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International News Title: Kim Missile Setback Raises Questions of N. Korean Leader’s Grip By Sangwon Yoon - Fri Apr 13 15:00:01 GMT 2012 Kim Jong Un suffered a public humiliation as North Koreas third-generation leader unlike any his father or grandfather faced after the totalitarian state admitted a long-range rocket failed shortly after liftoff. The launch was meant to mark the April 15 centennial of grandfather and state founder Kim Il Sung and further cement the younger Kims assumption of the family mantle, which the government has been burnishing since he took over in December. Its failure may raise questions of his hereditary hold on power as he deals with the countrys impoverished economy and international condemnation of its nuclear program. Its going to be destructive in North Korea, said Bruce W. Bennett, a senior defense analyst at Rand Corp. who is visiting Seoul. Theyre going to look at this as the failure of a young guy who hasnt shown his mettle yet. We really dont know the strength of his grip yet. South Korea warned that chances are very high that the regime will conduct a nuclear test to seek redemption and domestic support. The U.S. said the launch violated a February deal to give food assistance to North Korea and the United Nations Security Council met to discuss a response. Asian stocks climbed yesterday, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index rising 0.9 percent. The won rose 0.5 percent. The missile reached an altitude of 151 kilometers (93 miles) before disintegrating into 20 pieces and falling into the ocean 100 to 150 kilometers off the western coast, South Korean Major General Shin Won Sik said in Seoul. North Koreas state- run Korean Central News Agency said scientists are now looking into the cause of the failure. Public Admission The rare public admission contrasted with previous tests, and came after the regime invited foreign journalists to watch the launch. When North Korea fired a Taepodong-2 missile in April 2009 that crashed into the Pacific Ocean, it claimed it had been a successful launch of a satellite. North Korea promised transparency throughout this satellite launch to prove that it wasnt a missile test, said Yang Moo Jin, a professor at University of North Korean Studies in Seoul. They had to keep their word because the backlash would have been worse if they had tried to mask it as a success. Kim Jong Un became North Koreas leader after the Dec. 17 death of his father Kim Jong Il. The third son of the late dictator, he is thought to be less than 30 years old, went to school in Switzerland and resembles his grandfather. He was made a four-star general in September 2010 in the first official notice he was being groomed to succeed his father. Food Deal He inherited a country of 24 million people suffering from chronic malnutrition and dependent upon China for assistance. North Korea has twice detonated atomic devices and refuses to abandon its nuclear program. North Korea agreed in February to suspend its missile and nuclear tests in exchange for 240,000 tons of U.S. food aid, a deal that was broken by yesterdays events. Japan and South Korea joined the Obama administration in condemning the launch. A South Korean intelligence report this week warned that North Korea may soon detonate its third nuclear device. Recent activity at the Punggye-ri nuclear testing site is consistent with preparations for previous detonations in 2006 and 2009, according to the report. As part of the centennial celebrations, the countrys sole political party named Kim its head on April 11, and the Supreme Peoples Assembly today named him head of its National Defense Commission, positions previously held by his father. Military First North Koreas military first ideology holds that the top priority is strengthening the 1.2 million-strong armed forces. The country technically remains at war with South Korea since their 1950-53 conflict ended without a peace treaty and public statements regularly accuse the South, the U.S. and Japan of having belligerent intent. Senior military officers were also promoted this week to the partys Politburo, in a possible sign that the military remains the dominant force in North Korean politics, according to analysts including Park Young Ho. The missiles crash could undermine Kims position as the supreme wielder of military power. Kim Jong Uns political fate depends on how much he can control the military and he needs to prove his military capabilities, said Park, senior fellow at the Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul. Were this long-range rocket launch successful, he would have cleared doubts about his ability to lead and gain legitimacy.
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#1. To: Brian S (#0)
(Edited)
LOL. How many food deals have been violated with North Korea over the last 40 years? Starve them and let nature takes it course. Baby fat Kim will be out of office in two to three years if we did that. Unfortunately, our "compassionate" leaders won't do that. They are only making things worse for the Korean people as a result.
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