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China-Japan-Koreas
Dear Leader, Dead Leader?
2009-07-18
North Korea's coming transition presents dangers and opportunities.
by Claudia Rosett

Will North Korea's ailing Dear Leader soon be the Dead Leader? Speculation has been swirling around recent North Korean television footage of a haggard Kim Jong Il, his face gaunt, his once-thick hair receding. Believed to have suffered a stroke last August, Kim, now in his late 60s, has recently been described in South Korean media reports as stricken with pancreatic cancer.
He looks like death warmed over, or at least we hope ...
As ever with North Korea, which has no free press or free speech whatsoever, much remains murky. These latest reports on Kim's health attribute the cancer information to unnamed Chinese and South Korean intelligence officials. The U.S. State Department has refused to comment, apart from such stuff as a spokesman's quip Monday that Kim "didn't look in the pink of health."

Among U.S. policymakers, lists have been circulating of likely candidates to succeed Kim. High-profile names include Kim's 26-year-old son, Kim Jong Un, and Kim's 63-year-old brother-in-law, Chang Song Taek, a top-ranking official.
Jong Un is a lightweight. Chang's a player.
The BBC has background on Chang Song Taek ; the North Korean Economy Watch blog wrote a piece back in 2005 about Chang Song Taek's career.
But how a transition of power might play out inside North Korea is even less clear than what's wasting Kim. Unlike a democracy, North Korea's totalitarian regime has no clear transition process. Kim Jong Il has ruled as pretty much a one-man show. He has been godfather of North Korea's global rackets, including its nuclear program, since inheriting the helm in 1994 from his late father, Kim Il Sung--who ruled for 46 years after being installed by Stalin when North Korea was founded, in 1948.

According to a March 16, 2009 report from the Congressional Research Service, since Kim fell ill last year, "A collective decision-making apparatus has emerged, apparently headed by his brother-in-law, Chang Song-Taek." But even that won't tell you much about what comes next.

What is clear is that more than ever, there's an urgent need in Washington for contingency plans on this rogue state. North Korea's regime has established itself as a hub of trouble in Northeast Asia, trafficking missiles and nuclear technology to the Middle East, producing nuclear weapons and issuing apocalyptic statements such as recent threats to wipe America off the globe and drown South Korea in a nuclear "fire shower." Pyongyang's officials have become expert over the years in translating all this into diplomatic shakedown rackets that help sustain the regime.
Posted by:Steve White

#1  Gotta believe that someone will lose their temper and instead of being tossed out of power will instead toss a war shot across the border into Seoul.
Posted by: OldSpook   2009-07-18 12:44  

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