Kim Il-sung

From New World Encyclopedia
This is a Korean name; the family name is Kim.
Kim Il-sung
Kim Il-sung


General Secretary of the
Workers Party of Korea
In office
1946 – 1994
Succeeded by Kim Jong-il

President of North Korea (Eternal President of the Republic since 1994)
In office
1972

the only – present

Preceded by Choi Yong-kun

Prime Minister of North Korea
In office
1948 – 1972
Succeeded by Kim Il

Born April 15 1912
Flag of the Japanese Resident General of Korea (1905).svg Pyongyang, Japanese occupied Korea
Died July 8 1994
Flag of North Korea Pyongyang, North Korea
Kim Il-sung
Chosŏn'gŭl 김일성
Hancha 金日成
McCune-Reischauer Kim Ilsŏng
Revised Romanization Gim Il-seong


North Korea
Flag of North Korea.svg

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
North Korea



  • Eternal President: Kim Il-sung
  • Government
    • Premier: Kim Yong-il
  • Supreme People's Assembly
    • President: Kim Yong-nam

  • Subdivisions
  • Political parties
    • Workers' Party of Korea
  • Elections

  • Korean reunification
  • Human rights
  • Foreign relations
  • Songun policy

Politics Portal

Kim Il-sung (15 April 1912 – 8 July 1994) was the leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK or North Korea from late 1945 (prior to the state's 1948 founding) until his death, when his son, Kim Jong-il, succeeded him. In his early years, Kim was a well-known anti-Japanese guerrilla fighter while Korea was colonized by Japan. Installed as leader of the North by the Soviets in late 1945, he became Premier from 1948 to 1972 and then President from 1972 until his death. He was also General Secretary of the Worker's Party of Korea, and exercised dictatorial power in all areas of life. As leader of North Korea, he went beyond Marxism-Leninism, Stalinism, and even Maoism, to create the nationalistic and isolationist Juche ideology of "self-reliance," and established the most pervasive personality cult in history, characterized by deification, and the only dynastic succession in a communist regime. Although North Korea was formed with significant Soviet guidance and assistance, and initially Kim was a Soviet surrogate, it evolved into a unique nation, particularly after Stalin's death, molded by Kim's exercise of power for nearly 50 years.

North Korea, along with Cuba, are the two main unreformed remnants of the communist world since the fall of the Soviet Union. The DPRK, even under Kim's son, remains the most closed and repressive regime in the world. Nonetheless, when Kim died he appeared to have sought normalization of relations with the United States — its enemy from the 1950-53 Korean War to the present — as a means of balancing North Korea's relations with its neighbor, China, in a post-Soviet world. There is evidence his son considers fulfillment of his father's apparent dying wish to be one of his long-term goals.

Kim Il Sung, who was the world's longest-serving head of state when he died, is officially referred to as the "Great Leader" and the DPRK constitution has designated him "Eternal President."

Early years

Family

Much of the early records of Kim Il-sung's life comes from his own personal accounts and official North Korean government publications, which often conflict with independent sources. Nevertheless, consensus exists on at least the basic story of his early life, corroborated by witnesses from the period. He was born to Kim Hyŏng-jik and Kang Pan-sŏk, who named him Kim Sŏng-ju. He was born in Nam-ri, Taedong County, South P'yŏngan Province (currently the Mangyŏngdae area of P'yŏngyang), then under Japanese occupation.

The deification of all things related to Kim in North Korea has obscured the exact history of Kim's family. The family always seemed close to poverty. Kim's family had strong ties to the Protestant church: his maternal grandfather served as a Protestant minister, his father had gone to a missionary school, and both his parents reportedly played very active roles in the religious community. According to the official version, Kim's family participated in Japanese opposition activities, and, in 1920, fled to Manchuria, where Kim became fluent in Chinese. The more likely reason his family settled in Manchuria, like many Koreans at the time, was to escape famine.[1]

Kim Becomes a Communist

A view of Pyongyang from the Study Hall to the Juche Tower.

