John Kerry calls Kim Jong-un 'reckless and insecure' over uncle's execution

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/15/john-kerry-north-korea-kim-jongun-reckless-insecure

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Secretary of State John Kerry has described North Korean leader Kim Jong-un as reckless and insecure after the execution of his powerful uncle, according to an ABC News interview.

The execution of Jan Song Thaek, who was considered the second-most powerful man in the secretive country, showed why the world must make a united stand against North Korea's nuclear weapons program, Kerry said in the interview, which was taped for Sunday broadcast on ABC's This Week.

"It tells us a lot about, first of all, how ruthless and reckless he is," Kerry said of Kim. "And it also tells us a lot about how insecure he is, to a certain degree. The insights that we have tell us that he is spontaneous, erratic, still worried about his place in the power structure, and maneuvering to eliminate any potential kind of adversary or competitor and does so obviously ruthlessly."

North Korean state media on Friday reported the execution of Jang. North Korea said earlier it had stripped Jang of his power and positions and accused him of criminal acts including mismanagement of the state financial system, womanizing and alcohol abuse.

North Korean politics are virtually impenetrable from outside and Jang also could easily have been purged over a falling out with Kim, or other personal reasons.

Kerry, in some of the most detailed remarks made by a US official since the news on Friday, said the execution was not the first under Kim's rule and pointed to the urgency of addressing the North Korean nuclear state.

"It tells us a significant amount about the instability internally of the regime, with the numbers of executions," Kerry said. "It's an ominous sign of the instability and of the danger that does exist."

The young Kim, believed to be about 30, has carried out two long-range missile tests and a nuclear weapons test in defiance of UN sanctions since he took control two years ago after the death of his father, Kim Jong-il. The Obama administration is working with China, the closest thing Pyongyang has to an ally, in seeking help to prevent any internal upheaval in North Korea from destabilizing the Korean peninsula, US officials say.

Kerry, in the interview, said the nature of "this ruthless, horrendous dictatorship" and Kim's insecurities raised the stakes for China, Russia, Japan, South Korea and the United States to "stay on the same page" and push ahead on denuclearization.

"To have a nuclear weapon potentially in the hands of somebody like Kim Jong-un just becomes even more unacceptable."

In the same interview, Kerry answered claims that the US government had "abandoned" Robert Levinson, a former FBI agent who went missing in Iran in 2007, and whom the Associated Press reported on Thursday had been working for the CIA. "There hasn't been progress in the sense that we don't have him back," Kerry said. "But to suggest that we have abandoned him or anybody has abandoned him is simply incorrect and not helpful."

Kerry also rejected the claim that Levinson had been working for the CIA.

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