Return to Korea , Pyongyang, October 1945 The Soviet Union declared
war on Japan on 8 August 1945, and the Red Army entered Pyongyang on 24 August 1945. Captain Kim Il Sung, a 33-year-old officer of the
Red Army, arrived at the Korean port of
Wonsan on 19 September 1945 after 26 years in exile. According to Leonid Vassin, an officer with the Soviet
Ministry of Internal Affairs, Kim was essentially "created from zero." For one, his Korean was marginal at best; he had only eight years of formal education, all of it in Chinese. He needed considerable coaching to read a speech (which the MVD prepared for him) at a Communist Party congress three days after he arrived. In August 1945, the Soviet Union instructed the intelligence section of the 25th Army to identify Koreans qualified to lead North Korea, which led them to create a list that did not include Kim, though none in the list were seen as qualified enough. During this time, he met with Soviet General
Grigoriy Mekler, who visited the 88th Separate Rifle Brigade; impressed by Kim, Mekler wrote a positive assessment report on him, leading Soviet general
Maksim Purkayev and
Iosif Shikin, political officer of the Soviet Armed Forces in the Far East, to summon him to assess whether he could become the deputy commandant of Pyongyang. In later October 1945, deputy premier
Georgiy Malenkov, deputy commissar of defense
Nikolai Bulganin and Iosif Shikin recommended Kim Il Sung for leadership. During this time
Lavrentiy Beria learned of Kim's existence and met Kim several times before recommending him to Stalin. from Soviet officers in Pyongyang, October 1945 (second from the right) at the joint meeting of the
New People's Party and the
Workers' Party of North Korea in Pyongyang, 28 August 1946 Stalin's final decision was passed to Politburo member
Andrei Zhdanov, then to General
Terentii Shtykov and then to the 25th Army. In December 1945, the Soviets installed Kim as first secretary of the
North Korean Branch Bureau of the
Communist Party of Korea. Originally, the Soviets preferred
Cho Man-sik to lead a
popular front government, but Cho refused to support a Soviet-backed trusteeship and clashed with Kim. General Terentii Shtykov, who led the Soviet occupation of northern Korea, supported Kim over
Pak Hon-yong to lead the
Provisional People's Committee for North Korea on 8 February 1946. As chairman of the committee, Kim was "the top Korean administrative leader in the North," though he was still
de facto subordinate to General Shtykov until the Chinese intervention in the Korean War. To solidify his control, Kim established the
Korean People's Army (KPA), aligned with the Communist Party, and he recruited a cadre of guerrillas and former soldiers who had gained combat experience in battles against the Japanese and later against
Nationalist Chinese troops. Using Soviet advisers and equipment, Kim constructed a large army skilled in infiltration tactics and guerrilla warfare. Prior to Kim's invasion of the South in 1950, which triggered the Korean War, Stalin equipped the KPA with modern, Soviet-built medium tanks, trucks, artillery, and small arms. Kim also formed an air force, equipped at first with Soviet-built, propeller-driven fighters and attack aircraft. Later, North Korean pilot candidates were sent to the Soviet Union and China to train in
MiG-15 jet aircraft at secret bases.
Establishment of North Korea campaign After
North Korea rejected the
United Nations' plans to conduct nationwide elections in Korea, on 15 August 1948, the
Republic of Korea, which claimed sovereignty over all of Korea, was established. In response, the Soviets held elections of their own in
their northern occupation zone on
25 August 1948 for a
Supreme People's Assembly. The
Democratic People's Republic of Korea was proclaimed on 10 July 1948, and Kim was designated by the Soviet Union as the premier on 9 September. On 12 October, the Soviet Union recognized Kim's government as the sovereign government of the entire peninsula, including the south. The Communist Party merged with the New People's Party of Korea to form the Workers' Party of North Korea, with Kim as vice chairman. In June 1949, the Workers' Party of North Korea merged with its
southern counterpart to become the
Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) with Kim as
party chairman. By 1949, Kim and the communists had consolidated their rule in North Korea. Around this time, Kim began promoting an intense
personality cult. The first of many statues of him appeared, and he began calling himself "Great Leader". In February 1946, Kim Il Sung decided to introduce a number of reforms. Over 50% of the
arable land was redistributed, an 8-hour work day was proclaimed and all
heavy industry was to be
nationalized. There were improvements in the health of the population after he
nationalized healthcare and made it available to all citizens.
