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Now Kim Jong-un ‘Snubs China’ and Accepts Putin’s Invite to Moscow

He is trying to tell us that India has been winning it all。

Yet at the end of the day India is still a tiny 2 trillion USD economy that can't make its own damn assault rifles and has hundreds of millions of souls living in abject poverty。:enjoy:
WE have Taj Mahal ... can u show one in China:yes2:
 
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Now Kim Jong-un ‘Snubs China’ and Accepts Putin’s Invite to Moscow

BY DAMIEN SHARKOV
kimjongun.jpg

WORLD
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un is all smiles in Pyongyang.REUTERS/KCNA
Filed Under: World, North Korea,Russia, China, Kim Jong-Un,Vladimir Putin
North Korea’s Kim Jong-un has accepted an invitation from Russian president Vladimir Putin to attend a military march in Moscow this May, according to South Korean media, making his first ever foreign visit since coming to power in 2011.

"It was confirmed that North Korea gave a positive response to the Russian invitation for Kim Jong-un," a South Korean diplomat told Seoul-based daily newspaper The Korea Herald under the condition of anonymity on Tuesday.

In December, the Kremlin publicly announced that Kim Jong-un was among the leaders invited to the upcoming 70th anniversary commemoration of allied victory over the Nazis. At the time, Putin’s aide Yury Ushakov told Russia’s state-owned news agency Itar-Tass: “The first signals from Pyongyang are that the North Korean leader plans to come to Moscow and attend celebrations."

US president Barack Obama and Lithuanian president Dalia Grybauskaite are among the leaders who have refused to attend.

Should reports of North Korea’s confirmation be true, Kim Jong-un’s attendance to the Russian event would be his first ever state visit since succeeding his father as Supreme Leader of North Korea in December 2011. Notably, Jong-un has not visited China since becoming Supreme Leader, despite the fact the country has traditionally been North Korea’s strongest ally.

“If the news is confirmed - and it does seem quite solid - the two interesting aspects are the strengthening of ties with Russia and the implicit snub to China,” says former MEP, author of North Korea on the Brink and a frequent diplomatic visitor to North Korea, Glyn Ford.

According to Ford, Kim Jong-un’s arrival in Moscow could mark a historic shift in North Korea’s allegiances, not seen since the rule of his grandfather Kim Il-sung, who seized power in Pyongyang in 1948, aided by the advance of the Soviet Red Army.

“Unless Beijing fits in an earlier visit it will be highly symbolic that, for the first time since the Kim Il-sung era, Russia will have apparently superseded China as the North’s closest ally,” Ford says.

“Under Kim Il-sung, North Korea spent decades skilfully playing Moscow and Beijing off against each other. This balancing act seemed to be over with the collapse of the Soviet Union but it may all be back on again in the new post-Ukraine era,” Ford adds.

Kim Il-sung remained in power until his death in 1994, when his son Kim Jong-il took over leadership of the country. However Sung’s presidential post has remained symbolically vacant since his death as in North Korea’s government records he is simply referred to as the ‘Eternal President’, as a sign of resepct. Neither his son nor his grandson have been referred to as ‘President’ during their respective reigns but assumed the alternate title of Supreme Leader.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, China has become North Korea’s strongest political and economic ally, but the relationship between Pyongyang and Beijing has been strained of late.

Sung’s grandson Kim Jong-un’s allegiance to China has been questioned after he chose to pursue new joint military and agricultural projects with Russia. North Korea recently bid to rent10,000 hectares of Russian farmland, perhaps prompted by worries that Pyongyang had becoming overlygrowing reliant on Chinese grain.

Most notably, the new Jong-un has not visited China despite being invited to do so “as soon as possible” by Chinese state broadcasters over a year ago.

Source : http://www.newsweek.com/kim-jong-un-snubs-china-and-accepts-putins-invite-moscow-298974

wow that's pretty sad, poor Russia.
 
