Kim Jong-un Appointed General in First Official Hint He Will Be Next Leader of North Korea

Daily News Article   —   Posted on September 28, 2010

Note: This article is from the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph.

Kim Jong-un and Kim Jong-il(by Peter Foster in Beijing, Telegraph.co.uk) – North Korea’s ailing dictator Kim Jong-il appointed his youngest son a four-star general on Tuesday, giving his country the first official hint that he will be their next leader.  (PHOTO: North Korean leader Kim Jong-il (right) with his third son Kim Jong-un.  Photo: EPA)

Hours after Kim Jong-un, 28, was given his first known official position in North Korea’s 1.2 million-strong army, his name was mentioned for the first time in public by the country’s state media, in a move analysts described as highly significant.

The apparent confirmation that Kim Jong-un is now actively being groomed to succeed his ailing 68-year-old father came as hundreds of delegates travelled to the capital Pyongyang to attend the largest meeting of the ruling Workers Party [in] 30 years.

“As expected, the dynastic transition is becoming public. So far, they are following the pattern we saw in the 1970s when Kim Jong-il himself was moving to become the new Dear Leader. The difference is that this time they seem to be in a great hurry,” said Andrei Lankov of Seoul’s Kookmin University.

“It took almost a decade of ‘unofficial’ propaganda before Kim Jong-il’s name was first mentioned in an open media, and for his son the process took less than two years. It seems that Kim Jong-il and his entourage are not certain how long the current Dear Leader will stay with us.” The state television announcer, after saying that Kim Jong-il had been reappointed as general-secretary of the Workers’ Party, added that a “crucial” development was under way, but gave no further details.

After the bestowal of his new military rank, Kim Jong-un is expected to be appointed to a number of key party positions as the conference progresses, including the central committee of the ruling politburo. [Politburo is defined as the principal policy-making and executive committee of a Communist party.]

Kim’s sister Kim Kyong-hui, who was also appointed a four star general and has been increasingly seen at her brother’s side on military inspections and field visits, is also expected to receive promotions in what analysts described as a “belt and [suspenders]” approach to keeping power in North Korea firmly within the Kim family.

Remarkably little is known about Kim Jong-un, who spent several years being educated in Switzerland, where his classmates have recalled a young man with a quick temper and a passion for America’s National Basketball Association.

His introduction to the North Korean public has been hasty by North Korean standards, a reflection, say analysts, of concerns that Kim Jong-il’s health is now failing fast. The “Dear Leader” suffered a stroke in 2008 and is also rumoured to have pancreatic cancer.

Before his first official mention on state media, Kim Jong-un has been the subject of a two-year propaganda campaign, with patriotic songs and poems promoting his virtues, according to leaked South Korean intelligence.

Other reports say that Kim junior had already been hailed as the “Young General” and “Our Commander,” with soldiers and workers pledging allegiance to the son on his birthday in January.

Regional powers, including China, Japan, Russia and the U.S., are watching developments in Pyongyang closely, anxious for a stable transition of power at a time when tensions on the Korean peninsula have been at their highest level for a decade following the sinking of a South Korean warship [by North Korea] last March.

Analysts say the true test of the succession plans will come after Kim Jong-il’s death when Kim’s close aide Jang Song-taek is expected to play regent to the young Kim.

“There could be some strife within the ruling elite but a military coup or any other major upheaval is hardly likely because the elite think they and the Kims are in the same boat,” said Moo-Jin of Seoul’s University of North Korean Studies.

“Such conflicts might become latent or rise to the surface depending on how well Kim Jong-un’s guardians back him up.”

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Background

KIM JONG-IL (AND HIS FATHER KIM IL SUNG) - from guardian.co.uk/world/2010/sep/26/north-korea-new-leader-kim:

ON THE NORTH KOREAN GOVERNMENT: (from the CIA World FactBook)