Kim’s father died when Kim was 14. Kim attended middle school in Jilin, where he rejected the feudal traditions of older generation Koreans and became interested in communist ideologies; his formal education ended when he was arrested and jailed for subversive activities. At 17, Kim became the youngest member of an underground Marxist organization with less than twenty members, led by Hŏ So, who belonged to the South Manchurian Communist Youth Association. The police discovered the group three weeks after its founding, jailing Kim for several months.[2] [3]

Anti-Japanese Guerrilla. Kim joined various anti-Japanese guerrilla groups in northern China, and in 1935 became a member of the Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army, a guerrilla group led by the Chinese Communist Party. That same year, Kim received an appointment to serve as political commissar for the 3rd detachment of the second division, around 160 soldiers.[1] Kim also took the name Kim Il-sung, meaning "become the sun." By the end of the war that name became legendary in Korea, and some historians have claimed it was not Kim Sŏng-ju who originally made the name famous. A retired Soviet army colonel who says he was instructed to prepare Kim in 1945-46 to lead North Korea, says Kim assumed this name while taking refuge in the Soviet Union in the early 1940s from a former commander who had died.[4] Other experts dismiss the claim of a “second” Kim, arguing there was only one Kim Il-sung.

Kim's Rise in the Ranks. Kim received a commission as commander of the 6th division in 1937, at the age of 24, leading a few hundred soldiers known as “Kim Il Sung’s division.” Although Kim’s division only captured a small Japanese-held town across the Korean border for a few hours, the military success came at a time when the guerrilla units had experienced difficulty in capturing any enemy territory. That accomplishment won Kim a measure of fame among Chinese guerrillas, and North Korean biographies later exploited the sortee as a great victory for Korea. By the end of 1940, Kim alone among the only first Army leaders survived. Pursued by Japanese troops, Kim and what remained of his army escaped by crossing the Amur River into the Soviet Union.[5] Kim was sent to a camp near Khabarovsk, where the the Soviets retrained Korean Communist guerrillas. Kim received the commission of captain in the Soviet Red Army, serving until the end of World War II.

Leadership in the Korean Communist Party

The Communist Party of Korea, founded in 1925, soon disbanded due to internal strife. In 1931, Kim had joined the Chinese Communist Party. But in September 1945, he returned to Korea with the Soviet forces, who installed and groomed him to be head of the Provisional People's Committee in the north. During his early years as leader, especially from 1946, he consolidated his power through purges and execution of dissident elements within the Korean Workers Party.

Professional Army Established. Kim established the Korean People's Army, formed from a cadre of guerrillas and former soldiers who had gained combat experience in battles against the Japanese and later Nationalist Chinese troops. From their ranks, using Soviet advisers and equipment, Kim constructed a large army skilled in infiltration tactics and guerrilla warfare. Before the outbreak of the Korean War, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin equipped the KPA with modern heavy tanks, trucks, artillery, and small arms (at the time, the South Korean Army had nothing remotely comparable either in numbers of troops or equipment).

Korean War

Main article: Korean War
File:Pyongyang Arch of Triumph.jpg
Arch honoring Kim Il-sung's fight against Japan. It is slightly taller than the Arch of Triumph in Paris.

By 1948, the Soviets succeeded in entrenching the communist party in the north without intention to allow democratization, and the DPRK became a client state that September. Kim Il Sung then became fixated with invading the South as means to forcibly bring unification with the American-governed southern zone (which became the Republic of Korea in August 1948), and repeatedly asked Stalin for permission and assistance to do so, which was denied until early 1950. However, as Stalin learned through his intelligence sources - verified by Secretary of State Dean Acheson's January 1950 National Press Club speech[6] - that the United States had no intention of defending the mainland of Asia (i.e., South Korea), Stalin approved Kim's request. He also told Kim to also obtain approval from China's communist leader Mao Zedong, which was reluctantly given that May. The massive military buildup North Korea received from Stalin, and the extensive evidence of meticulous planning by Soviet military advisers, leaves no doubt that Stalin was ultimately responsible for the outbreak, as well as prolongation, of the Korean War.

