Introduction
Throughout this series, I have tried to draw from numerous
sources to provide an accurate accounting of the first decade of Kim Jong-un’s
rule and to limit the number of my own opinion-based comments. For this final
article, opinion is about all that anyone could offer. Informed opinion, but
opinion and supposition, nonetheless.
People have offered predictions about North Korea since its
inception. That there was no way it could survive the Korean War. That Kim
Il-sung would end the nuclear program. That Kim Jong-il would falter in the
face of famine and the whole system would collapse. That Kim Jong-un couldn’t
handle power at such a young age or that war is inevitable.
Those predictions were all wrong. At the same time, plenty
of other predictions have been right. That the government would survive the
famine because it didn’t care about cutting less desirable citizens off from
food. That the country would achieve nuclear miniaturization. That it wouldn’t
stop illicit trade activities regardless of the United Nations and especially
regardless of the United States.
So, this ‘look to the future’ opinion piece is just as
likely to be wrong and to be right and to have areas of grey as the future
unfolds and becomes the present. With that caveat, I will attempt to look at
the trends of the last decade, the changes, and what’s stayed the same from Kim
to Kim to Kim to inform my own views of what the next decade of Kim Jong-un’s
rule may look like.
COVID and the Economy
The most pressing issue that Kim Jong-un will have to
resolve is that of economic contraction due to his lockdown of the country over
COVID-19 fears. After two years of very limited trade and internal quarantine
measures, the economy is suffering more than it has at any other point during
his rule and the food situation, in particular, has reached a critical point.
Although illicit activities have continued unabated,
bringing in hundreds
of millions each year, there is little indication that those funds are
being used to prop up the economy; rather, they are most likely being used to
maintain Kim’s lifestyle, provide gifts to the elites to keep their loyalty,
and to continue the country’s military buildup.
As such, legal trade must resume before a crisis becomes inescapable, leading to future disease outbreaks (such as from
tuberculosis), a limited famine, or even popular unrest. Kim will also have to
consider finally allowing vaccines into the country as COVID-19 stops being a
pandemic and transitions to an endemic global illness that will be around for
years.
Leaving no opportunity behind, the COVID lockdown actually provides Kim the opportunity to
gain greater control over the broader economy and over the economic activities of the
people as the ‘border blockade’ has made it even more difficult for unapproved
cross-border trading to continue. This places the state in a better position to
control and monitor what goods come into the country, and it has set up at
least two decontamination centers to help facilitate the resumption of trade:
one in Sinuiju and one at the Port of Nampo.
A test
run at the Sinuiju center recently took place on January 17, 2022, when a
train entered North Korea from China after a two-year border shutdown resulted
in an 80% drop in trade with the country. The outcome of the train visit and
how well the government thinks the Sinuiju facility handled the operation may
allow for a slow resumption of trade in the near future.
One twist in North Korea’s economic story has been how Kim,
in the early years, allowed limited reform and the markets to continue to grow,
but under COVID he has reverted back to more anti-market policies,
desperately trying to reign in free market activities and strengthen the
state’s central control over the economy. How this struggle against
marketization will play out is anyone’s guess, but one complication that Kim is
currently having to deal with and will continue to need to contain in future
years is the “tyranny of growing
expectations”.
As people
become accustomed to a certain living standard, they begin to expect more from
their government and begin to expect that life in the future will be better
than what they have today. In a growing globalized world, this works itself out
through expanding free markets and liberalized governments. But in North Korea
and other closed states in the past, it can turn into a major threat to the
regime as the government cannot compete with the gains made by
marketization, and as the people realize that the outside world is much
wealthier and freer than what they have at home.
Kim Jong-un
made improving living standards and access to consumer goods a key pillar of
his rule since the beginning. Promising no more ‘belt tightening’ in 2012, the
government is today telling people that they should expect food shortages until
at least 2025. After the moderate but measurable rise in living standards of
the last 10-15 years, if the government isn’t able to maintain upward growth,
then the popular pressure of growing expectations can serve to destabilize the
regime.
Should this
meld with other pressures against the current system, an inescapable domino
effect may occur in the future, leading to the end of the state. This has been
one of the biggest threats to the Kim’s and it is something they have managed
to avoid thus far, but no one knows where the ultimate tipping point lies.