Korean War . Archival material suggests that North Korea's decision to invade South Korea was Kim's initiative, not a Soviet one. Evidence suggests that
Soviet intelligence, through its espionage sources in the US government and British
Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), had obtained information on the limitations of US atomic bomb stockpiles as well as defense program cuts, leading Stalin to conclude that President
Harry S. Truman's administration would not intervene in Korea.
China acquiesced only reluctantly to the idea of Korean reunification after being told by Kim that Stalin had approved the action. On 25 October 1950, after sending various warnings of their intent to intervene if UN forces did not halt their advance, Chinese troops in the thousands crossed the Yalu River and entered the war as allies of the KPA. There were nevertheless tensions between Kim and the Chinese government. Kim had been warned of the likelihood of an amphibious landing at Incheon, which was ignored. There was also a sense that the North Koreans had paid little in war compared to the Chinese who had fought for their country for decades against foes with better technology. The UN troops were forced to withdraw and Chinese troops retook Pyongyang in December and Seoul in January 1951. In March, UN forces began a new offensive, retaking Seoul and advanced north once again halting at a point just north of the
38th Parallel. After a series of offensives and counter-offensives by both sides, followed by a grueling period of largely static
trench warfare that lasted from the summer of 1951 to July 1953, the front was stabilized along what eventually became the permanent
Military Demarcation Line of 27 July 1953. Over 2.5 million people died during the Korean War. Chinese and Russian documents from that time reveal that Kim became increasingly desperate to establish a truce, since the likelihood that further fighting would successfully unify Korea under his rule became more remote with the UN and US presence. Kim also resented the Chinese taking over the majority of the fighting in his country, with Chinese forces stationed at the center of the front line, and the Korean People's Army being mostly restricted to the coastal flanks of the front.
Post-war consolidation of power With the end of the Korean War, despite the failure to unify Korea under his rule, Kim Il Sung proclaimed a victory in the "Fatherland Liberation War". However, the three-year war left North Korea devastated, and Kim immediately embarked on a large reconstruction effort. He launched a five-year national economic plan akin to
Soviet Union's five-year plans to establish a
command economy, with all industry owned by the state and all agriculture
collectivized. The economy was focused on heavy industry and arms production. By the 1960s, North Korea enjoyed a standard of living which was higher than the standard of living in the South, which was
fraught with political instability and economic crises. In the ensuing years, Kim established himself as an independent leader of
international communism. In 1956, he joined Mao in the "
anti-revisionist" camp, which did not accept
Nikita Khrushchev's program of
de-Stalinization. At the same time, he consolidated his power over the WPK. Rival leaders were eliminated.
Pak Hon-yong, former leader of the Korean Communist Party, was purged and executed in 1955.
Ch'oe Ch'angik appears to have been purged as well. Yi Sang-Cho, North Korea's ambassador to the Soviet Union and a critic of Kim who defected to the Soviet Union in 1956, was declared a factionalist and a traitor. The 1955 speech titled
On Eliminating Dogmatism and Formalism and Establishing Juche in Ideological Work, which stressed Korean independence from Soviet influence, debuted in the context of Kim's power struggle against leaders such as Pak, who had Soviet backing. This was little noticed at the time until state media started talking about it in 1963. Under Kim Il Sung, the
Juche ideology was developed in opposition to the idea of North Korea as a
satellite state of China or the Soviet Union. Kim transformed North Korea into what Wonjun Song and Joseph Wright consider a personalist dictatorship, where power was centralized in Kim personally.
