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| The mere fact of a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin was a diplomatic boost for Kim Jong Un, analysts say (AFP Photo/Alexey NIKOLSKY) |
The first summit between Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin was short on public content but the mere fact of it was a diplomatic boost for Pyongyang in its nuclear stalemate with the US, analysts said.
Thursday's
talks in Vladivostok were the North Korean leader's first meeting with another
head of state since returning from his February summit with US President Donald
Trump in Hanoi, which broke down without a deal on Pyongyang's nuclear arsenal.
In Russia,
Kim said little about the specifics of his discussions with Putin, preferring
promises of strengthening traditional ties -- and did not mention the word
"denuclearisation" once in public.
There was
no joint statement -- and the Kremlin had said beforehand there would not be.
The Russian
president told reporters that, like Washington, Moscow wanted to see
"complete denuclearisation", but added that North Korea's security
should be guaranteed, without going into detail.
Despite the
limited substance, analysts say Kim got exactly what he was looking for: a
strong handshake with Putin in front of international media.
And unlike
some other occasions, the Russian president did not keep his guest waiting.
"The
summit was heavy on diplomatic symbolism rather than actual cooperation, but
the meeting itself is an achievement for Kim," said Shin Beom-chul of the
Asan Institute of Policy Studies.
It was the
latest chapter in the North Korean leader's summit diplomacy, aimed at chipping
away some of the negative public image of his regime, analysts said.
For six
years after inheriting power, the North Korean leader was an international
recluse and remained within his borders.
But since
March 2018, he has held meetings four times with Chinese President Xi Jinping,
three with South Korea's Moon Jae-in, two with Trump and one each with
Vietnam's president and Singapore's prime minister.
"Kim
understands there is clearly a benefit in just holding a summit," said
Harry Kazianis of the Center for National Interest ahead of the talks.
"All
Kim needs to be successful is images of him shaking Putin's hand -- a sort of
selfie diplomacy with summit pictures being plastered all over the media -- to
prove to the world he is a global statesman."
Wining
and dining
In
Thursday's expanded meeting, Kim was accompanied only by Ri Yong Ho and Choe
Son Hui -- his foreign minister and vice foreign minister.
Opposite
them sat about a dozen Russians, among them officials handling economic
cooperation with the North, such as mothballed gas pipeline and power grid
projects.
Their North
Korean counterparts did not travel to Russia with Kim and their absence showed
that reviving such joint projects was nowhere near the top of Pyongyang's
agenda, said Koo Kab-woo, a professor at the University of North Korean
Studies.
For the
North, the main goal of the summitry was finding "another exit" -- an
alternative option to China -- Koo said, and seek more international support in
its nuclear stand-off against Washington.
At the
meeting with Trump in Hanoi, the cash-strapped North demanded immediate relief
from sanctions imposed over its weapons programmes, but the talks broke up in
disagreement over what Pyongyang was prepared to give up in return.
Since then,
North Korea has carried out a new weapons test and demanded the removal from
negotiations of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo -- who said Wednesday that he
expected "bumpy" talks ahead with Pyongyang.
North Korea
will expect the sight of Kim and Putin wining and dining together to prompt
Washington to return to the negotiating table with a better offer, Koo said.

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