Regardless of
economic reforms or further ossification, one thing, of course, that continued
throughout the pandemic and will continue well into the future is North
Korea’s illicit activities. Whether it’s selling counterfeit goods, money
laundering and theft, or busting sanctions with oil, fish, luxury goods, and
other commodities, the state will keep relying on these ill-gotten millions
each year to try to stabilize the system and keep the elites in lockstep with
Kim Jong-un.
Weapon Development
Missile development is the next most important
issue as Kim Jong-un works toward realizing his “wish list” as laid out in his
speech to the 8th WPK Congress in January 2021. This list includes everything from developing improved ICBMs to hypersonic glide vehicles to
tactical nuclear bombs and other weapon systems.
Kim Jong-un spent much of 2021 testing multiple weapons and showed off a wide range of equipment (some known, some new) during the “Self Defense 2021” exhibition. He also began 2022 with a series of seven missile launches that included its longest-range missile test since 2017.
Since the failed summits, North Korea has embarked on a
series of technology demonstrators like the hypersonic glide vehicles (showing
off two different designs) and rail-based missile launches. Having declared the
country’s nuclear deterrent complete, Kim is going to need to continually
develop new delivery methods and to improve his nuclear arsenal’s
survivability, as it currently relies on a limited number of large, slow-moving
TELs that cannot be easily replaced. This helps to explain the proliferation of
weapon designs as well as radar and improved air defense systems.
I believe that future nuclear tests are unlikely, but they can’t be ruled out as Punggye-ri still has two functional tunnels. And after North Korea implied that the self-imposed moratorium on testing would no longer be adhered to, it does place future tests on the table.
In terms of sanctions, I think that it is unarguable that they
have been an abject failure. Upwards of two hundred thousand citizens are still
locked in prison camps, the country has tested nuclear weapons and created
miniaturized warheads, North Korea has missiles that can reach the United
States, and the Kim family is still firmly in control. However, one reason why
sanctions have failed is that the enforcement of those international
sanctions is rooted in each individual UN member state’s own interpretations of
the sanctions and their own willingness to enforce them.
China has been integral to North Korea’s ability to skirt
sanctions and carry out illegal activities. And while China occasionally gets
tired of Pyongyang’s behavior and temporarily gets stricter with enforcement,
the existence of North Korea is within their own national self-interest. This
means that China will never do anything that might directly cause the collapse
of the current government short of North Korea declaring war or causing
significant damage to China itself.
Therefore, absent greater international pressure on China to
plug the enforcement leaks and loopholes, China will continue to be North
Korea’s lifeline and Kim Jong-un will continue using this to his advantage.
Until China becomes willing to strictly enforce sanctions or
until either the United States or South Korea becomes willing to cave on major
issues (all unlikely scenarios), North Korea is going to keep testing
weapons. The goal of complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization
(CVID) is now completely unrealistic unless the United States is willing to go to
war, which it hasn’t been despite the murder of multiple US military personnel
and the assassination of multiple South Korean officials over the decades.
In my view, the only viable option is that of arms control,
limiting the number of warheads and their yields, limiting the range of
missiles, and limiting the numbers of launchers North Korea can have in
exchange for substantial sanctions relief.
However, the human rights situation complicates matters as does
Pyongyang’s history of ignoring agreements.
At least in the near term, we should certainly engage in
talks but the longer-term position is likely to
be merely “wait and see,” as neither side seems willing or capable of making the
difficult decisions or want to risk losing face, and as North Korea hasn’t been
patient enough for slower confidence-building measures prior to more
substantial agreements.
Human Rights
Domestically, human rights abuses will assuredly continue. Kim Jong-un has shown little inclination to degrade the state’s
system of prison camps and he has ramped up internal surveillance to levels not
seen since Kim Il-sung.
Although Camp 22 was closed under his watch in 2012, many of
the prisoners were merely transferred to other sites, and others are alleged to
have been allowed to starve to death to enable the camp’s closure.
In contrast, prisons in Pokchong-ni, Kangdong, Chidong-ri,
Yongdam, Nongpo, Chongjin, Hwasong, Pukchang, and others have all seen new
construction or renovations to their facilities. Additionally, public
executions outside of the prisons, within regular towns and villages, have
reportedly not ended and are now carried out for things like watching certain foreign media.
