South Korea says 'credible intelligence' indicates North Korean leader's daughter is successor

South Korea says 'credible intelligence' indicates North Korean leader's daughter is successor
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Summary The NIS said the imagery of the daughter driving a tank was ​intended to highlight her supposed military aptitude and dispel doubts over a female heir, lawmakers said

SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea's spy agency now believes North ‌Korean leader Kim Jong Un's teenage daughter has been positioned as his successor, lawmakers said on Monday, citing a recent public display of her driving a tank that was likely intended to dispel any doubts.

The National Intelligence Service (NIS) told ​lawmakers its assessment was not based on circumstantial inference but on what it described as "credible ​intelligence" collected by the agency, according to briefings by ruling and opposition party members after a closed-door parliamentary meeting.

The NIS said the imagery of the daughter driving a tank was ​intended to highlight her supposed military aptitude and dispel doubts over a female heir, lawmakers said.

North Korea's ​staterun media KCNA last month published photos of Kim and his daughter driving a new tank, following earlier images showing her firing a rifle at a shooting range and using a handgun.

Such scenes are intended to pay "homage" to Kim's own ​public military appearances during the early 2010s when he was being prepared to succeed his own ​father, ruling Democratic Party lawmaker Park Sun-won said.

The latest assessment of Kim's daughter, who is believed to be around ‌13 and to be named Ju Ae, is a progression from earlier analysis by the spy agency which said she was likely being groomed to succeed her father.

Ju Ae's repeated presence at defencerelated events is aimed at easing doubts over a female successor and accelerating the construction of a succession narrative, the lawmakers ​said, citing the NIS.

Lawmakers ​have previously said the agency believes her increasingly prominent role suggests she is already being treated as the de facto secondhighest figure in the North’s leadership.

People Power Party lawmaker Lee ​Seong-kweun said the NIS noted that suggestions Kim's younger sister Kim Yo Jong ​might be unhappy about the focus on Ju Ae were misplaced, as Kim Yo Jong does not hold independent power.

Some North Korea experts, however, urged caution in interpreting the images as definitive succession signals.

Hong Min, an analyst at the ​Korea Institute for National Unification, said Ju Ae's tank appearance ​alone was insufficient to conclude she had been confirmed as Kim's heir, noting she appeared alongside her father rather than independently, unlike ​Kim Jong Un's own solo military appearances during his grooming phase.

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