Soviet Role in the War

On June 25, 1950, North Korea, led by Kim, launched an unprovoked, surprise attack on South Korea. Stalin wanted the Northern attack to look like a defensive response to a Southern provocation, but once Kim reported to Stalin in mid-June that the South Korean military was aware of the North's invasion plans, Stalin panicked and ordered a full frontal assault along the 38th parallel. Thus, rather than the invasion being disguised as a defensive response, the U.S. immediately perceived Stalin and Kim's intent to launch all-out war in Korea.[7][8][9]

China's Role in the War

North Korean forces captured Seoul, rapidly occupying most of the South except for a perimeter surrounding the port city of Busan. Contrary to Stalin and Kim's expectations, the U.S. quickly dispatched troops based in Japan to defend the South. Moreover, by late June, the UN Security Council voted to create the United Nations Command, composed of forces from 16 nations led by the United States, to repel the North Korean invasion. General Douglas MacArthur's bold September 15 amphibious landing at Inchon cut the North Koreans in two, forcing the rapid withdrawal of North Korean army fragments to the Yalu River bordering China. By October, the UN forces had retaken Seoul and then captured Pyongyang, and they attempted to capture the rest of North Korean territory to the Yalu. Stalin had almost come to the point of despair and ordered Kim to evacuate to China, but Mao made an independent decision to provide massive manpower assistance to Kim, not only to prevent UN troops from possibly entering Chinese territory, but to preserve the gains of communism in Asia. [10]

On October 25, 1950, seasoned Chinese troops ("people's volunteers") in the tens (and later hundreds) of thousands crossed the Yalu in "human wave" attacks. US military intelligence had seen indications of a Chinese buildup, but MacArthur thought they were simply large reconnaissance missions; MacArthur soon admitted he faced an entirely new war. UN troops were compelled to hastily retreat with heavy losses; Chinese troops retook Pyongyang in December and Seoul in January 1951. In March, UN forces began a counter-offensive, permanently retaking Seoul. After a series of offensives and counter-offensives by both sides, followed by a grueling period of trench warfare, the front stabilized generally along the 38th parallel. Upon Stalin's death in March 1953, the Soviet Politburo immediately pursued serious truce negotiations through the Chinese, arriving at the Armistice Agreement on July 27, 1953, which is still in effect today. Kim Il-sung survived the war, and with Soviet and Chinese assistance, rebuilt his devastated country.

Leader of North Korea

After the Korean War, Kim Il-sung consolidated his power against Koreans aligned with either the Soviet Union or China, or with South Korean communists, using his followers from his anti-Japanese guerrilla days as his base of support. He purged all of his rivals, real or potential, embarking on the reconstruction of the country which had been flattened through both aerial bombing and ground combat. He launched a five-year national economic plan to establish a Soviet-style command economy, with all industry owned by the state and agriculture collectivized. With the economy based on heavy industry, and with significant Soviet subsidies, North Korea retained a armed force far in excess of its defense needs. Most analysts believe Kim sought additional opportunities to reunify the Korean peninsula through force until the beginning of the collapse of the Soviet empire in 1989.

Kim's Orthodox Communist Posture

During the 1950s, Kim maintained the posture of an orthodox Communist leader. He rejected the USSR's de-Stalinization and began to distance himself from his patron, including the removal of any mention of his Red Army career from official history. In 1956, anti-Kim elements encouraged by de-Stalinization in the Soviet Union emerged within the Korean Workers Party to criticize Kim and demand reforms.[11] After a period of vacillation, Kim instituted a brutal purge, executing some opponents and forcing the rest into exile.[11] When the Sino-Soviet split developed in the 1960s, Kim initially sided with the Chinese but prudently never severed his relations with the Soviets. When the Cultural Revolution began in China in 1966, Kim veered back to the Soviet side. At the same time, he established a pervasive personality cult, with North Koreans coming to address him as "Great Leader" (widaehan suryŏng 위대한 수령). Kim developed the nationalistic ideology of Juche (self-reliance), that maintains that man is the master of his fate, which defied the materialistic determinism of Marxism-Leninism.[12] In the process, North Korea became increasingly isolated from the rest of the world.