Kim Il Sung's cult of personality had initially been criticized by some members of the government. The North Korean ambassador to the Sovet Union,
Lee Sang-jo, a member of the
Yan'an faction, reported that it had become a criminal offense to so much as write on Kim's picture in a newspaper and that he had been elevated to the status of
Marx,
Lenin,
Mao, and
Stalin in the communist pantheon. He also charged Kim with rewriting history so it would appear as if his guerrilla faction had single-handedly liberated Korea from the Japanese, completely ignoring the assistance of the
Chinese People's Volunteers. In addition, Li stated that in the process of agricultural collectivization, grain was being forcibly confiscated from the peasants, leading to "at least 300 suicides" and he also stated that Kim made nearly all major policy decisions and appointments himself. Li reported that over 30,000 people were in prison for completely unjust and arbitrary reasons which were as trivial as not printing Kim Il Sung's portrait on sufficient quality paper or using newspapers with his picture to wrap parcels. Grain confiscation and tax collection were also conducted with force, which consisted of violence, beatings, and threats of imprisonment. During the 1956
August faction incident, Kim Il Sung successfully resisted Soviet and Chinese efforts to depose him in favor of pro-Soviet Koreans or Koreans who belonged to the pro-Chinese Yan'an faction. In 1956, North Korea rejected
Nikita Khrushchev's program of
de-Stalinization. Khrushchev promoted the concept of
collective leadership, and the Soviet embassy in North Korea started advising Kim Il Sung to either give up his position as WPK leader or as
premier. Kim wanted to retain both positions, but was prepared to yield one of the positions to a close ally; he recommended
Choe Yong-gon to the Soviet embassy. However, by 1957, Kim started to advise the Soviet embassy against appointing Choe. Kim also proposed
Kim Il, who had little political independence. Over the following months, Kim Il Sung and his allies
Nam Il and
Pak Chong-ae started investigating the degree of the demands by the Soviet embassy. Soviet ambassador
Alexander Puzanov did not push hard on the issue of division of powers, including in a personal meeting with Kim. This eventually led Kim to directly ignore Soviet advice and stay on as premier. The Soviet Union did not intervene, highlighting declining Soviet influence in North Korea. The last Chinese troops withdrew from the country in October 1958, which is the consensus as the latest date when North Korea became effectively independent, though some scholars believe that the 1956 August faction incident demonstrated North Korea's independence. Songbun was used to decide all aspects of a person's existence in North Korean society, including access to education, housing, employment, food rationing, ability to join the ruling party, and even where a person was allowed to live. Large numbers of people from the so-called hostile class, which included intellectuals, land owners, and former supporters of
Japan's occupying government during
World War II, were forcibly relocated to the country's isolated and impoverished northern provinces. When
years of famine ravaged the country in the 1990s, those people who lived in its marginalized and remote communities were hardest hit. The
4th Congress of the WPK in September 1961 saw Kim loyalists take over all key political positions. Having consolidated power, Kim started to intensify efforts to create a planned economy. He reorganized the public distribution system, which distributed goods provided by the state in quotas and was established in 1946, to become the only mechanism through which North Koreans could receive any goods. In 1960, he implemented the
Chongsanri method, which led to agriculture being directly controlled by local party cadres, with any pre-alteration of economic plans requiring pre-approval by a superior party organisation. In 1961, he implemented the
Taean work system, which replicated the same system across industry. Despite his opposition to de-Stalinization, Kim never officially severed relations with the Soviet Union, and he did not take part in the
Sino-Soviet split. North Korea signed a defense treaty with both the Soviet Union and China in 1961. After Khrushchev was replaced by
Leonid Brezhnev in 1964, Kim's relations with the Soviet Union became closer. At the same time, Kim was increasingly alienated by Mao's unstable style of leadership, especially during the
Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s. Kim in turn was denounced by Mao's
Red Guards. At the same time, Kim reinstated relations with most of Eastern Europe's communist countries, primarily with
Erich Honecker's
East Germany and
Nicolae Ceaușescu's
Romania. Ceaușescu was heavily influenced by Kim's ideology, and the
personality cult which
grew around him in Romania was very similar to that of Kim.
