SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The outside world focuses on the messages
of doom and gloom from North Korea: bombastic threats of nuclear war, fantasy
videos of U.S. cities in flames, digitally altered photos of leader Kim Jong Un
guiding military drills.
But back home, North Koreans get
a decidedly softer dose of propaganda: Kim portrayed as a young, energetic
leader, a people person and family man.
Mixed in with the images showing
Kim aboard a speeding boat on a tour of front-line islands, or handing out
commemorative rifles to smartly saluting soldiers, are those of Kim and his
wife clapping at a dolphin show or linking arms with weeping North Korean
children.
The pictures can look odd or
obviously staged to outsiders. But they’re carefully crafted propaganda meant
to give North Koreans an image of a country governed by a leader who is as
comfortable overseeing a powerful military as he is mingling with the people.
Analysts say the images also hint
at something that often gets lost amid the threatening rhetoric: North Korea’s
supreme commander isn’t an all-powerful, isolated monarch who can govern
without considering his people’s approval. Kim is still busy building his
reputation at home.
“Even dictatorships respond to
public opinion and public pressure,” said John Delury, a North Korea analyst at
Seoul’s Yonsei University. “He’s expected to pay attention to and make
improvements in the common people’s standard of living. They’ve put that promise
out in their domestic propaganda.”
It’s a tall order. Living
standards in Pyongyang, the capital, are relatively high, with new shops and
restaurants catering to a growing middle class. But U.N. officials’ reports
detail harsh conditions elsewhere in North Korea: up to 200,000 people
estimated to be languishing in political prison camps, and two-thirds of the
country’s 24 million people facing regular food shortages.
When it comes to North Korean
propaganda, much of the world focuses on the series of outlandish videos
uploaded to the country’s YouTube channel and government website, largely for
foreign consumption. In one fantasy, missiles rain down on a burning American
city while an instrumental version of “We Are the World” plays in the background.
In another, President Barack Obama and U.S. troops burn.
But what most North Koreans see
on state TV is a different propaganda message: Kim Jong Un bending down to
receive flowers from children, Kim visiting families living in rustic homes on
front-line islands, Kim mobbed by gushing female soldiers.
As with any propaganda or PR, the
images are carefully staged. And many make foreign news headlines only when
experts and photo editors discover that North Korea is digitally altering them.
For instance, in a picture distributed recently by state media, troops and
hovercraft land on a barren, snow-dappled beach. Experts say some of the
multiple hovercraft have been copied and pasted into the image.
But North Korea’s propaganda
makers aren’t concerned about the criticism abroad to their heavy-handed photo
editing. “These efforts are aimed more at an unsophisticated domestic peasant
audience than those of us who are more discerning,” said Ralph Cossa, president
of the Pacific Forum CSIS think tank in Hawaii.
The caring domestic persona being
built for Kim by his image specialists is aided by his wife, Ri Sol Ju.
She is young and glamorous, a
chic and smiling presence at his side in many of the country’s propaganda
images. The couple is often photographed at amusement parks, nurseries, factory
tours and concerts.
“It’s a more complex kind of
image he has as a leader,” Delury said. “The basis of his legitimacy
domestically has to do with these other, non-military things.”
The propaganda machine in North
Korea also worked to build up a caring image for Kim’s father, the late Kim
Jong Il. He doggedly appeared at tours of factories, farms and military posts.
But while Kim Jong Un puts his wife front and center and is a relaxed presence
on camera, his father was stiff in photos and secretive about his family life.
North Korea takes pains to select
and sometimes alter photos so its leaders appear in the best light possible,
said Seo Jeong-nam, a North Korean propaganda expert at Keimyung University in
South Korea.
For example, past propaganda
specialists were careful not to pick photos that showed the large lump on the
back of the neck of Kim’s grandfather, North Korean President Kim Il Sung, Seo
said. When Kim Jong Il was alive, North Korean photographers tried to make him
look taller in photos than he actually was, often positioning him slightly in
front of others, Seo said.
As for Kim Jong Un, Seo said
North Korea’s propaganda mill chooses photos that show off his strong
resemblance to his grandfather, who still is depicted on state TV as the loving
father of the nation, surrounded by children and adoring citizens.
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