Xi and Kim Agree to Strengthen ‘Strategic Relationship’ with Socialist Principles
The Koreas | Security | East Asia
Xi and Kim Agree to Strengthen ‘Strategic Relationship’ with Socialist Principles
Touting the achievements Pyongyang has made in recent years, Xi de facto recognized North Korea as a nuclear-armed state.
According to the state news agencies of China and North Korea, on June 8, Kim Jong Un, the leader of North Korea, and Chinese leader Xi Jinping, held a summit meeting around 6:30 p.m. local time at the Kumsusan State Guesthouse. It was the second summit between Xi and Kim since Kim visited Beijing to attend a military parade in September 2025 commemorating the 80th anniversary of China’s victory in World War II.
“Your current visit will mark an important occasion of showing once again that the DPRK and China have always stood together on the right side of history for independence and justice and their relations are definitely solid as they have stood the test of history under any international upheavals,” Kim was quoted as saying during the meeting by the North’s state-controlled Korean Central News Agency. (DPRK is an acronym of North Korea’s official name: Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.)
Affirming his regime’s firm support for Beijing, Kim also said that his top priority is strengthening bilateral relations with China into a “solid strategic relationship.”
“No matter the situation may change, our party and government will fully support the policy and stand of the Chinese party and government to defend the core interests on the ‘one-China’ principle,” Kim said.
Since U.S. President Donald Trump walked away from the negotiating table in Hanoi in February 2019, Pyongyang has explicitly beefed up its nuclear capabilities. In 2023, North Korea approved an amendment to its constitution legitimizing its nuclear-building policy.
With the enhancement of U.S.-South Korea-Japan trilateral cooperation, North Korea has also clearly taken steps to consolidate its coalition with China and Russia. Kim has extended its support to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war efforts in Ukraine. The construction of the China-Russia-North Korea coalition is widely interpreted as an anti-U.S. coalition in the region.
Xi’s leverage is clear. Following his summit with Trump last month, he met in quick succession with Putin and Kim. Even if Trump still wants to approach Kim with a top-down diplomatic approach, Xi has grasped the lever in any future talks between Trump and Kim.
“The traditional friendship between the two countries is rooted in their shared ideals and beliefs as well as their common goals, and is backed by a profound historical........