Since coming to power, Kim Jong-un has directed the Ministry
of Social Security, Ministry of State Security, the People’s Border Guards, and
other relevant agencies to crackdown on defections and unapproved cross-border
economic activity. In 2011, 2,706 defectors made it to South Korea. By 2018,
only 1,137 defectors were able to make it to the South. However, COVID-19 gave
Kim a great opportunity to ramp up the repression of freedom of movement.
Hundreds of new border guard huts and hundreds of kilometers
of new border fencing have been erected during the pandemic. While
anti-defection measures had been begun prior to COVID, nearly the entire
northern border ended up with a double row of electrified fencing since the
beginning of the pandemic. Although the ‘border blockade’ is ostensibly to prevent the
spread of the virus from Chinese persons and goods illegally crossing the
border, it has served to nearly end defections.
In 2021 a mere 63
defectors made it to South Korea.
Freedom of expression and thought have also come under
greater assault, especially in the last few years, as Kim has solidified his
rule and now looks forward to being the only Kim in charge for another
generation or two, in the model of his grandfather.
There is no greater threat to a closed society than
information and no greater threat to an authoritarian system than
individuality. It is said that blue
jeans helped bring down communism. This wasn’t because jeans come with guns
or brings down economies, but because they became a symbol of capitalism and
individuality. While the saying is overly simplistic, that basic article of
clothing became subversive and was a reminder that the free world and its
values were thriving, while breadlines and secret police were all communism had
to offer.
Similarly, North Korea has relied upon the group subsuming
the individual. The masses, as a unified whole, are what the North Korean government
and society are built upon. The individual only exists as an entity for so long
as they give themselves over the larger group and never turn their back on
socialism by highlighting their individuality or demanding to be treated as a human being equal to any other.
This feature of all authoritarian regimes, left and right,
is relied on to keep the masses in line and curtail any risk of nonconforming
thoughts and actions. It is this feature that Kim Il-sung wielded to such a
great effect that for a stretch of thirty years, almost no known public demonstrations or other
protests occurred.
And after the breakdown of the information cordon in the
1990s, it is this feature that Kim Jong-un must learn to wield again, or else he
will have to accept that permanent cracks in the system exist and may one day
bring the entire system crashing down.
To this end, more and more effort is being expended on
hunting down purveyors of smuggled media material, cell phone tracking and
blocking technology has been installed along the entire Sino-DPRK border, and the
government has taken greater
steps to punish officials and police who turn a blind eye toward or take
bribes to overlook illegal activity. Even
attacks on everything from non-traditional hairstyles to using foreign slang
have been couched in terms of national salvation – of restoring a true
socialist community by going after impure, reactionary elements.
Kim Jong-un has even leveraged South Korea’s desires for
diplomatic normalization to get the South Korean government to pass laws violating
human rights within the ROK merely to appease him. But all that has done is
hurt the South’s own legitimacy and standing as a democratic beacon in the
region while enabling Kim Jong-un to limit the flow of outside information and
culture into the country.
In my view, it’s hard to see a time when this rise in human
rights abuses will end so long as the invisible yet existential threat of COVID
exists. Of course, the government has never needed a real threat to its
existence to lash out at foreign elements within the self-proclaimed racially
and culturally pure North Korean community, but COVID happens to be a very real
threat and provides an excellent opportunity for Kim to maintain his veer
toward greater authoritarianism.
Future of Foreign Relations
Between assassinations, further missile and nuclear tests,
and a never-ending list of illicit activities, North Korea has become more and
more isolated under Kim Jong-un. The government’s anti-pandemic measures have
only exacerbated this with the removal of diplomatic and foreign aid staff from
the country. But North Korea has still tried to strengthen ties with China and
Russia, as well as Eastern European and African countries through the
exploitation of DPRK citizens as foreign labor and, occasionally, construction project
leaders.
The long and turbid history of North Korea’s interactions
with the world has created an unstable environment with little ingrained
goodwill or trust among all parties. Its history with the United States has been
particularly fraught.
