PYONGYANG, North Korea — The only predictable thing about the North Korean regime is its unpredictability.
For decades it has tried to keep the outside world off balance. This week’s ruling party congress has followed the same uncertain pattern.
The congress — the first in 36 years since Jimmy Carter was president and the Soviet Union alive and well — was designed to solidify leader Kim Jong Un’s grip on power and on his party. His grandfather Kim Il Sung was handpicked by the Soviets to run the state at the age of 33. Exactly Kim’s age Saturday.
It is a coronation of sorts and on the streets, factory workers, schoolchildren, youth groups and soldiers are rehearsing for the huge parades that will follow the congress.
RELATED: Images suggest North Korea preparing for nuke test, website says
But North Koreans were unaware it had even started on Friday until it was shown on television 12 hours later.
NBC News was invited along with other media to cover the celebrations, but we haven’t been allowed inside. Instead journalists were taken to a sidewalk 300 yards from it, a wire factory and a maternity hospital.
And no one knows why Kim called the congress or what he’ll say in his major speech — if he delivers one.
Still, an estimated 5,000 North Koreans were there to watch him cement his leadership as he opened the congress in typically defiant mood.
The country is safe with him and with nuclear weapons, he maintained in the short remarks opening the congress.
All of those NBC News spoke with outside the congress professed total loyalty to Kim and his vision.
Pak Doc Ju said he remembered the last congress in 1980.
“Kim Jong Un is the best leader in the world and under his wise leadership, North Korea is the most powerful country in the world,” the wiry old man said.
Kim Chun Bok, a 41-year-old homemaker, breathlessly reassured Americans that “thanks to Comrade Kim’s leadership the world will live peacefully — he’s a peacemaker.”
Kim has been called many things by world leaders, but rarely that.
Even his main allies, the Chinese, have lost patience with his repeated missile and nuclear tests. In the last few months alone he has fired missiles from submarines, ships and land, exploded a nuclear bomb and threatened America with war. The UN has condemned him. Under his leadership, North Korea is more isolated, and more dangerous, than ever.
There’s no hint of that in his sanitized capital Pyongyang, partly because its people have almost no contact with the outside world.
Here, the government has spent weeks polishing the streets and preparing parades for the political extravaganza they believe showcases what a socialist paradise North Korea is.









