Kim Jong-il on Trip to Woo China
The North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, left his country for the first time in three years yesterday to visit China. To counter the influence of the US, which wants Pyongyang punished for its nuclear weapons programme, he is expected to offer a new round of multilateral talks in return for...
The North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, left his country for the first time in three years yesterday to visit China.
To counter the influence of the US, which wants Pyongyang punished for its nuclear weapons programme, he is expected to offer a new round of multilateral talks in return for Chinese economic aid, especially in the form of food and energy resources.
Rarely have charm offensives been conducted in greater secrecy. Mr Kim is reported to have had talks with the Chinese president, Hu Jintao, yesterday, but he is being kept out of the public eye.
The Chinese foreign ministry said it had "no information" about the visit. Beijing station was closed for the arrival of Mr Kim's train, and the 40 visitors were driven to the Zhongnanhai state guesthouse in a fleet of unmarked cars.
Mr Kim's previous visits, in 2000 and 2001, were not announced officially until after he was back in North Korea.
The US vice-president, Dick Cheney, was in Beijing last week, and Mr Hu is seen by many as fulfilling the role of honest broker between the US and North Korea.
To counter the influence of the US, which wants Pyongyang punished for its nuclear weapons programme, he is expected to offer a new round of multilateral talks in return for Chinese economic aid, especially in the form of food and energy resources.
Rarely have charm offensives been conducted in greater secrecy. Mr Kim is reported to have had talks with the Chinese president, Hu Jintao, yesterday, but he is being kept out of the public eye.
The Chinese foreign ministry said it had "no information" about the visit. Beijing station was closed for the arrival of Mr Kim's train, and the 40 visitors were driven to the Zhongnanhai state guesthouse in a fleet of unmarked cars.
Mr Kim's previous visits, in 2000 and 2001, were not announced officially until after he was back in North Korea.
The US vice-president, Dick Cheney, was in Beijing last week, and Mr Hu is seen by many as fulfilling the role of honest broker between the US and North Korea.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Games Festival Feeds the Cult of Kim Jong-il
- Kim Comes Out Smiling at Korean Summit
- Bush Offers North Korea a Deal to End the World's Oldest Cold War
- China Denies Reports of North Korean Apology
- Chinese Dismiss Rumours of Kim Jong-il Apology
- Nuclear Talks Hope Fades As China Says Kim Did Not Apologise
- North Korea Backs Down After Chinese Pressure
- China Presses North Korea on Nuclear Tests
- Mystery Dictator With 22 Million in His Thrall
- Growing Fears Over North Korea Nuclear Test
- Reports of Leader's China Visit Fuel Nuclear Fears
- Nation Bound Together By State Paranoia
- Kim Jong-il Overplays His Hand
- Birthday Tributes to Kim Jong-il
- China's Flunkey
- Analysis: Brinkmanship on the 38th Parallel
- Madman or master? Kim keeps the world guessing



