North Korean leader’s son rises as likely successor

SEOUL (Reuters) – North Korea’s ailing leader Kim Jong-il has named his youngest son as a military general, state media said early today, marking the first stage of a dynastic succession.

It was the first time the 20-something Kim Jong-un had been mentioned by name in the North’s media, and his appointment came just hours before the start of a rare ruling party meeting to elect its supreme leadership.
Kim Jong-il, 68, is believed to have suffered a stroke in 2008, but despite his declining health is not expected to go into retirement just yet, experts say. They say his son is too young and inexperienced to fully take the reins.

State news agency KCNA said Kim had issued a directive bestowing military rank on six people including Jong-un, the leader’s sister Kyong-hui and Choe Ryong-hae, who is considered a loyal aide of Kim and his family.

Kim Jong-il “indicated in the directive that he … confers the military titles to members of the Korean People’s Army with the firm belief they will complete their honorable mission and duty on the occasion of the 65th anniversary of the Workers’ Party of Korea,” the report said.

Intelligence officials say the youngest son of the “Dear Leader” was identified last year as next in line to take power in a country which for years has been punished by international sanctions for trying to develop nuclear weapons.

The son is believed to have been born in 1983 or 1984 but little is known about him, even by intensely secretive North Korean standards, beyond the sketchy information that he went to school in Switzerland and has been his father’s favourite.

Regional powers will be keeping close tabs on the Workers’ Party conference, the biggest meeting of its kind for 30 years, for any signs of change which could have an impact on the destitute state’s economic and foreign policies.

Washington said it was too early to tell how the country’s leadership may be evolving or how other nations should respond.

“The United States is watching developments in North Korea carefully and we will be engaged with all of our partners in the Asia-Pacific region as we try to assess the meaning of what’s transpiring there,” Kurt Campbell, the top US diplomat for the Asia-Pacific region, told reporters.

Financial markets see the preferred outcome of the meeting as an approximate continuation of the current system. The biggest concern is any sign of collapse that could result in internal unrest, massive refugee flows and military exchanges.

China and Japan are the world’s number two and three economies and, with South Korea, account for close to 20 percent of global economic output. Instability on the Korean peninsula could have grave implications for the global economy.

“Should the conference itself open the door for an orderly leadership change and in one way or another economic reform, we see a great deal of underlying, long-term economic benefit for a united Korean economy,” said Goohoon Kwon, Korea economist and co-head of research at Goldman Sachs in Seoul.

At the last such party meeting three decades ago, Kim, then aged 38, embarked on the path to succeed his father Kim Il-sung, the state founder, by taking on a Workers’ Party title.

“It’s striking that the big announcement coming out of a party conference is not a party position but a military position,” said Marcus Noland, a North Korea expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

“This attests to the centrality of the military in governing North Korea today,” he said, adding this followed the pattern of his father’s succession.