Introduction of the Monolithic Ideological System In October 1966, Kim convened the
2nd Conference of the WPK, when his position was renamed from Party Central Committee chairman to Central Committee General Secretary. The meeting also marked the beginning of the promotion of
Juche as the state ideology. In 1967, a group of veterans of the
anti-Japanese struggle of the 1930s and 1940s struggled Kim for leadership in what was known as the
Kapsan faction incident. The incident led to the introduction of the
Monolithic Ideological System at the fifteenth plenum of the
4th Central Committee in May 1967 to ensure Kim's absolute leadership over North Korea. On 25 May, Kim gave a speech titled ''On the Immediate Tasks in the Directions of the Party's Propaganda Work'', which led to dramatic increase in state control over society. The cult of personality around Kim intensified dramatically, It became compulsory to write Kim's name in bold or a bigger font, his birthday became the
Day of the Sun, and his portraits were mass produced around the country. Control over domestic travel increased, with 1967 seeing the introduction of local government-issued travel certificates that have since been required for North Korean citizens to leave their county of residence. Censorship was tightened significantly; even the Soviet Union's
Pravda and China's ''
People's Daily became banned, while the works of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong were removed from libraries. and Prime Minister Otto GrotewohlIn the 1960s, Kim became impressed with the efforts of North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh to reunify Vietnam through guerrilla warfare and thought that something similar might be possible in Korea. Infiltration and subversion efforts were thus greatly stepped up against US forces and the leadership in South Korea. These efforts culminated in an attempt to storm the Blue House and assassinate President Park Chung Hee. North Korean troops thus took a much more aggressive stance toward US forces in and around South Korea, engaging US Army troops in fire-fights along the Demilitarized Zone. The 1968 capture of the crew of the spy ship USS Pueblo'' was a part of this campaign.
Albania's
Enver Hoxha was a fierce enemy of the country and Kim Il Sung, writing in June 1977 that "genuine
Marxist-Leninists" will understand that the "ideology which is guiding the Korean Workers' Party and the Communist Party of China ... is
revisionist" and later that month he added that "in Pyongyang, I believe that even
Tito will be astonished at the proportions of the cult of his host [Kim Il sung], which has reached a level unheard of anywhere else, either in past or present times, let alone in a country which calls itself socialist." He further claimed that "the leadership of the Communist Party of China has betrayed [the working people]. In Korea, too, we can say that the leadership of the Korean Workers' Party is wallowing in the same waters" and claimed that Kim Il Sung was begging for aid from other countries, especially among the Eastern Bloc and
non-aligned countries like
Yugoslavia. As a result,
relations between North Korea and Albania would remain cold and tense right up until Hoxha's death in 1985. Although a resolute anti-communist,
Zaire's
Mobutu Sese Seko was also heavily influenced by Kim's style of rule. at
Moranbong Stadium, 1978The North Korean government's practice of abducting foreign nationals, such as
South Koreans,
Japanese,
Chinese,
Thais, and
Romanians, is another practice of Kim Il Sung which persists to the present day. Kim Il Sung planned these operations to seize persons who could be used to support North Korea's overseas intelligence operations, or those who had technical skills to maintain the socialist state's economic infrastructure in farms, construction, hospitals, and heavy industry. According to the Korean War Abductees Family Union (KWAFU), those abducted by North Korea after the war included 2,919 civil servants, 1,613 police, 190 judicial officers and lawyers, and 424 medical practitioners. In the
hijacking and seizure of Korean Airlines flight YS-11 in 1969 by North Korean agents, the pilots and mechanics, and others with specialized skills, were the only ones never permitted to return to South Korea.