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China says Kim's possible visit to Russia 'conducive to peace'
2015/01/22 17:39

BEIJING, Jan. 22 (Yonhap) -- China said Thursday that a possible visit by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un to Russia in May would be "conducive to regional peace and stability," sounding a positive tone as Kim looks increasingly likely to choose Moscow, not Beijing, as his first destination for an unprecedented foreign trip.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday that Moscow received a positive signal from Pyongyang after Russian President Vladimir Putin invited Kim to attend a May ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War II.

Asked about the Russian invitation and positive signal from North Korea, China's foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying replied, "North Korea and Russia are both friendly neighbors of China."

"We believe that such engagement between the two countries is conducive to regional peace and stability," Hua said.

North Korea is seeking to deepen both diplomatic and economic ties with Russia at a time when its political relationship with China remains frosty amid international pressure over its nuclear ambition and dismal human rights record.

Putin, who has been under intense pressure over the West's response over Ukraine, is also eager to bolster ties with North Korea in an apparent effort against America's pivot to Asia. Putin invited Kim to attend the May 9 ceremony during a meeting with Kim's special envoy in November.

China is North Korea's main economic benefactor, but political ties between the allies remain strained, particularly after the North's third nuclear test in early 2013.

In what many analysts believe was a message to North Korea, Chinese President Xi Jinping paid a state visit to South Korea last year, breaking a long-standing tradition by Chinese heads of state of visiting Pyongyang before Seoul.

Xi was also invited to the May 9 ceremony in Russia.

Russia also invited South Korean President Park Geun-hye for the May 9 ceremony and South Korea's presidential spokesman Min Kyung-wook told reporters earlier in the day that no decision has been made yet over whether Park will accept the invitation.

North Korea has made no official comments about the Russian invitation, but a South Korean diplomatic source in Beijing told Yonhap News Agency last week that Pyongyang "gave a positive response to the Russian invitation for Kim Jong-un."

The North's positive stance over Russia's invitation of Kim, who has not made a visit to a foreign country since taking the helm of the reclusive country in late 2011, appears to have prompted China to try to move toward warmer relations with Pyongyang recently, the source said on the condition of anonymity.

Chinese analysts say Xi may not hold a summit with Kim if North Korea continues to defy international calls to give up its nuclear weapons program.

Asked whether China would invite Kim this year, Hua replied, "I have no specifics to offer to you pertaining to the relationship between China and North Korea."
 
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Wow! Now even North Korea has joined the bandwagon of China snubbers! From Vietnam to Indonesia to Malaysia to Philippines, and now China's best friend has done it too! This sucks, what? :fie:
 
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@Horus @WebMaster @Hu Songshan

Can you guys check the IP address of @Ind4Ever, because I believe its a double account suicide troll.

Thanks

Exactly. He is one of the many who recently flooded the section. These are new accounts of formerly banned Indians.

Indian wave comes and goes from time to time.

Ignore the trolls and report them. Talking to them is as inefficient as their railway system.
 
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Now Kim Jong-un ‘Snubs China’ and Accepts Putin’s Invite to Moscow

BY DAMIEN SHARKOV
kimjongun.jpg

WORLD
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un is all smiles in Pyongyang.REUTERS/KCNA
Filed Under: World, North Korea,Russia, China, Kim Jong-Un,Vladimir Putin
North Korea’s Kim Jong-un has accepted an invitation from Russian president Vladimir Putin to attend a military march in Moscow this May, according to South Korean media, making his first ever foreign visit since coming to power in 2011.

"It was confirmed that North Korea gave a positive response to the Russian invitation for Kim Jong-un," a South Korean diplomat told Seoul-based daily newspaper The Korea Herald under the condition of anonymity on Tuesday.

In December, the Kremlin publicly announced that Kim Jong-un was among the leaders invited to the upcoming 70th anniversary commemoration of allied victory over the Nazis. At the time, Putin’s aide Yury Ushakov told Russia’s state-owned news agency Itar-Tass: “The first signals from Pyongyang are that the North Korean leader plans to come to Moscow and attend celebrations."

US president Barack Obama and Lithuanian president Dalia Grybauskaite are among the leaders who have refused to attend.

