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In a first, Kim Jong Un will attend a gathering of leaders with both Putin and Xi

In this photo provided by the North Korean government, its leader Kim Jong Un speaks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the phone at an undisclosed location in North Korea, Aug. 12. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image and its content cannot be independently verified.

In this photo provided by the North Korean government, Kim Jong Un speaks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the phone at an undisclosed location in North Korea, Aug. 12. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image and its content cannot be independently verified. Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP hide caption

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Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP

SEOUL, South Korea — When North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visits China next week for a military parade, he’ll make his debut at a large gathering of foreign leaders, an event with the heads of China, Russia and North Korea all together for the first time.

The Sept. 3 parade marks the end of World War II after Japan’s formal surrender to Allied forces. China’s Foreign Ministry says the event commemorates China’s victory over “Japanese aggression.”

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Kim’s decision to attend the event was reported by South Korean and North Korean news outlets.

China’s State Council this week published a list of 26 leaders it said would attend that would also include the leaders of Iran, Cuba, Belarus and Serbia. Slovakia is so far the only NATO member on the list.

North Korea rebalances ties with Moscow and Beijing

This will also be Kim’s first known visit to China since 2019. He and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met five times between 2018 and 2019.

But since then, Kim has drawn closer to Russia, signing a mutual defense treaty with the Kremlin and sending thousands of troops to Russia to fight Ukraine.

“This is a major mending of the fence, I would say, between China and North Korea,” says John Delury, a Seoul-based senior fellow at Asia Society, a nonprofit educational organization. “This puts the strategic relationship of the leaders back on some kind of even keel.”

With President Trump trying to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine, Delury says that Kim may be anticipating that he will have less leverage with Moscow, and may want to consider resuming talks with the U.S.

Trump said this week at a summit meeting with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung that he hopes to meet again with Kim, as he did three times in 2018 and 2019.

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A possible opening for Trump

In addition to Kim seeing the need to improve ties with China, Delury says, the North Koreans could also be “looking over their shoulder at Donald Trump, and see what may be in play with the Americans.”

Kim’s sister Kim Yo Jong has indicated that Pyongyang has no interest in resuming talks with the U.S. But she said in a statement in state media that Trump and Kim have a “special personal relationship” and can meet again if the U.S. drops its “outdated way of thinking.”

The South Korean government national security adviser Wi Sung-lac said in an interview with the country’s CBS radio that it would be best to keep expectations about engagement with North Korea low, for now. Although, he said, Kim’s China trip “is a development that requires close attention.”

South Korean President Lee will not attend the parade, but the government will be represented by Parliamentary Speaker Woo Won-shik.

Concerns of a new cold war grouping

Doo Jin-ho, senior researcher at the Korea Research Institute for National Strategy, is quoted by South Korea’s Kyunghyang Shinmun newspaper as saying Kim’s attendance at the parade suggests the emergence of a “new Cold War structure,” with North Korea relying on Russia for military cooperation and China for economic relations.

China and Russia have cooperated in helping North Korea avoid international sanctions imposed because of its nuclear and missile programs. 

And China and North Korea have helped Russia in different ways with its war in Ukraine. But the three countries’ loose alignment is not institutionalized, unlike the U.S., South Korea and Japan, which established a trilateral secretariat last year.

Nor have China, Russia and North Korea held trilateral military drills, as the U.S. and its allies have.

Chinese media, meanwhile, have focused on preparations for the parade, and China’s contributions to victory in World War II, officially known in the country as the “Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression.”

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That conflict started with Japan’s invasion of Manchuria in 1931, a decade before Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. Some 35 million Chinese soldiers and civilians were killed or wounded in the conflict, according to official Chinese government figures.

The People’s Daily newspaper quoted leader Xi Jinping on a visit to a battlefield memorial last month, instructing the nation to “tell the story of the War of Resistance well, and pass on the great spirit of the War of Resistance from Generation to Generation.”

NPR’s Se Eun Gong contributed to this report in Seoul.

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