A new constitution was proclaimed on 27 December 1972, in the same year as Kim's 60th birthday, which created the position of the
President of North Korea. Kim gave up the premiership, which he had held since 1948, and instead assumed office as president. On 14 April 1975, North Korea discontinued most formal use of
its traditional units and
adopted the
metric system. At the
6th Party Congress in October 1980, Kim publicly designated his son
Kim Jong Il as his successor. The
Kim family was supported by the army, due to Kim Il Sung's revolutionary record and the support of the veteran defense minister,
O Jin-u. In 1986, a rumor spread that Kim had been assassinated, making the concern for Jong Il's ability to succeed his father actual. Kim dispelled the rumors, however, by making a series of public appearances. It has been argued, however, that the incident helped establish the order of successionthe first apparent patrilineal in a communist statewhich eventually would occur upon Kim Il Sung's death in 1994. From the 1980s, North Korea encountered increasing economic difficulties. South Korea became an economic powerhouse fueled by Japanese and American investment, military aid, and internal economic development, while North Korea
stagnated and then declined in the 1980s. During this period, Kim Il Sung directed efforts to destabilize South Korea. In October 1983, North Korean agents
attempted to assassinate South Korean president
Chun Doo-hwan during a visit to
Rangoon, Myanmar, leading to the death of 21 people. In November 1987, North Korean agents planted a bomb on the
Korean Air Flight 858, killing 115 people. The
reform and opening up policy of
Deng Xiaoping in China from 1979 onward meant that trade with the moribund economy of North Korea held decreasing interest for China. The
Revolutions of 1989 in
Eastern Europe and the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, from 1989 to 1992, destabilized North Korea by undermining the ideological legitimacy and cutting Soviet-subsidized oil supply to the North Korean coal and chemical industry, contributing to the emergence of
North Korean famine. In response, Kim Il Sung launched the policy of "agriculture first, light industry first, foreign trade first".
Final years and ensuring succession to Kim Jong Il To ensure a full succession of leadership to his son and designated successor Kim Jong Il, Kim turned over his chairmanship of North Korea's
National Defense Commissionthe body mainly responsible for control of the armed forces as well as the supreme commandership of the country's now million-man strong military force, the Korean People's Armyto his son in 1991 and 1993. In early 1994, Kim began investing in nuclear power to offset energy shortages brought on by economic problems. This was the
first of many "nuclear crises". On 19 May 1994, Kim ordered spent fuel to be unloaded from the already disputed nuclear research facility in
Yongbyon. Despite repeated chiding from Western nations, Kim continued to conduct
nuclear research and carry on with the uranium enrichment program. In June 1994, former
US President Jimmy Carter traveled to Pyongyang in an effort to persuade Kim to negotiate with the
Clinton administration over its nuclear program. To the astonishment of the United States and the
International Atomic Energy Agency, Kim agreed to halt his nuclear research program and seemed to be embarking upon a new opening to the West.
Death of Kim Il Sung, issued after his death Shortly before noon on 7 July 1994, Kim Il Sung collapsed from a
heart attack at his residence in
Hyangsan,
North Pyongan. After the heart attack, Kim Jong Il ordered the team of doctors who were constantly at his father's side to leave and arranged for the country's best doctors to be flown in from Pyongyang. After several hours, the doctors from Pyongyang arrived, but despite their efforts to save him, Kim Il Sung died at 02:00 am
PST on 8 July 1994, aged 82. His death was declared 34 hours later. Kim Il Sung's death resulted in nationwide mourning and a ten-day mourning period was declared by Kim Jong Il. His funeral was scheduled to be held on 17 July 1994 in Pyongyang but was delayed until 19 July. It was attended by hundreds of thousands of people who were flown into the city from all over North Korea. Kim Il Sung's body was placed in a public
mausoleum at the
Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, where his preserved and embalmed body lies under a glass coffin for viewing purposes. His head rests on a traditional Korean pillow and he is covered by the flag of the Workers' Party of Korea. Newsreel video of the funeral at Pyongyang was broadcast on several networks and can now be found on various websites. The position of
President of North Korea was not inherited by Kim Jong Il. In a 1998 amendment, the presidency was written out of the constitution, and the document's preamble named Kim Il Sung as the country's "
Eternal President" to honor his memory. == Ideology ==