Stepped Up Campaign of Aggression

In the mid-1960s, Hồ Chí Minh's efforts to reunify Vietnam through guerrilla warfare impressed Kim. He thought something similar might be possible in Korea. He ordered an intense program of Infiltration and subversion efforts culminating in an attempt to assassinate South Korean President Park Chung-hee by unsuccessfully storming the presidential Blue House. Kim promoted an aggressive stance toward U.S. forces in and around South Korea. North Korean troops frequently provoked U.S. and South Korean troops into firefights along the Demilitarized Zone. The 1968, North Korean navy ships seized the USS Pueblo (a virtually unarmed U.S. Navy intelligence vessel) and crew in international waters, intentionally heightening the tension between the North and South.

Kim Jong-il Heir

Under a new constitution proclaimed in December 1972, Kim made himself President of North Korea. He also announced that his son, Kim Jong-il, would succeed him and up until Kim Il-sung's death, he increasingly delegated the running of the government to his son. At the Sixth Party Congress in October 1980, Kim publicly designated his son as his successor.

Later years

Economic Ruin

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter (right) met with President Kim Il-sung in Pyongyang on June 16-17, 1994, which defused the first North Korean nuclear crisis. Photo courtesy of The Carter Center.

The collapse of communism in Eastern Europe and the fall of the Soviet Union, during 1989–1991, cut off the DPRK from most of it fraternal communist allies, and Russia refused to continue the subsidies of the former USSR; China, as well, reduced its assistance to Kim. The consequence was North Korea's severe political and economic isolation. Those events, added to North Korea's continued high level of military investment, led to a mounting economic crisis. As the Cold War ended, the contrast between North Korea's poverty and the booming economy of South Korea became increasingly glaring, but North Korea's totalitarian control of information, nearly completely cut North Koreans off from news inside and outside Korea.

Personality cult

During the 1970s, Kim's personality cult grew more extensive. The state claimed that Kim personally supervised nearly every aspect of life in North Korea, attributing almost supernatural powers to him; Kim was deified in quasi-religious terms. The North Korean regime executed or sent to concentration camps any North Korean suspected of opposing Kim in any way; even a failure to show enthusiastic worship of Kim could lead to arrest.

Kim repeatedly proclaimed internally that he would reunite Korea before his 70th birthday in 1972. That winter some analysts maintain Kim was prepared to invade the South, but U.S. President Richard Nixon's dramatic trip to China in February to create a strategic alliance against the Soviet Union, forced Kim to abandon his plan. Instead, he began a brief inter-Korean dialogue, which led to a significant joint declaration in July. In 1975, as South Vietnam and Cambodia fell and U.S. forces rapidly abandoned their former allies, Kim proposed to China the "liberation" of South Korea; however, China made clear to Kim its preference for "stability" on the Korean peninsula, and Kim was not able to take advantage of perceived American weakness in Asia.[13]

Meeting with Sun Myung Moon

In December 1991, Kim Il-sung held a private audience with South Korean founder of the Unification Movement, Sun Myung Moon. Prior to that meeting, dissident minister Moon Ik-hwan had met with Kim in 1989 resulting in Moon Ik-hwan's arrest and imprisonment by the South Korean government upon his return.[14] The meeting with Sun Myung Moon had been arranged after Kim read a comment Moon made upon his arrival in North Korea in November 30, 1991, published in the Toding Shinmun, the North Korean daily newspaper, that blood is thicker than water. According to North Korea expert Michael Breen, the meeting "demonstrates how Koreans are able to go beyond ideology. Sun Myung Moon's meeting with Kim and his earlier meetings in Moscow puzzled his anti-communist allies in the United States." [15]

Reports note that Reverend Moon followed an unorthodox path to meet Kim, absent the usual cowering and servile behavior offered those attending tyrants. When Kim meet with Moon, they embraced and walked hand in hand. As a result of the meeting, Kim gifted Moon's childhood home to him for the creation of a Peace Park. In addition, he granted Moon and his Tong-il conglomerate the exclusive rights to develop Kumgangsan. Although the project in Kumgangsan later failed due to a lack of funding needed for the development, Kim's willingness to open North Korea to South Korean development marked a first. Later, according to Breen, "Daewoo opened factories in Nampo and Hyundai has big projects (Kumgangsan and Gaesong industrial zone). The North Koreans were careful not to give one conglomerate too much."[16]

