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'Important consensus': What we know about Xi Jinping's North Korean visit

It is the first time the Chinese President has visited the nation since 2019.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shakes China's President Xi Jinping's hand as he steps off the plane.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has hosted China's President Xi Jinping in Pyongyang for a series of talks. Source: AFP / KCNA VIA KNS

IN BRIEF

  • The leaders agreed to strengthen exchanges in diplomacy, law enforcement, military and expand economic cooperation.
  • Some hold concerns for the reported lack of discussions on North Korea's nuclear weapons development.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has visited North Korea for a series of meetings with leader Kim Jong Un.

The pair reached an "important consensus" on the nation's ties in a "new era", according to Xi.

What happened?

Xi arrived in the North Korean capital Pyongyang on Monday for his first official visit to the diplomatically isolated nation since 2019.

He travelled with his wife and several other top officials for a two-day trip, he said, aimed to bring ties between the longtime partners to "new heights".

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The visit follows Xi's hosting of a string of world leaders, including US President Donald Trump and Russia's Vladimir Putin, in Beijing.

State media images showed Xi and Kim beaming as they shook hands, with the Chinese leader receiving a lavish welcome ceremony featuring a red-carpet military salute and cheering crowds.

What were the outcomes?

Xi said he had reached "an important consensus with Kim on developing China-DPRK relations in the new era", China's Xinhua news agency reported, using North Korea's official acronym.

The leaders agreed to put the two nations' friendly relations "on a more solid basis", North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency said.

Chinese state media reported Xi told Kim their countries "should strengthen exchanges in diplomacy, law enforcement [and] the military" and expand economic cooperation.

He also called for expanded economic cooperation, citing the recent reopening of border crossings and transport links.

China has long been North Korea's largest economic partner, with US and South Korean estimates indicating that China has accounted for almost all of North Korea's annual foreign trade in recent years.

In March, flights and passenger train services between the two nations resumed after a six-year hiatus due to pandemic-era border closures and their aftermath.

What about North Korea's nukes?

Official readouts and state media reports have not said whether Xi and Kim discussed North Korea's nuclear weapons development, for which the nation languishes under international sanctions.

Last month, the White House announced that the Chinese leader and Trump had "confirmed their shared goal to denuclearise North Korea" during their summit in Beijing.

Kim has repeatedly vowed never to give up his nuclear arsenal, and his sister said before Xi's visit that the program was North Korea's "line of no retreat".

The absence of denuclearisation from official statements means the summit effectively "appeared to have been a forum where China granted Pyongyang's rights to nuclear weapons", Lee Ho-ryung of the Korea Institute for Defence Analyses told AFP.

In return, it appears Kim supported China's "One-China principle regarding Taiwan", she added, referring to the self-ruled island China claims as its own.

"Our party and government will fully support the policy and stand of the Chinese party and government to defend the core interests on the 'one-China' principle," KCNA said.

How did Kim emerge from the talks?

Analysts noted that the summit took place as Kim enjoys an enhanced global status — a result of backing Russia with troops and munitions in its war with Ukraine.

Kim is "no longer just a recipient of aid, but a provider of critical military assets", having "successfully leveraged his nuisance value into strategic relevance", Seong-Hyon Lee, a visiting scholar at the Harvard University Asia Centre, told AFP.

Hong Min, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, said the meeting reflected the convergence of "North Korea's desire to cement its status as an indispensable strategic actor through its nuclear arsenal" and "China's expanding ambitions to shape the Northeast Asian order".

Besides Xi and Putin, Kim's meetings with leaders from Belarus, Laos and Vietnam since last year have proven that North Korea is no longer such a diplomatic pariah, said Minseon Ku, a diplomacy professor at DePaul University.

China and North Korea have a military alliance centred on a 1961 treaty obliging each side to come to the other's aid in the event of an armed attack.

North Korea is the only country with which China has such a military agreement. Despite North Korea also signing a mutual defence treaty with Russia in 2024.

China appears to aim "to offer economic incentives while monitoring North Korea to ensure it does not act against Beijing's interests in the diplomatic and military spheres", Hong said.


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4 min read

Published

Source: AFP



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