By Jean H. Lee
Ten years ago this month, North Korea welcomed the world for a party like no other. Diplomats, journalists and tourists — including me — were invited to Pyongyang for a weekend of extravagant celebrations, including mass games, performances on the plaza, and a massive military parade. The entire city was giddy with anticipation.
The event: the 65th anniversary of the ruling Workers’ Party. But the real occasion for celebration: the public debut of Kim Jong Un, the baby-faced young man tapped to become North Korea’s next leader. As he stepped forward, in a dark blue Mao suit, to salute the troops, one of my North Korean guides wept.
This pandemic year, the festivities were hardly what Kim Jong Un would have wanted for the decade anniversary of his debut. And yet, the events — though small — were dramatic.
Read more at Asia Dispatches.
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