In meeting with Moon, Kim may have hoped to find a sorely need source of funding since both Russia and China sources of funds dried up with the collapse of communism in those countries. Moon's standing as controlling a business conglomerate may have contributed to Kim's interest in meeting Moon. Kim learned a few days before the meeting that Moon had been incarcerated for "disturbing the peace" in a death camp at Hungnam just a few miles from the meeting place. On Moon's part, meeting with Kim represented an act of forgiving an enemy for the sake of peace in the world. Moon demonstrated conspicuous courage prior to the meeting. Just as the North Koreans had arrested him, sending him to the Hungnam concentration camp for preaching in Pyongyang in the early 1950s, Moon said, during a speech he gave to the unification committee of the party at the Supreme People's Assembly, that Juche was "rubbish" and that North Korea needed God. During the speech, a top official leaned over one member of the Moon entourage, Pak Bo-hi, and whispered to him that in North Korea people get executed for saying less.[17]

Family life

File:Kim-il-sung Kim-jong-suk Kim-jong-il.jpg
A 1944 photo of Kim Jong-il at 3 years old, with his father, Kim Il-sung, and mother, Kim Jong-suk. All three are venerated in North Korea. Official DPRK archives.

Kim Il-sung married twice. His first wife, Kim Jŏng-suk, bore him two sons and a daughter. Kim Jong-il is his oldest son; the other son (Kim Man-il, or Shura Kim) died in 1947 in a swimming accident. Kim Jong-suk died in 1949 while giving birth to a stillborn baby. Kim married Kim Sŏng-ae in 1962, and reportedly had three or four children with her: Kim Yŏng-il, Kim Kyŏng-il and Kim P’yŏng-il. Kim P’yŏng-il held prominent positions in North Korean politics until he became ambassador to Hungary. Kim reportedly had illegitimate children, including Kim Hyŏn-nam (born 1972, head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the Workers' Party since 2002)[18] and Chang-hyŏn (born 1971, adopted by Kim Jong-il's sister Kim Kyŏng-hŭi).[19]

Death

By the 1990s, North Korea enjoyed nearly complete isolation from the outside world, except for limited contacts with China. Kim's dictatorship had virtually bankrupt the economy, crippled by huge expenditure on armaments. The agricultural sector failed to feed its population, setting the stage for widespread famine. Still, Kim forced the North Korean media to lionize Kim.

Kim died suddenly of a heart attack in P’yŏngyang on July 8, 1994, bequeathing the country's mounting crisis to Kim Jong-il. Faced with reprisals, hundreds of thousands of people attended his funeral in Pyongyang, many of whom, knowing the ever present state police watched carefully, wept and cried Kim's name during the funeral procession. The government placed Kim Il-Sung's body in a public mausoleum at the Kumsusan Memorial Palace. Now, his preserved and embalmed body, lies under a glass coffin. His head rests on a pillow and he is covered by a red flag acting as a blanket, probably a symbol of communism. A three-year period of "official mourning" took place after his death; during that time, North Koreans would be punished for not expressing enough grief at the loss of their leader. Several networks broadcast a Video of the funeral at Pyongyang downloadable from a number of internet sites.[20]

After his death, his son Kim Jong-Il replaced the Gregorian calendar in North Korea and put in place a calendar in which the years begin with the birth of Kim Il-sung.

Legacy

File:Kumsusan Palace.jpg
The Presidential Palace of North Korea until Kim Il-sung's death, then transformed into his mausoleum.

Although difficult to determine exactly, approximately 800 statues of Kim Il-sung stand around North Korea. He has numerous places named after him, reportedly more than any other communist leader, an uncommon practice in Eastern Asian cultures.. The most prominent are: Kim Il-sung University, Kim Il-sung Stadium, Kim Il Sung Square, Kim Il-sung Bridge and the Immortal Statue of Kim Il-sung. Kim Il-sung's image smiles prominently in places associated with public transportation, hanging at every North Korean train station and airport, as well as at the border crossings between China and North Korea.

