Kim Jong Un wanted to
assassinate his half-brother in the most “gruesome” and public way
possible earlier this year to “horrify the rest of the world” and
instill fear among his doubters, according to a Monday report.
The daring assassination of Kim Jong Nam in February undertaken by two
prostitutes in Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur airport has mostly been shrouded
in mystery, with few reports from South Korean media speculating why the
estranged half-brother of the North Korean despot was killed.
A South Korean spy agency initially said the death was part of the
leader’s five-year plot. A Korea University professor investigating the
assassination -- and who previously led a research arm with South
Korea's intelligence agency -- told GQ on Monday it was all “part of a
master plan.”
“From the moment Jong Nam left Macau, the North Koreans tailed him,” Nam
Sung-wook told GQ. “They had a group on his airplane. As soon as he
arrived at the airport in Kuala Lumpur, another group followed him. They
kept that surveillance up while he slept. Even as Jong Nam entered the
terminal, he was shadowed.”
Several reports claimed the assassination attempt was sloppy work by the
North Korean government. The women were clearly visible on CCTV walking
to Kim Jong Nam and smearing the banned VX nerve agent on his face. The
North Korean agents accused of coordinating the attack never hid their
faces either. Nam said people shouldn’t dismiss this as some bad
planning on Kim’s part.
This image provided by Star TV on Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2017, of closed
circuit television footage from Monday, Feb 13, 2017, shows a woman,
center in white, at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang,
Malaysia, who police say was arrested Wednesday in connection with the
death of Kim Jong Nam, the half brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un. (Star TV via AP)
Surveillance video showed two women approaching Kim Jong Nam at Kuala
Lumpur International Airport on the day of the assassination. (Star TV
via AP)
“Pyongyang wanted to send a worldwide message by murdering Kim Jong Nam
in this gruesome, public way,” Nam said. “Pyongyang wanted to horrify
the rest of the world by releasing a chemical weapon at an airport.”
He added: “Jong Un wants to reign a long time and negotiate as a
superpower. The only way to do that is to keep the world in fear of his
weapons. He has a grand design, and this is part of it."
Two women, identified as Siti Aisyah and Doan Thi Huong, are the only
two people in custody and are charged in Kim Jong Nam's death. Both
worked as escorts and claim they were duped into thinking they were
playing a harmless prank for a television show. They face the death
penalty if convicted.
A reporter holds up a local newspaper during his report in front of the
morgue at Kuala Lumpur General Hospital where Kim Jong Nam's body is
held for autopsy in Malaysia February 18, 2017. REUTERS/Athit
Perawongmetha - RC137931A000
A reporter holds up a local newspaper during his report in front of the
morgue at Kuala Lumpur General Hospital where Kim Jong Nam's body is
held for autopsy in Malaysia February 18. (Reuters)
Reports have since emerged saying Kim Jong Nam was being positioned to
lead the North Korean government-in-exile. He also may have appeared as
a threat to the current North Korean leader because he was older.
A report by Japanese magazine Nikkei Asian Review also claimed Kim Jong
Un had his uncle, Jang Song Thaek, executed after uncovering an alleged
coup plot coordinated with the Chinese government.
North Korea refuses to accept Kim Jong Nam as the half-brother of Kim
Jong Un and believes a heart attack was the true cause of death. The
regime also accused the Malaysian government of working with South Korea
and other “hostile forces” to blame them for the assassination.
Kim Jong Nam was living abroad when he was killed. He was arrested in
2001 while trying to sneak into Japan to visit Tokyo Disneyland. He
quickly fell out of favor with his father, Kim Jong Il, to take over the
dictatorship. Kim Jong Un, meanwhile, ascended to take the job when his
father died in 2011.
There were two other attempts to assassinate Kim Jong Nam before his
strange death, once in 2010 and another in 2012, GQ reported.
Eventually, the regime also cut his funds, leaving him begging his
family to not punish him because he and his family had “nowhere to
hide.” |
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