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Kim-Xi meeting presents a new challenge for Trump on North Korea

March 28, 2018 at 9:55 a.m. EDT
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made a surprise trip to China. He met with Chinese President Xi Jinping. (Video: Reuters)

BEIJING — A secretive meeting between North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and China’s Xi Jinping this week showcased enduring bonds between the two countries, highlighting the diplomatic challenge facing President Trump.

Kim, making what was believed to be his first foreign trip as leader, arrived in Beijing aboard a slow, armored train Monday and met with President Xi and other senior Chinese officials, according to North Korean and Chinese media.

The “unofficial” visit, which was not announced until after Kim left China, came just weeks before the North Korean leader is scheduled to see South Korea President Moon Jae-in, followed by a planned summit with Trump. 

The Beijing meeting, analysts said, was staged to show that North Korea-China ties are back on track, as underscored by photographs of energetic handshakes and an account of a heartfelt toast from Kim.

Footage from North Korean propaganda gives us a glimpse inside the regime’s armored leadership train. The train may have paid a visit to Beijing this week, with mystery passengers on board. (Video: The Washington Post)

 The message to the United States: Any moves on North Korea must go through Xi. 

Trump showcased China’s gatekeeper role in a tweet Wednesday, saying Xi told him that plans for a U.S.-North Korea summit appear on track.

“Received message last night from XI JINPING of China that his meeting with KIM JONG UN went very well and that KIM looks forward to his meeting with me,” Trump wrote. “In the meantime, and unfortunately, maximum sanctions and pressure must be maintained at all cost!”

North Korea leader meets with China president in ‘unofficial visit’ to Beijing

Adam Mount, a senior fellow and director of the Defense Posture Project at the Federation of American Scientists, said Beijing is “reasserting itself” and “looking to shape the agenda for the upcoming summits.”

“Divisions between Beijing and Pyongyang were a major asset to Trump’s pressure campaign,” he said, adding that a reinforcement of their ties would weaken Trump’s hand in negotiations and “diminish further the effectiveness of U.S. military threats.”

Ni Lexiong, a military expert at the Shanghai University of Political Science and Law, said Kim was using conflict between China and the United States to “obtain benefits from both sides.”

In international media coverage, Kim is often portrayed as an irrational madman, more of a punchline than a person, let alone a leader. Trump has referred to him as “little Rocket Man” in tweets.

Kim’s diplomatic debut will make it harder to dismiss him outright, experts said.

“We’re seeing a carefully crafted North Korean strategy on diplomacy unfold on the world stage, starting with Beijing,” Jean H. Lee, a North Korea expert and fellow at the Wilson Center in Washington, said in an email. 

“Shutting China out and ramping up the rhetoric with the United States gave [Kim] the space and justification he needed to expedite the building of nuclear bombs and ballistic missiles,” she wrote. “Now, with a program he feels confident is a proven threat, he feels emboldened to force the region’s leaders to treat him as an equal, not as the young son of a dictator who inherited power.” 

China’s official statement on Kim’s visit, annotated

China’s Xi may take issue with “equal.” There have been few signs that Xi is fond of Kim. 

Only two years into his reign, Kim had his uncle, who was North Korea’s main liaison with China, executed for building his own power base. 

Then, in 2016, as Xi was hosting a Group of 20 summit on his home turf, Kim presided over the launch of three medium-range ballistic missiles, stealing the spotlight. The South Korean military called the move an act of “armed protest” against Xi.

When Xi sent a top official to Pyongyang last year, Kim did not even see him.

Successive American administrations have called on China to use its economic leverage over North Korea to exert control. But analysts say that China’s main priority has always been stability and that it does not want to do anything that could cause the collapse of the Kim regime, which could bring millions of hungry refu­gees — and, it fears, U.S. troops — to its door.

Amid increasing talk of military options from the Trump administration, China seemed more willing to act. It has been more carefully enforcing sanctions, conducting intrusive inspections of cargo and cutting off key North Korean exports, including seafood and workers. 

Those efforts helped bring Kim back to the table. “Amid the tightened sanctions, rapprochement with China has become a practical need of great urgency for North Korea,” said Cheong Seong-chang, an expert on North Korea’s leadership at the Sejong Institute near Seoul.

In the short term, experts see the meeting as a sign that the Trump summit is likely to go ahead. Kim can now enter those talks with more confidence. 

“The visit is a breakthrough of the diplomatic isolation imposed on North Korea,” said Cai Jian, executive director of the Center for Korean Studies at Shanghai’s Fudan University.

He said that Kim, having shaken hands with Xi, heads into the negotiating room with “more useful bargaining chips, or a more advantageous position to negotiate with the West.” 

Fifield reported from Tokyo. Luna Lin, Amber Ziye Wang and Yang Liu in Beijing, Min Joo Kim in Seoul and Brian Murphy in Washington contributed to this report.

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