The Clinton administration thought it had a workable deal in the development of the Agreed Framework, but the death of Kim Il-sung and subsequent famine
radically altered the world Kim Jong-il was forced to face, and the Bush
administration posed a much different threat in Kim Jong-il’s view after North
Korea was labeled as part of the Axis of Evil and with the eventual invasion of
Iraq. Under Obama, ‘strategic patience’ only allowed Kim Jong-il and eventually
Kim Jong-un to continue their military buildup and created no real progress on
the diplomatic front. With President Trump, ‘maximum pressure’ was about as
unserious a campaign as one could think of. Despite the horrifying bluster with
both sides threatening the annihilation of the other, maximum pressure was more
like moderate suggestions, particularly as international efforts continued to
hinge on China’s willingness (or lack thereof) to enforce the will of the
United Nations.
After a year of a new administration under Biden, it has
become obvious that the United States lacks
the bandwidth to deal with Kim Jong-un. In the face of continual missile
tests, failed summits, and mounting geopolitical problems elsewhere, Americans
and the international community itself seem to be going numb to Pyongyang.
Launches no longer draw the media attention they once did
and South Korea’s official announcements regarding activity at various nuclear
facilities have basically become exact copies of each other, with only the
dates changed.
In such an apathetic environment, it’s difficult to see how
any progress can be made. And as Russia and China continue to serve as
lifelines in the face of international will, dealing with Pyongyang can never
simply be a bilateral proposition.
Of course, the only reason anyone even cares about North
Korea is because North Korea made itself a problem. It has commanded the
world’s attention for generations through threats and belligerent actions. Receding
into the background is not the Kim way.
Kim Jong-un will eventually do something that catches the
world’s eye once again, and we can only hope that the international community
is willing to address whatever that is. Ignoring Pyongyang only emboldens the
regime. And while there may be no good options currently and although there
have been many failures over the years, discussion and diplomacy are still the
best policy – even in the absence of grand agreements or apocalyptic
threats.
Tomorrow’s Personality Cult
The half-life of the North Korean cult of personality is
roughly the reign of one Kim. During Kim Il-sung’s rule over the country, he
was a genuinely beloved and respected leader. The cult under Kim Jong-il fell
precipitously as upwards of 1 million North Koreans died under his watch, but
the state’s system of indoctrination from birth and its security apparatus
insured that the cult survived. Under Kim Jong-un, the cult has weakened
further, with many young people reportedly not caring about the great ‘Paektu
Bloodline’ or his alleged brilliance.
To counter this, Kim has taken multiple steps to shore up
the cult, and, assuming he survives another ten years, these steps can be
expected to continue as the cult forms one of the ideological pillars for the
state’s very existence and must be maintained.
During his first years, Kim tried to solidify his rule by
drawing direct comparisons between himself and Kim Il-sung. His appearance,
dress, more personable qualities, and even riding around on white horses, all
reminded the people that he was not just another leader but was the rightful
heir to Kim Il-sung.
Even his ability to complete the country’s nuclear program
and bring a United States president to cross the DMZ all underscored the
divine blood flowing in his veins. Still, younger generations have been far
more concerned with economic betterment and cultural exchanges than they have
been with ridged ideologies. And this poses a long-term threat to the
government.
Kim has taken the opportunities provided by COVID-19 to try
to reestablish a sense of national unity through a shared crisis, and in
doing so, has double-downed on the development of his own personality cult. To
do this, he has turned the sacrifice of personal liberties into an expression of true patriotism, for only the Kim family,
Juche, and the Monolithic
Ideological System can save the country.
As part of this, he has attacked foreign cultural
influences, particularly that of South Korean music and other entertainment, with
a key focus on rooting out these influences from among
the nation’s youth. A so-called “thought law” was implemented in 2021 that
goes after those using South Korean slang, efforts have been redoubled to
punish those watching foreign media, with executions in store for those accused
of distributing the material, and even personal fashion choices have been attacked as being anti-socialist and part of the corrupting influence
of capitalism.
With the information cordon that so dramatically cracked
under Kim Jong-il being reestablished and cross-border travel becoming ever
more difficult, Kim Jong-un is working toward rebuilding the ‘hermit kingdom’
of his grandfather, with as many vestiges of western influences wiped out as
possible. The end results being a population less susceptible to revolution,
greater government control over the people’s daily lives, less market activity,
and it has prolonged the longevity of the Kim family’s rule over the country.
