Kim Jong Il Photo A Fake, Report Claims
South Korean Media Dispute Legitimacy Of Ailing North Korean Leader's Picture
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In this undated photo released by Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service in Tokyo Sunday, June 14, 2009, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, center, inspects the command of the 7th Infantry Division of the Korean People's Army at an undisclosed location in North Korea. (AP Photo)
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A still photo of 67-year-old Kim Jong Il visiting an army unit, shown on state TV on June 14, is nearly identical to an April 25 military group shot of Kim, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper said. The report cited unidentified intelligence officials who said there was a "a high possibility" the April image was recycled.
Officials at the National Intelligence Service, South Korea's main spy agency; the Unification Ministry, which handles affairs with North Korea; and the president's office said they could not confirm the report.
Kim's health has been the focus of keen attention since he reportedly suffered a stroke last August without publicly naming a successor. He looked gaunt in an April appearance in parliament.
A string of provocative moves - including an April rocket launch, a May nuclear test and continuing threats to launch another long-range missile - are believed linked to a succession campaign under way in North Korea as Kim seeks to shore up national unity before tapping his youngest son as the communist nation's next leader.
Earlier this month, the South Korean spy agency told lawmakers that Pyongyang notified its diplomatic missions and government agencies overseas that 26-year-old son Kim Jong Un was in line to succeed him.
South Korea's Dong-a Ilbo newspaper said last week that Kim has put Jong Un in charge of the country's powerful spy agency.
The Chosun Ilbo said intelligence authorities reported their assessment of recent photos of Kim to South Korea's presidential Blue House, prompting officials to keep a close watch on Kim's health.
In both photos, which the newspaper published, Kim stands with a group of soldiers with the same ceiling lights above them and a banner calling for loyalty to the leader behind them.
The positioning of many of people in the photos is largely the same - except for a dozen figures who do not appear in the later image. No exact date for the June photo was provided in the Korean Central News Agency report.
A third photo, also published June 14, shows Kim wearing a winter jacket during the height of summer.
Nam Ju-hong, a North Korea expert at Seoul's Kyonggi University, said Kim's made so many public appearances this year while recovering from his stroke - probably to allay public concerns and media speculation about his health - that he may have collapsed again. The Unification Ministry said last week that Kim has made 77 public appearances this year, compared with 49 during the same period last year.
Paik Hak-soon, an analyst at the private Sejong Institute think tank outside Seoul, said the photos looked identical but suggested it was premature to conclude Kim's health had worsened on the basis of only one photo.
Also Monday, the North criticized the U.S. for positioning missile defense systems around Hawaii, calling the deployment part of a plot to attack the regime. The North said it would bolster its nuclear arsenal in retaliation.
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said he ordered the deployment of a ground-based, mobile missile intercept system and radar system to Hawaii amid concerns the North may fire a long-range missile toward the islands, about 4,500 miles away.
"Through the U.S. forces' clamorous movements, it has been brought to light that the U.S. attempt to launch a pre-emptive strike on our republic has become a brutal fact," the North's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper said in a commentary.
The paper also accused the U.S. of deploying aircraft carrier USS George Washington and Ohio-class submarines armed with nuclear warheads in the waters near the Korean peninsula, saying the moves prove "the U.S. pre-emptive nuclear war" on the North is imminent.
The commentary, carried by the official Korean Central News Agency, said the North will bolster its nuclear arsenal in self-defense.
The George Washington - one of the largest warships in the world - has its home port at the U.S. Navy's 7th Fleet in Yokosuka, Japan, and spends about half the year at sea.
Jeff A. Davis, a fleet public affairs officer, said Monday that his office cannot comment "specifically where the carrier is right now."
The North routinely accuses the U.S. of plotting to invade. But Washington, which has 28,500 troops in South Korea, has said it has no such plan.
South Korea's prime minister urged the North to immediately abandon its nuclear program, saying the regime's recent atomic and missile tests "are threatening" international and regional peace.
"We will never tolerate North Korea's nuclear development," Prime Minister Han Seung-soo said during a speech marking the anniversary of a 2002 bloody naval skirmishes between the Koreas.
© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- I think they are still deleting some already this morning.
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- If A commenter is reported as a abuser of the forum, and they ban that commenter, the comments made by the commenter are removed when He/She is banned. If someone commented about a comment, that will dissapeaqr as well since the root story is gone.. I have had mine dissapear also when connected to a different comment.
- lol w-t-f is censored on here
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- They couldn't show both photos? ***?
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- Yeah, it's a fake.
That is actually a photo of me with his face photoshoped to
replace mine.
It was one cold September morn and I was out strolling when
I suddenly realized I had crossed the border.
I stopped and asked these good gentlemen if they could direct
me back home.
One was kind enough to draw me a map (that's him in the right).
I left behind my camera. I'd like it back please. - Reply to this comment
- They're Right!!!
If you look close you can see that it's actually a chimp in that winter coat.
Has the chimp been making public policy?
If so, it would answer a lot of questions. - Reply to this comment
- Kim Jung may be ugly but many Korean women are absolutely beautiful.
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- I'm still waiting on North Korea's response to the ICBM with three dummy warheads that was launched from Vandy AFB in California early this morning and hit their target in the Pacific Ocean Southeast of North Korea.
Bet old Kim never expected that one. Why the silence?
Don't mess with President Obama, he doesn't play.
Of course North Koreans have never been around an African American so how would they know not to mess with them? - Reply to this comment
- This sad little man. He rules a impoverished nation, that's people are too ignorant to realize things could be better. How sad.
- Reply to this comment
- I'm so ronery...
- Reply to this comment
- Look at the Picture of Kim Jong-Il above.
It looks like he is wearing Blue Blocker Sun Glasses that were sold in the 1980s.
Hahahahahahaha. - Reply to this comment
- Deception and trickery, naw can't be. Since the beginning of time, man has relied on their ingenuity and know how to accomplish things. When that doesn't work, they resort to other things. In this case other things happens to be slight of hand. Enough to make a mother and father proud, don't you think?
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- Stop that! you are speaking over most posters head!.
You should phrase it more like this:
Kim Ills children are doing a wonderful job of covering for their brain dead father. The rhetoric is so refreshingly childlike that one knows immediately that his brilliant offspring are busy making their fallen father proud by taking the entire world on at the same time. May this knowledge give him the rest he 'so richly deserves'!!!!!!
- Stop that! you are speaking over most posters head!.




