Xi flies to North Korea - Why China is worried about Kim Jong Un and Russia

| Jun 09, 2026, 06:18:32 PM | TOI.in
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Xi Jinping’s June 8 visit to Pyongyang is more than a photo op — it’s a strategic recalibration. Marking his first overseas trip of 2026 and his first trip to North Korea since 2019, Xi arrives at a moment when Kim Jong Un’s ties with Vladimir Putin have moved from symbolic gestures to operational cooperation: a 2024 mutual defence pact, reported transfers of advanced military technology, and North Korean troop deployments to Ukraine. Beijing’s core worry is clear — as Russia supplies reactors, missile tech and possibly submarine components, Pyongyang gains military autonomy that weakens China’s traditional leverage and risks creating a semi‑independent, heavily armed neighbour on China’s border.Xi’s visit aims to do three things at once: reassert China as North Korea’s indispensable economic lifeline, signal that Beijing still matters in the peninsula’s strategic calculus, and offer low‑cost diplomatic alternatives that might pull Kim away from Moscow without rupturing ties with Russia. He timed the trip to coincide with the 65th anniversary of the 1961 Treaty of Friendship, underscoring historical weight while delivering immediate economic reassurances — trade, investment and supplies — that Russia cannot match.But Beijing’s options are constrained. Kim’s access to Russian military hardware reduces China’s coercive tools, and confronting Moscow risks harming a relationship China still values. The likely outcome is a fragile equilibrium: closer economic ties to Beijing counterbalanced by continued military cooperation with Russia, managed through crisis containment rather than firm control. Xi’s Pyongyang gambit highlights a changing regional order where diplomatic theatre maps out realignment in power, arms, and influence across northeast Asia.

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