
Chinese President Xi Jinping is scheduled to visit North Korea next week, marking his first trip to the rogue state in years and underscoring the enduring, dangerous partnership between the two communist powers.
This meeting comes as Kim Jong Un continues to flaunt his nuclear and missile arsenal, recently boasting that his production of weapons-grade nuclear materials has more than doubled over the last five years. Despite international sanctions intended to curb Pyongyang's reckless behavior, China remains the regime's primary economic and political lifeline.
The two nations are bound by a defense pact—the only one China maintains with any country—which guarantees mutual support in the event of an attack.
While some in Seoul hold out hope that Beijing might act as a mediator to force North Korea back to the negotiating table, the reality is that Kim has explicitly abandoned reunification efforts with the South, labeling them a 'sworn enemy.' Xi’s visit serves as a calculated display of support for a regime that has prioritized nuclear proliferation and hostility over global stability.
While Beijing occasionally pays lip service to the concept of denuclearization, their actions consistently provide the necessary cover for Pyongyang to continue its defiance of the international community.
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