North Korea's Kim sacks No. 2 military official
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[January 02, 2023]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea has sacked Pak Jong Chon, the second most
powerful military official after leader Kim Jong Un, state media
reported.
Pak, vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the ruling
Workers' Party and a secretary of the party's Central Committee, was
replaced by Ri Yong Gil at the committee's annual meeting last week, the
official KCNA news agency said on Sunday.
No reason for the change was given. Pyongyang regularly revamps its
leadership and the year-end party gathering has often been used to
announce personnel reshuffles and major policy decisions.
State television showed Pak sitting in the front row of the podium with
his head down during the meeting while other members raised their hands
to vote on personnel issues. His seat was later shown unoccupied.
He was also absent in photos released on Monday by the official KCNA
news agency of Kim's New Year's Day visit to the Kumsusan Palace of the
Sun which houses the bodies of his grandfather and father, unlike in
October when Pak accompanied Kim on a trip to the palace to mark a party
anniversary.
The party's Central Military Commission, which is headed by Kim, is
considered the country' most powerful military decision-making body,
above the defence ministry. \
Pak's replacement came as Kim called for developing new intercontinental
ballistic missiles and a larger nuclear arsenal to counter the United
States and South Korea as key to the isolated country's 2023 defence
strategy.
Pak had rapidly moved up the military ladder from a one-star artillery
commander in 2015 to a four-star general in 2020, taking credit for
contributing to progress in the country's short-range missile
technology.
In late 2020, Pak was promoted to the politburo and earned the title of
marshal, the highest military rank under Kim, and became a leading voice
last November against joint South Korea-U.S. military exercises.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attends
a session of the sixth enlarged meeting of the eighth Central
Committee of the Workers' Party, in Pyongyang, North Korea, in this
photo released on January 1, 2023 by North Korea's Korean Central
News Agency (KCNA). KCNA via REUTERS
Like most other top military aides who went through ups and downs
repeatedly under Kim, Pak was briefly demoted in mid-2021 after Kim
chided some officials for their handling of North Korea's
anti-coronavirus policy, before being promoted again months later.
Pak's dismissal comes despite Kim mostly lauding the military's
advances in weapons development during the meeting, unlike other
areas where he pointed out some faults and called for improvement.
Oh Gyeong-sup, a fellow at the Korea Institute for National
Unification in Seoul, said a recent flare-up in inter-Korea tension
over North Korean drones' intrusion into the South could have played
a role.
Officials in Seoul said South Korea sent three drones across the
border in response to the intrusion, but there was no response from
the North, which Oh said could mean that it failed to detect the
aircraft.
"Pak might have taken responsibility for the failure of security
operations," Oh said.
Ri, Pak's successor, is also a senior military commander who held
key positions including chief of the army's general staff and
defence minister.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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