Kim
Jong Un's Uncle May Be The Beginning Of More Purges
PYONGYANG, North
Korea — The execution of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's uncle brought a
swift and violent end to a man long considered the country's second most
powerful. But while Jang Song Thaek is now gone, the fallout from his purge is
not over.
In a stunning
reversal of the popular image of Jang as a mentor and father figure guiding
young Kim Jong Un as he consolidated power, North Korea's state-run media on
Friday announced he had been executed and portrayed him as a morally corrupt
traitor who saw the death of Kim's father, Kim Jong Il, in December 2011 as an
opportunity to make his own power play.
Experts who study
the authoritarian country, which closely guards its internal workings from both
outsiders and citizens, were divided on whether the sudden turn of events
reflected turmoil within the highest levels of power or signaled that Kim Jong
Un was consolidating his power in a decisive show of strength. Either way, the
purge is an unsettling development for a world that is already wary of Kim's
unpredictability amid North Korea's attempts to develop nuclear weapons.
"If he has to
go as high as purging and then executing Jang, it tells you that everything's
not normal," said Victor Cha, a former senior White House adviser on Asia.
The first appearance
of the new narrative came out just days ago, when North Korea accused Jang, 67,
of corruption, womanizing, gambling and taking drugs. It said he'd been
eliminated from all his posts. Friday's allegations heaped on claims that he
tried "to overthrow the state by all sorts of intrigues and despicable
methods with a wild ambition to grab the supreme power of our party and
state."
"He dared not
raise his head when Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il were alive," it said,
referring to the country's first leader and his son. But after Kim Jong Il's
death, it claimed, Jang saw his chance to challenge Kim Jong Un and realize his
"long-cherished goal, greed for power."
The purge also
could spread and bring down more people, Cha said. "When you take out
Jang, you're not taking out just one person — you're taking out scores if not
hundreds of other people in the system. It's got to have some ripple
effect."
South Korean
intelligence officials say two of Jang's closest aides have already been
executed last month.
Narushige
Michishita, a security expert at the National Graduate Institute for Policy
Studies in Tokyo, suggested that Jang's removal shows "that Kim Jong Un
has the guts to hold onto power, and this might have shown his will to power,
his willingness to get rid of anything that stands in his way."
One of the biggest
opportunities for the world to see what may happen next will come on Dec. 17,
which is the second anniversary of Kim Jong Il's death. North Korea watchers
will be closely following whether Jang's wife, Kim Kyong Hui, the younger
sister of Kim Jong Il, and other figures are present in the official ceremonies
marking the day.
Jang's removal
leaves no clear No. 2 under Kim, whose inner circle now includes Vice Marshal
Choe Ryong Hae, Premier Pak Pong Ju, and Kim Yong Nam, the ceremonial head of
state.
News of Jang's
execution was trumpeted across the nation by North Korea's state media — with
unusually vitriolic outbursts on TV, radio and in the main newspaper — as a
triumph of Kim Jong Un and the ruling party over a traitor "worse than a
dog" who was bent on overthrowing the government.
Pyongyang residents
crowded around newspapers posted at the capital's main subway station to read
the story. State media said Jang was tried for treason by a special military
tribunal and executed Thursday.
"He's like an
enemy who dares to be crazy enough to take over power from our party and our
leader," said Pak Chang Gil, echoing the media's official line. "He
got what he deserved."
That's a long way
from the popular perception that "Uncle Jang" was nurturing his
nephew as a regent appointed by Kim Jong Il. Jang was seen prominently behind
Kim Jong Un as he walked by his father's hearse during his 2011 funeral. He was
also a fixture at the new leader's side as he toured the country.
The KCNA report was
unusually specific in its accusations. It criticized Jang for not rising and
applauding his nephew's appointment to a senior position because Jang
"thought that if Kim Jong Un's base and system for leading the army were
consolidated, this would lay a stumbling block in the way of grabbing the
power."
It stressed
repeatedly that Jang had tried to assemble a faction of his own, suggesting the
purging process could still be playing out.
Jang's death could
herald a "reign of terror," including more purges, said Lim Eul Chul,
a North Korea expert at South Korea's Kyungnam University.
Another question
mark is how the purge will impact North Korea's relationship with its only
major ally, China. Jang had been seen as the leading supporter of Chinese-style
economic reforms and an important link between Pyongyang and Beijing. China has
called Jang's execution a domestic issue and has avoided further public
comment.
North Korea has
recently turned to attempts at diplomacy with South Korea and the United
States. But tensions have remained high since Pyongyang's threats in March and
April, which included warnings that it would restart nuclear bomb fuel
production.
Another resident of
Pyongyang, Ri Chol Ho, said he did not believe Jang alone was deserving of the
harshest punishment.
"For this
group of traitors who were going to destroy our single-hearted unity, execution
is too lenient," he said. "They should be torn up and thrown into the
rubbish bin of history."
Klug reported from
Seoul. Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim and Eun-young Jeong in Seoul and
Ken Moritsugu in Tokyo contributed to this report.


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