Analysis-N.Korea reshuffle signals military policy not top priority now,
analysts say
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[July 08, 2021]
By Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - New photos confirm North
Korea has demoted a military leader in a reshuffle that left the ruling
party's top body dominated by civilians, possibly signalling leader Kim
Jong Un's focus on the economy and frustration with bureaucratic
failures, analysts said.
Last week, North Korea announced the latest in a series of leadership
changes that may be the most significant reshuffle of top officials in
years.
State media has not given details of the personnel changes but analysts
believe they included demotions for those Kim blamed for causing an
unspecified "great crisis" with coronavirus lapses amid economic
problems and food shortages compounded by anti-pandemic border closures.
Photographs published in state media on Thursday of Kim visiting his
family mausoleum appear to confirm that Ri Pyong Chol, a top adviser who
plays a leading role in North Korea's ballistic missile and nuclear
programmes, has at least lost his position on the politburo Presidium.
Ri, who sometimes wears his military uniform, was seen in the photos
wearing civilian clothes and standing several rows behind Kim,
indicating his new role is unclear.
A new appointment in his place on the presidium did not appear in the
photos, and with those standing next to Kim all civilians, it appeared
the military had been "pushed down the pecking order", said Ken Gause, a
North Korea leadership specialist at CNA, a non-profit research and
analysis organisation based in the United States.
The military dominates affairs in North Korea and there is no suggestion
that will change in the long term, but the changes may signal that for
the time being, Kim is unlikely to resume nuclear brinkmanship while he
focuses on problems at home, Gause said.
"The focus internally is on the economy, not the nuclear programme," he
said.
'REWIRE THE REGIME'
It was hard to determine Ri's fate, let alone draw conclusions about
what signal this is meant to send in terms of North Korea's strategic
weapons programme, said Rachel Minyoung Lee, an analyst at the
U.S.-based 38 North programme, which studies North Korea, noting that he
may be fully reinstated and even reclaim his presidium member title.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un speaks during a Report on Enlarged
Meeting of the 2nd Political Bureau of the 8th Central Committee of
the Workers' Party of Korea, in Pyongyang, North Korea in this image
released July 5, 2021 by the country's Korean Central News Agency.
KCNA via REUTERS
The photos also suggest that Choe Sang Gon, a party
secretary and director of the science and education department, lost
his position in the politburo, while Kim Song Nam, International
Department director, and Ho Chol Man, Cadres Department director,
may have been promoted to full members, Lee said.
Kim Jong Un has been frustrated by officials not accurately carrying
out his directives or communicating information up to him, and the
personnel changes may fit with broader efforts to "rewire the guts
of the regime" by devolving authority - but not power - down the
chain of command, Gause said.
"Kim has tightened his inner circle around a group of technocrats
and internal security personnel, the two sectors dedicated to making
Juche run at the moment," he said, referring to the North Korean
ideology of self-reliance.
"It is not a long-term plan, but temporary measure given the
extraordinary circumstances the regime is facing."
Michael Madden, a leadership expert at 38 North, said that what
looked like a demotion could often be part of a routine shuffle
aimed at preventing any one official from building up too much of a
power base, or an instance of reassigning a competent and trusted
official to handle a particular problem in a more hands-on role.
"Demotions are very common things in North Korea politics," he said.
"We need to keep in mind that things that look like demotions to us
can in fact be something else."
(Reporting by Josh Smith; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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