Start GRASP/Korea Making North Korea Great Again. How realistic are Kim's new year plans?

Making North Korea Great Again. How realistic are Kim's new year plans?

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Kim Jong Un’s annual New Year’s Day address is akin to the State of the Union for US Presidents.
The North Korean leader talked about factory jobs and coal. He talked about textiles and scientific research. He talked about domestic production of consumer goods. He even talked about green initiatives.
„We have created a mighty sword for defending peace, as desired by all our people who had to tighten their belts for long years,“ said Kim.
„This great victory eloquently proves the validity and vitality of the Party’s line of simultaneously conducting economic construction and building up our nuclear forces and its idea of prioritizing science, and it is a great historic achievement that has opened up bright prospects for the building of a prosperous country and inspired our service personnel and people with confidence in sure victory.“
It’s not exactly „Make North Korea Great Again,“ but it’s not wholly dissimilar either. In policy circles, Kim’s agenda is known as “ byungjin,“ a twofold strategy of investing in the economy and the nuclear program.
„The amazing thing that’s been hiding in the open is the North Korean game plan of byungjin,“ said John Park, director of the Korea Working Group at the Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.
According to Park, the North Korean regime under Kim has been very consistent in saying that its primary policy goal is the parallel pursuit of a nuclear deterrent for self-defense and the building of the economy.
To that end, Kim used the speech to call upon his rocket and nuclear industries to mass-produce the weapons that have already been successfully tested, while also pursuing economic advances, such as diversified energy sources.
Experts CNN spoke to believe Kim’s proclamations aren’t the wish-list of a delusional dictator, but rather a key set of priorities tallied by a calculating, pragmatic leader who plans to address the immediate challenges his country faces.
„Every year these speeches are primarily about the economic situation,“ said John Delury, a professor at Yonsei University’s Graduate School of International Relations in Seoul. Delury has listened to each of Kim’s speeches since the young leader took power in 2011.
„(But) Kim Jong Un is not pretending everything is groovy,“ said Delury. „He’s consistently acknowledged hardship and that the economic situation should be better. And he’s publicly committed himself to improving the economy.“
Key clues
Some of the proposals offered specific insight into the government’s evolving strategy, explained Rodger Baker, a vice president at the geopolitical analysis firm Stratfor.
Baker said in previous years, Kim had called for the construction of a national power grid in the electricity-starved country.

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