Hiro Komae / AP
On Monday afternoon, a black-clad newscaster in Pyongyang, sitting in front of a bucolic backdrop of pine trees and snow-capped mountains, was barely able to get out the news. North Korea's long-time leader Kim Jong Il, she managed to say between sobs, had died on Dec. 17 of a sudden illness. "We make this announcement with great sorrow," she wept.
The abrupt absence of a leader in one of the world's most unpredictable nations ? though not entirely unexpected given Kim's visibly declining health in recent years ? sent a chill through northeast Asia's corridors of power. South Korean President Lee Myung Bak immediately convened an emergency security meeting and put the nation's military on highest alert.(See photos of North Korea's long-time dictator Kim Jong Il.)
At a press conference on Monday, Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura expressed his condolences to their neighbor to the west ? and expressed "hope that this will not affect peace and stability on the Korean peninsula." Fujimura said Japan had not ruled out whether to raise the level of alert of Japan's own army, but he allowed that Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has called for Japan to step up efforts to collect information on North Korea's movements and cooperate on sharing this information with South Korea and China. "Japan is watching carefully," says Choe Kan-ik, managing editor of the Korean-Japanese newspaper Choson Sinbo.
Though Kim Jong Un, Kim's third son, is expected to succeed his father, any possibility of a power struggle has North Korea's neighbors worried about security and stability in a region that was rattled last year after Pyongyang sunk a South Korean warship, killing 46 sailors, and proceeded toshell South Korea's Yeonpyeong Island, killing two soldiers and two civilians.
Since Kim Jong Il took power after the death of his father Kim Il Sung, the Hermit Kingdom has been steadily building its nuclear arms program, conducting two nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009, and amassing missiles reportedly aimed at Japan and South Korea. Japan, along with the U.S. and South Korea, has been urging the North to halt its uranium enrichment and allow international inspectors into the country. It is unclear what will now become of the so-called Six-Party Talks about the North's nuclear program, which have been stalled since 2008.
Tokyo says that relations with Pyongyang cannot normalize until North Korea accounts for the abductions of Japanese citizens by North Korean agents in the 1970s and 1980s. North Korea has admitted to the deaths or repatriation of 13 Japanese citizens, ostensibly to teach North Korean agents Japanese, but Tokyo insists there are more and that Pyongyang continues to withhold information on their fate.(See more on Kim Jong Il's life.)
Will Pyongyang cause trouble for the region as it transitions to a new regime? Analysts say North Korea is likely to be too preoccupied with its own dynastic dramas to create any trouble ? for the present. "North Korea is very unstable now," says Ha Tae Kyung, president of Tokyo-based Open Radio for North Korea. "The government wants to minimize the risk that could worsen [its domestic situation]."
Bradley Martin, author of Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty, says that "it's not really a different government [in Pyongyang], just a continuance of the same dynasty." Even if there were players in the North who wanted to destabilize the Kim clan's grip on power ? and unsettle the region in the process ? it's too soon to tell, says Martin. "People don't normally go to war while they're holding a funeral."
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/time/world/~3/fwLe4l639DY/0,8599,2102776,00.html
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