Xi Jinping to Visit North Korea in First Trip Since 2019 Amid Tensions
Quick Look
Chinese President Xi Jinping will visit North Korea June 8-9, his first in nearly 7 years, amid Pyongyang's nuclear program, strained ties with South Korea, and complex alliances with Russia and the US.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
China and North Korea share a strategic alliance with a mutual defense pact, crucial for North Korea's economic and political survival under international sanctions.
China's president Xi Jinping will meet Kim Jong Un next week in a trip to North Korea, in his first visit in nearly seven years, according to both countries' state media. Xi will be in North Korea from 8 to 9 June at Kim's invitation. Xi last visited Pyongyang in 2019. The visit comes weeks after Xi received US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Beijing - two countries that loom large over Pyongyang's foreign policy. China is a key economic and political partner of North Korea, which faces sweeping international sanctions as a result of its nuclear weapons programme and alleged human rights violations. China and North Korea share a 1,400km-long border and are bound by a defence pact - the only one China has with any country. It guarantees mutual support if either is attacked. For Kim, the propaganda value of Xi's visit is self-evident. North Korea had improved its standing on the world stage after withstanding the pandemic and entering the war in Ukraine on the side of Russia. Despite Beijing's close ties with both Pyongyang and Moscow, Xi is wary of the burgeoning alliance between Kim and Putin. It is widely expected that Kim will seek more trade over the land border and more Chinese tourists to fill its newly built beach and ski resorts. Kim has been proudly displaying his nuclear and missile arsenal. He has also been showing off the capital Pyongyang to visiting dignitaries. And he wants the world to know that it was all achieved without bending his knee to the US or engaging with the South. Since Kim declared the end to reunification efforts with the South in December 2024, he had called South Koreans a sworn enemy and had cut all levels of communication with Seoul. When the North Korean women's professional football team visited South Korea last month to face a South Korean football team, the freeze-out was in full display. The North Koreans barely acknowledged the South Korean public who showed up to welcomed them at the airport and the stadium. They coldly shook hands with the South Korean players before the match then followed with rough and aggressive play. Seoul is hoping Xi will play a mediator in this trip, nudging Pyongyang to resume dialogue with both Seoul and Washington. South Korea's minister of unification Chung Dong-young said he believes that during Xi's meeting with Kim he will discuss resuming the US-North Korea talks. While Beijing is a long-standing promoter of denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula, it has significantly toned down this position in recent years. During the Trump-Xi meeting last month, the two leaders reaffirmed the shared goal of denuclearising North Korea, according to a White House fact sheet of the meeting.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Increased trade between China and North Korea
Likely · Within weeks
No immediate breakthrough in US-North Korea talks
Very likely · Within months
Open Questions
- Will Xi Jinping successfully mediate between North Korea and the US/South Korea?
- What specific trade agreements might be discussed during the visit?