Kim's legacy will need to await the death of his son, Kim Jong-il, before his lasting contributions shine forth. As long as the communist dictatorship he established stays in place, reverence, adoration, and gratitude are forced. Like his contemporary, Stalin, Kim used the iron fist of totalitarian government to enforce his policies. He initiated a devastating civil war, the Korean War, that killed one million Koreans and plunged the United Nations into the conflict. The condemnation of North Korea's attack, and the truce in effect since then, are the best indicators of the view the world community has on Kim Il-sung's rule.

In every area of North Korean life, the people suffered under his rule. He left the economy in shambles, the manufacturing base depressed, the farming industry devastated. The common person in North Korea, the farmer and factory worker, lived a life of poverty cut off from communication with the world. He enforced a personality cult that imprisoned in concentration camps or executed any person who showed less that exuberant worship of him. In that regard, his legacy is similar to Caesar's.

Can anything good be said about Kim's legacy? No doubt, he fought as a patriot against Korea's common enemy during World War II, the Japanese. And, unlike Hitler, he apparently demonstrated real courage and bravery. Yet fighting a common enemy may be his only virtue. When his son dies, Kim Jong-il, the test of his legacy will be the statues that remain standing. Will the people still revere his image when the state police disband, or will they tear them down as the Russians tore down Stalin's statues?

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lankov, Andrei, From Stalin to Kim Il Sung: The Formation of North Korea, 1945-1960, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2002, p. 53. ISBN 9780813531175
  2. Lankov, Andrei, From Stalin to Kim Il Sung: The Formation of North Korea, 1945-1960, p. 52.
  3. Suh, Dae-Sook, Kim Il Sung: The North Korean Leader, New York: Columbia University Press, 1988, p. 7. ISBN 9780231065726
  4. "Soviets groomed Kim Il Sung for leadership", Vladivostok News.
  5. Lankov, Andrei, From Stalin to Kim Il Sung: The Formation of North Korea 1945-1960, p. 53-54.
  6. For relevant excerpts of the speech, see EXCERPTS FROM ACHESON'S SPEECH TO THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB, January 12, 1950 Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  7. Weathersby, Kathryn, "The Soviet Role in the Early Phase of the Korean War," The Journal of American-East Asian Relations 2, no. 4, Winter 1993: 432
  8. Goncharov, Sergei N., Lewis, John W. and Xue Litai, Uncertain Partners: Stalin, Mao, and the Korean War, Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 1993. ISBN 9780804721158
  9. Mansourov, Alexandre Y., "Stalin, Mao, Kim, and China's Decision to Enter the Korean War, September 16-October 15, 1950: New Evidence from the Russian Archives," Cold War International History Project Bulletin, Issues 6-7, Winter 1995/1996: 94-107
  10. See Chen, Jian, China's Road to the Korean War, New York: Columbia University Press, 1996. ISBN 0231100256
  11. 11.0 11.1 Lankov, Andrei N., Crisis in North Korea: The Failure of De-Stalinization, 1956. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004. ISBN 9780812916706
  12. See Park, Han. S., "The Nature and Evolution of Juche Ideology," in Park, Han. S., ed., North Korea: Ideology, Politics, Economy, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1996. ISBN 0131021613
  13. Oberdorfer, Don, The Two Koreas: A Contemporary History, Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, 1997, pp. 63-64. ISBN 0201409275
  14. The information for this section comes in large part from Michael Breen, interview with Daniel Davies, August 28, 2007.
  15. Michael Breen, interview with Daniel Davies, August 28, 2007.
  16. Michael Breen, interview with Daniel Davies, August 28, 2007.
  17. Michael Breen, interview with Daniel Davies, August 28, 2007.
  18. Terrence Henry, After Kim Jong Il, The Atlantic Monthly, May 2005
  19. Leadership Succession Recent Developments
  20. Scenes of lamentation after Kim Il-sung's death