Should reports of North Korea’s confirmation be true, Kim Jong-un’s attendance to the Russian event would be his first ever state visit since succeeding his father as Supreme Leader of North Korea in December 2011. Notably, Jong-un has not visited China since becoming Supreme Leader, despite the fact the country has traditionally been North Korea’s strongest ally.

“If the news is confirmed - and it does seem quite solid - the two interesting aspects are the strengthening of ties with Russia and the implicit snub to China,” says former MEP, author of North Korea on the Brink and a frequent diplomatic visitor to North Korea, Glyn Ford.

According to Ford, Kim Jong-un’s arrival in Moscow could mark a historic shift in North Korea’s allegiances, not seen since the rule of his grandfather Kim Il-sung, who seized power in Pyongyang in 1948, aided by the advance of the Soviet Red Army.

“Unless Beijing fits in an earlier visit it will be highly symbolic that, for the first time since the Kim Il-sung era, Russia will have apparently superseded China as the North’s closest ally,” Ford says.

“Under Kim Il-sung, North Korea spent decades skilfully playing Moscow and Beijing off against each other. This balancing act seemed to be over with the collapse of the Soviet Union but it may all be back on again in the new post-Ukraine era,” Ford adds.

Kim Il-sung remained in power until his death in 1994, when his son Kim Jong-il took over leadership of the country. However Sung’s presidential post has remained symbolically vacant since his death as in North Korea’s government records he is simply referred to as the ‘Eternal President’, as a sign of resepct. Neither his son nor his grandson have been referred to as ‘President’ during their respective reigns but assumed the alternate title of Supreme Leader.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, China has become North Korea’s strongest political and economic ally, but the relationship between Pyongyang and Beijing has been strained of late.

Sung’s grandson Kim Jong-un’s allegiance to China has been questioned after he chose to pursue new joint military and agricultural projects with Russia. North Korea recently bid to rent10,000 hectares of Russian farmland, perhaps prompted by worries that Pyongyang had becoming overlygrowing reliant on Chinese grain.

Most notably, the new Jong-un has not visited China despite being invited to do so “as soon as possible” by Chinese state broadcasters over a year ago.

Source : http://www.newsweek.com/kim-jong-un-snubs-china-and-accepts-putins-invite-moscow-298974


Just few minutes back, I had written one post in PDF on a thread stating that Pakistan is an Irreplacable frientd of china. I had written that CHina has just replaced is irreplacable friend N Korea with S korea.
Here is a proof of increasing rift between 2 countries.
 
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Exactly. He is one of the many who recently flooded the section. These are new accounts of formerly banned Indians.

Indian wave comes and goes from time to time.

Ignore the trolls and report them. Talking to them is as inefficient as their railway system.

Forget their railway system.

India is one big cesspool of underachieving, dirty, 3rd world people who have no intellectual ambitions.
 
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i think you guys are missing the point. This is all about Putin. He's going to sell North Korea all sorts of military stuff just to be a headache for US allies South Korea and Japan. He's trying to make them uncomfortable for being so chummy chummy with the U.S.

I don't think China would like that.]
NK is there pet after all. they need to keep Fat Kim on a leash.

a NK/SK war in the region wouldn't benefit them at all.


btw what is the China/SK trade nowadays??? it must dwarf the trade with NK.
 
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China is happy to see North Korea have deeper relations with Russia. Foreign Ministry hailed the visit as a positive step. China does not care what external relations other countries may have. Its their sovereign right.
 
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Maybe Russia successfully invites Kim Jong-Un through the means of presenting tons of food for the fat Kim. We all know Fat Kim loves food.
 
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Jr Kim is not popular with us anyway
So who cares?

WE have Taj Mahal ... can u show one in China:yes2:

Obuma has snubbed Taj Mahal just recently
There must be a lot bruising egoes out there
01122Sc2-7.gif
 
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Jr Kim is not popular with us anyway
So who cares?



Obuma has snubbed Taj Mahal just recently
There must be a lot bruising egoes out there
01122Sc2-7.gif
Who said . We told we cannot allow him until he dance for us ... Like u are doing in ur Smiley ....

Of course he said no :shout::shout::shout:
 
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