Ever since Kim Jong Il was anointed Kim Il Sung’s successor - and especially after he inherited power when his father died in 1994 - there was some speculation that this was not the end, and that his son would eventually succeed him. Beginning as a joke in the 1970s and 80s, in the 1990s it became more of a hypothesis, and in the 2000s, specialists and North Koreans themselves talked about it with near certainty.
The problem was which son would be the one to inherit the throne, as the Ever-Victorious Iron-Willed Brilliant Commander had three - Kim Jong Nam, Kim Jong Chol, and Kim Jong Un. Those who closely monitored the family knew that the first son was nearly certainly out of the question: his aunt Song Hye Rang’s memoirs “Wisteria House” (등나무집), published in 2000, revealed that he was something of an outcast in his family.
Ever since Kim Jong Il was anointed Kim Il Sung’s successor - and especially after he inherited power when his father died in 1994 - there was some speculation that this was not the end, and that his son would eventually succeed him. Beginning as a joke in the 1970s and 80s, in the 1990s it became more of a hypothesis, and in the 2000s, specialists and North Koreans themselves talked about it with near certainty.
The problem was which son would be the one to inherit the throne, as the Ever-Victorious Iron-Willed Brilliant Commander had three - Kim Jong Nam, Kim Jong Chol, and Kim Jong Un. Those who closely monitored the family knew that the first son was nearly certainly out of the question: his aunt Song Hye Rang’s memoirs “Wisteria House” (등나무집), published in 2000, revealed that he was something of an outcast in his family.
Become a member for less
than $5.75 per week.
-
Unlimited access to all of NK News: reporting, investigations,
analysis
-
The NK News Daily Update, an email newsletter to keep you in
the loop
-
Searchable archive of all content, photo galleries, special columns
-
Contact NK News reporters with tips or requests for reporting
Get unlimited access to all NK News content, including original reporting,
investigations, and analyses by our team of DPRK experts.
Subscribe
now
All major cards accepted. No commitments – you can cancel any time.