consolidating power
· Nuclear and ballistic developments
· Foreign affairs and diplomatic efforts
· Economic developments and construction
· His health and the health of the country
· Looking toward the next ten years
Additionally, occasional supplemental articles may be added
to help expand certain topics that are relevant to Kim’s first decade and will
be based on the findings of the AccessDPRK
2021 Pro Map.
It is important to avoid caricatures and popular biases when
investigating a county and a man already viewed in the popular imagination as
unstable and irrational; a view often prompted by reports in mass media. While
occasional literary flourishes may be used throughout this series, I have
endeavored to present a fair and accurate accounting of the facts of this last
decade and will not shy away from objective successes or indulge in a tragedy of
horrors to fit certain political narratives.
Kim Jong-un is a complex individual and North Korea is a
nation of 25 million other individuals all with their own hopes and dreams, who share 75 years of history. Attempting to minimize their experiences or
warp them through overt political lenses does not serve the wider debate and
dishonors the realities of life in North Korea as best as we can understand it
from an outside perspective.
I have scheduled this project to run through to the end of
the year, with a new article coming out roughly every 10 days or so. If you
would like to support the project and help me with research costs, please
consider supporting AccessDPRK on
Patreon. Those supporters donating $15 or more each month will be entitled
to a final PDF version of all the articles together that will also have
additional information included once the series is finished. They will also receive
a Google Earth map related to the events in the series.
Supporters at other levels will be sent each new article a
day before it’s published and will also receive a mention as seen below.
I
would like to thank my current Patreon supporters:
Amanda O., GreatPoppo, Joel Parish, John Pike, Kbechs87, Russ Johnson, and ZS.
Note 1: Kim Jong-un’s birth year is uncertain. It is either 1982 or 1983 but is generally accepted to be 1983 based on U.S. and South Korean sources.
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