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China, North Korea Exchange High-Level Visits

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China, North Korea Exchange High-Level Visits

In this photo provided by North Korean state media, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un receives Wang Huning, China’s No. 4 ranked leader, in Pyongyang, North Korea, July 15, 2026.

Credit: KCNA

According to North Korea’s state-controlled Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), Jo Yong Won, secretary of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea and a member of the Presidium of its Political Bureau, held talks with Wang Huning, a member of the Politburo Standing Committee of the Central Committee of China’s ruling Communist Party, at the Pyongyang Assembly Hall on July 15.

“The ever-changing present international political situation has required the two countries to further strengthen the militant unity, support and solidarity and steadily intensify and develop the friendly and cooperation relations for the victorious advance of the common cause of socialism in conformity with the basic spirit of the DPRK-China Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance,” Jo was quoted as saying in the KCNA report. (DPRK is an acronym of North Korea’s official name: Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.) As Pyongyang seeks to enhance its ties with Beijing, Jo reiterated Pyongyang’s will to develop the bilateral relations “in a many-sided way.” 

Wang also met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, according to photos published by KCNA, although no detailed report on those discussions had been issued as of this writing.

Just days before Wang’s visit to Pyongyang, a top North Korean official, Pak Thae Song – the premier of the Cabinet and, like Jo, a member of the Presidium of the Political Bureau of the Workers’ Party of Korea – made a trip to Beijing from July 10-12. While there, Pak met with China’s top leader Xi Jinping.

The reciprocal visits came just a month after Xi visited Pyongyang to hold a summit meeting with Kim. It was Xi’s first visit to North Korea in seven years.

Officially, the purpose of all these exchanges is to commemorate the 65th anniversary of the China-DPRK Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance. While in Pyongyang, Wang said that “the conclusion of the treaty between China and the DPRK laid a legal foundation to consolidate the militant friendship formed at the cost of blood,” according to KCNA.

However, the 60th anniversary of the treaty passed without such fanfare, making it clear the current geopolitical environment is the main driver. Xi made his North Korea trip shortly after he hosted both U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Beijing. The sequence put the Korean Peninsula squarely inside China’s broader balancing act among the major powers. 

During their summit in Pyongyang, Xi and Kim agreed to strengthen their “strategic relationship” with socialist principles. Importantly, Xi refrained from commenting on North Korea’s possession and development of nuclear weapons. Chinese readouts made no mention of denuclearization, even as a long-term goal, which many took as de facto recognition of North Korea as a nuclear-armed state. 

In his talks with Pak, the North Korean premier, Xi once again made no mention of nuclear issues. Instead, the Chinese leader urged both countries to “strengthen strategic coordination, resolutely defend our respective sovereignty, security and development interests, and create a favorable external environment for both countries,” according to a readout from the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

In the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, ties between Moscow and Pyongyang have blossomed. North Korea provided ammunition and deployed its troops to Russia to support Moscow’s operation in Ukraine. In exchange, it has widely been speculated that Pyongyang might have received economic assistance and sensitive missile technology from Moscow. 

China had maintained a position as something of a mediator on Korean Peninsula issues since the days of the Six Party Talk. In recent months, however, Beijing seems to have shifted its stance to take the same side with North Korea, creating more space for Pyongyang to evade U.S. and U.N. economic sanctions while bolstering its ties with Beijing. As Beijing has stopped bringing up Pyongyang’s nuclear issues, the trade and cooperation between the two sides will likely be strengthened even as Washington, Seoul, and Tokyo beef up their trilateral cooperation in the region. 

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