
Kns / AFP - Getty Images
North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a military base in the southern part of the
country, in a recently released, undated photo from the country's official news
service.
North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un is planning to travel to Tehran next week, in his
first overseas visit since taking over after his father's death in December,
South Korea’s Yonhap and Arirang news services reported on Wednesday.
Iran’s
spokesman for the Non-Aligned Movement Summit confirmed that Kim would attend a
meeting of the 120-member Non-Aligned Movement scheduled for Aug. 26-31,
according to Seoul-based Arirang.
North
Korea watchers have keenly tracked the movements of Kim Jong Un, about whom
virtually nothing was known when he was installed in the top posts of the
authoritarian regime in Pyongyang.
In
recent months, by adopting a different style than his late father Kim Jong Il,
he has sparked a flurry of speculation that he might reform the country's rigid
economic and social structure.
In
July, Kim started appearing in public with an attractive woman who was later
announced to be his wife Ri Sol Ju. Kim's recent appearances at an amusement
park and with school children have made the young leader — thought to be 28 or
29 years old — seem more approachable than his father.
Last
week, Kim's uncle Jang Song Taek met with top leaders in Beijing, fueling
predictions that Pyongyang would put in place economic reforms like those
launched in China three decades earlier.
But
by making his first foreign visit to Iran — a country nearly as estranged from
the rest of the world as his own — Kim gives no sign of a foreign policy
thaw.
The
Non-Aligned Movement was set up at the height of the Cold War by nations that
did not want to side with NATO or the Warsaw Pact Nations. Hosting the summit,
held about every three years, rotates among the 120 member nations, including
.
About
40 world leaders have confirmed they will attend the summit in Iran, according
to the English-language Tehran Times, while another 60 were expected to send
lower level officials.
The
Obama Administration has said Iran doesn’t deserve to host the summit given its
failure to comply with international demands to open up about its nuclear
program and has urged U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon not to attend. He has
asked nations that are attending to pressure Tehran to come clean, the Associated Press reported Monday.
North
Korea also has a nuclear program, the details of which are the topic of much
analysis and speculation in the West.
U.S.
efforts to engage Pyongyang ended abruptly when Kim Jong Un announced a planned
missile launch shortly after agreeing to a deal freezing nuclear development in
exchange for food from the United States. The launch failed, but discussions
remain on hold. Analysis of recent
satellite imagery by the Institute for Science and International Security suggest that the country’s construction of
nuclear facilities is accelerating.
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