Succession & Future of Government
With questions about Kim Jong-un’s health dogging his entire
reign, and the fact it is known that he has experienced medical emergencies,
the matter of succession is more pressing than it otherwise would be for a
ruler still in his thirties.
Kim Jong-un has made a series of structural changes to the
rules of the WPK that could, theoretically, allow for the future succession of a
non-Kim family member. He has also placed his sister, Kim Yo-jong, in positions
of moderate official power while giving her substantial practical authority.
She appears to be the most trusted person in his orbit and can routinely be
seen following behind her brother taking notes and keeping meetings/events on
track. Additionally, she has been given more leeway to voice her own views than
anyone since Kim Jong-il was still being groomed by Kim Il-sung.
Given that Kim doesn’t have any adult children, killed his
half-brother, and his other brother has largely been kept in the background,
this points to Kim Yo-jong being the de facto successor in the event of
an emergency.
Once Kim’s own children come of age, this is likely to
change but for the time being, Yo-jong can be considered to be the second most
important person in the country. While she lacks the needed official Party and
military titles to take over, what’s important is Kim Jong-un’s faith in her
and the fact that she has been able to build her own support base within the
Party and even the military.
Kim Jong-un will also continue to reform the government and
Party to fit the particular needs of his era. Loosening agricultural controls
to improve productivity, seeking greater government revenue via market
fees/taxes, the further militarization of the civilian police force, and the
ongoing shift away from the Songun Policy have all made their mark.
What’s more, is as Kim has replaced older Party apparatchiks
and military officers, he has opened up the opportunity to rearrange the inner
workings of both organizations to cut down on corruption (which drains money and
authority away from the central government), introduce and enforce his own
ideological views, and he can gradually set up frameworks to deal with major
crises of leadership such as if he became incapacitated or died, as well as to
develop a more robust command and control system regarding nuclear weapons.
Trying to understand the decision-making process and the
“why’s” within North Korea is often a form of reading tea leaves, but it is my
suspicion that the cumulative effect of Kim’s efforts on the structure of the
WPK and the military will lead to organizations that, in the end, will be
markedly more modern and forward-looking, creating a more viable system for
the future.
Final Thoughts
Contrary to predictions of the Kim regime collapsing or
that Kim Jong-un would be a Western-minded reformer, as Pratik Jakhar has noted,
his rule has been “remarkably resilient and consistent. Kim Jong Un has stayed
within the confines of the framework established by his grandfather Kim Il Sung
and inherited from his father Kim Jong Il. In the process, he has preserved
state oppression, class divisions, purges, military adventurism, economic
control and mandated glorification of the Kim family.”
Jakhar’s view sums up the last ten years and I believe it is
prescience for the next ten years as well.
Throughout this biographical series, we have seen that although
Kim has initiated a number of changes, they have been on the periphery and
still uphold the core values of the regime. Massive construction projects and
megafarms have always been part of Pyongyang’s agenda. The roots of North
Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs date to soon after the Korean
War and have melded into the national psyche, making their development an
integral part of the state’s legitimacy. And there has been no decline in
rampant human rights abuses nor has there been a move away from the personality
cult.
External forces always elicit responses and policy changes
to fit the moment, but they have followed tried and true formulas that have
kept North Korea going for 77 years. Meaningful structural changes to the way
things are done are never done in haste. What drift there has been over the
years since the early days of Kim Il-sung has largely been incremental, with
Party hagiographers and archivists taking care to erase any public trace of old
policies that are no longer supported by the current ideological flavor.
Over the next decade, Kim Jong-un will undoubtedly face new
challenges and will continue to face growing threats from within the country
such as information sharing and marketization. But if the last ten years have
taught us anything, it’s that he can be relied upon to employ terror
tactics within and without, and that he is only open to reform so long as that
reform can help ensure the state’s longevity and his premier position within
it.
And until China decides to step up its enforcement of
international sanctions, there is little reason to believe that things like missile tests, illicit trade, financial crimes, and human labor trafficking won’t continue.
~ ~ ~ ~
I have scheduled this
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