Source:
https://scmp.com/sport/other-sport/article/2126994/let-games-begin-why-kim-jong-un-might-be-interested-pyeongchang
Sport/ Other Sport

Let the Games begin? Why Kim Jong-un might be interested in Pyeongchang Winter Olympics

A look at what’s on the table for North Korea across the demilitarised zone at the Winter Games as Kim takes Seoul’s temperature

With little time to spare, North and South Korea are preparing to discuss Kim Jong-un’s offer to send a delegation to next month’s Winter Olympics. Photos: AP

With little time to spare, North and South Korea are preparing to hash out Kim Jong-un’s offer to send a delegation to next month’s Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.

Sceptics are calling the offer, floated by Kim during his annual televised New Year’s address, a cynical tactic to drive a wedge between Washington and Seoul, while optimists see it as a sign of hope that Kim has decided to dial back his defiance and come in from the cold.

The answer probably lies somewhere in between.

But why, after a year marked by the test of his country’s most powerful nuclear bomb to date and a record number of missile launches, is Kim starting off 2018 by proposing talks across the demilitarised zone?

A South Korean government official communicates with a North Korean officer during a phone call on the dedicated communications hotline at the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea. Photo: AP
A South Korean government official communicates with a North Korean officer during a phone call on the dedicated communications hotline at the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea. Photo: AP

WHAT’S ON THE TABLE

Kim stressed in his speech that 2018 will be an important year for the Korean nation.

The North will be marking the 70th anniversary of its September 9 founding and the South’s hosting of the Games, Kim said, “will serve as a good occasion for demonstrating our nation’s prestige” and “we earnestly wish the Olympic Games a success”.

To that end, he suggested Pyongyang send a delegation and “adopt other necessary measures”. He presented all of it in a familiar framing – saying the Korean people must work together on their own toward reunification to “frustrate the schemes by anti-reunification forces within and without”.

In North Korea-speak, that means anti-Pyongyang hardliners in the South and the United States and its allies.

Kim did not say what kind of a delegation he has in mind. But North Korea quickly restored a hotline with the South that had been cut off for two years to allow communications to resume.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in applauded the gesture and the two sides are set to meet on Tuesday at the border village of Panmunjom for the first time since December 2015.

The 2018 Pyeongchang Olympic Winter Games begin next month. Photo: AP
The 2018 Pyeongchang Olympic Winter Games begin next month. Photo: AP

TAKING SEOUL’S TEMPERATURE

Just about the time the Olympics will be wrapping up and the Paralympics getting underway, tens of thousands of US and South Korean troops would normally be staging the world’s biggest annual war games.

This year, however, Moon convinced President Donald Trump to postpone them until everything is over.

The exercises feature the United States’ most advanced weaponry and in recent years have included training for “decapitation” strikes on Kim himself.

In his New Year’s address, Kim pointedly referred to that, claiming the US can’t launch an attack “on me or our country” now that North Korea has a viable nuclear deterrent.

Kim would love to see the war games called off for good. Or at least scaled down.

Kim Jong-un speaks during his New Year's Day speech. Photo: Reuters
Kim Jong-un speaks during his New Year's Day speech. Photo: Reuters

With their postponement, he might believe Moon may be willing to go further down that path. And if Moon isn’t, Kim can say he tried and use that as a justification for launching more missiles or space-bound rockets and maybe even trying another nuclear test later this year.

The bottom line: it never hurts to take Seoul’s temperature every now and then.

Engaging directly with Seoul does, in fact, tend to complicate things for Washington. Sanctions, meanwhile, are taking their toll. Easing tensions would give Kim breathing room to boost the domestic economy.

One of his key projects – also mentioned in the New Year’s speech – is developing tourism in the Wonsan-Kumgang area on North Korea’s east coast.

Kim already built a luxury ski resort there and doesn’t want to see it go to waste. With Trump’s North Korea travel ban now in effect, Pyongyang might be thinking of wooing tourists from the South.

Kim’s father, Kim Jong-il, had some success with that idea from the late 1990s until 2008, when a South Korean housewife was shot dead for wandering into a restricted zone.

Participants gesture during a mass demonstration in support of a New Year address made by Kim Jong-un at Kim Il-sung square in Pyongyang. Photo: AFP
Participants gesture during a mass demonstration in support of a New Year address made by Kim Jong-un at Kim Il-sung square in Pyongyang. Photo: AFP

UNUSUAL, BUT NOT UNPRECEDENTED

For sure, North and South Olympic rivalry runs deep.

The North boycotted the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul and instead hosted the World Festival of Youth and Students, a sort of socialist equivalent, the following year.

The Koreas tried marching together under a “unification flag” in three Olympics, but that didn’t stick. The blue-and-white flag last flew at the 2006 Winter Games in Turin, Italy.

North Korea isn’t a big Winter Olympics country to begin with. It has only sent teams to eight and won just two medals: a silver in 1964 and a bronze in 1992. Both were won by women, in speed skating and short track skating.

Still, it’s not unprecedented for the North to send athletes to major competitions in the South.

Kim sent a full team to the Asian Games in Incheon in 2014 and dispatched three of his top lieutenants to attend the closing ceremony and meet with the South’s unification minister.

Whatever progress was made in those talks seemed to dissipate soon after the trio went home, however.

Pair skaters Ryom Tae-ok and Kim Ju-sik are North Korea’s only qualified athletes for the Games.
Pair skaters Ryom Tae-ok and Kim Ju-sik are North Korea’s only qualified athletes for the Games.

ANY CHANCES OF GOLD?

Well, not really.

It isn’t entirely clear if Kim intends to send athletes to Pyeongchang or just officials.

There might still be some wiggle room, but only two athletes, pair skaters Ryom Tae-ok and Kim Ju-sik, are qualified to go.

Skating to the Beatles’ song “A Day in the Life” for their short programme, the two won North Korea’s first medal – a bronze – at the Asian Winter Games in Sapporo, Japan in February last year.

Nevertheless, Kim Jong-un likes sports.

Following the example of former Soviet bloc countries like East Germany, Kim has elevated the role of sports to a new level for North Korea, lavishing praise and rewards on medal-winning athletes while the official media catalogues each win in international competition as proof of the nation’s ideological superiority and physical grit.

“Upon receiving the New Year Address made by respected Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un, sportspersons in the DPRK are filled with firm determination to achieve fresh victory,” its state-run news agency reported on Tuesday, using the acronym for the North’s official name.

The report went on: “It is the determination and will of all sports officials, players and coaches to produce more excellent results in international games this year.”