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

Books

  • Armstrong, Charles K. 2003. The North Korean Revolution, 1945-1950. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801489148
  • Creekmore, Marion V., Jr. 2006. A Moment of Crisis: Jimmy Carter, the Power of a Peacemaker, and North Korea's Nuclear Ambitions, New York: Public Affairs. ISBN 1586484141
  • Goncharov, Sergei N., Lewis, John W. and Xue Litai. 1995. Uncertain Partners: Stalin, Mao, and the Korean War. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804721158
  • Kim, Il-sung. 1975. For the independent, peaceful reunification of Korea. New York: International Publishers. ISBN 9780717804269
  • Kim Il-sung (2003). With the Century. Korean Friendship Association. OCLC 26154302. 
  • Lankov, Andrei. 2002. From Stalin to Kim Il Sung: The Formation of North Korea, 1945-1960. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. 2002. ISBN 1850655634
  • Martin, Bradley K. (2004). Under The Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader: North Korea and the Kim Dynasty. New York: St. Martins. ISBN 9780312322212. 
  • Scalapino, Robert A., and Lee, Chong-Sik. 1972. Communism in Korea. (2 vols.) Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 0520020804
  • Seiler, Sydney A. 1994. Kim Il-sung, 1941-1948: The Creation of a Legend, The Building of a Regime. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. ISBN 0819194670
  • Suh, Dae-sook, ed. 1970. Documents of Korean Communism: 1918-1948, Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691087237
  • Suh, Dae-sook. 1988. Kim Il Sung: The North Korean leader. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231065726
  • Szalontai, Balázs. 2006. Kim Il Sung in the Khrushchev Era: Soviet-DPRK Relations and the Roots of North Korean Despotism, 1953-1964. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804753229
  • Wada, Haruki. 1992. Kinnichisei to Manshu kinichi senso [Kim Il Sung and the Manchurian Anti-Japanese War]. Tokyo: Heibonsha (Japanese).

Articles

  • "[Ten Point] Joint Declaration," signed by Sun Myung Moon and Yoon, Ki-bok, Pyongyang, DPRK, December 5, 1991, reprinted in World & I Special Report, vol. 2, no. 1 (February 2006), IIFWP (now Universal Peace Federation), pp. 238-39. This document presaged the Basic Agreement on Reconciliation, Non-aggression, and Exchanges and Cooperation, signed by the two Koreas on December 13, 1991
  • Cheong, Seong-Chang, "Stalinism and Kimilsungism: A Comparative Analysis of Ideology and Power," Asian Perspective, vol. 24, no. 1, 2000
  • Choe, Yong-ho, "Christian Background in the Early Life of Kim Il-song," Asian Survey, October 1986
  • Graham, Billy, "(Chapter 34) Through Unexpected Doors: North Korea 1992 and 1994" [about Graham's two meetings with Kim Il Sung], in Just As I Am: The Autobiography of Billy Graham, New York: HarperCollins, 1999. ISBN 0060633921
  • Harrison, Selig, "Kim Seeks Summit, Korean Troop Cuts" [first Western journalist interview with Kim Il Sung, together with Harrison Salisbury of The New York Times], The Washington Post, June 26, 1972
  • Mansourov, Aleksandre Y., "Stalin, Mao, Kim, and China's Decision to Enter the Korean War, September 16-October 15, 1950: New Evidence from the Russian Archives," Cold War International History Project Bulletin, Issues 6-7, Winter 1995/1996
  • Medetsky, Anatoly, "Kim Il Sung's Soviet Image-Maker," The Moscow Times, July 20, 2004
  • Petrov, Vladimir, "Mao, Stalin, and Kim Il Sung: An interpretive essay," Journal of Northeast Asian Studies, Summer 1994
  • Sanger, David, "Death of a Leader: Kim Il Sung, Enigmatic 'Great Leader' of North Korea for 5 Decades, Dies at 82," The New York Times, July 10, 1994
  • Shiner, Josette, "Q&A: 'We don't need nuclear weapons'" [interview with Kim Il Sung], The Washington Times, April 15, 1992
  • Shiner, Josette, "Q&A: North Korea's Kim calls nuclear talk 'fictitious'" [interview with Kim Il Sung], The Washington Times, April 19, 1994
  • Weathersby, Kathryn, "The Enigma of the North Korean Regime: Back to the Future?" IRI Review [published by Korea University], Spring 2005. Retrieved September 17, 2007.
  • Weathersby, Kathryn, "The Soviet Role in the Early Phase of the Korean War," The Journal of American-East Asian Relations, vol. 2, no. 4 (Winter 1993)

External Links

See also


Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.