South Korea’s National Intelligence Service has reported that Kim Ju-ae, the daughter of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, is now in the “successor nomination stage,” a phrase indicating not just symbolic visibility but active internal positioning as the next leader. This marks the clearest signal yet that Pyongyang is preparing for a fourth-generation transfer of power within the Kim dynasty.

Kim Ju-ae first appeared in state media in November 2022, accompanying her father at a missile test, and over the subsequent three years, she has been featured at military parades, significant weapons unveilings, and national ceremonies. The world did not know that the dictator had a daughter until his close friend, American basketball star Dennis Rodman, leaked the information to reporters. Seoul believes Ju-ae will be treated as the de facto second-highest figure in official protocol. There is no official record of her age, but based on the information from Rodham, she is believed to be in her teens.
North Korea has survived isolation, economic contraction, sanctions that exceed anything applied to the Soviet bloc during the Cold War, and ongoing famine. The notion that North Korea will “collapse” because a teenager is at the helm is not a reality. The Kim Dynasty is seen as immortal, and the people have an unwavering, albeit forced, loyalty to the family. The people will accept her as their leader, but the true question is whether there will be a “North Korea” to rule over. The answer largely depends on China.
North Korea’s existence is heavily dependent on Beijing’s strategic tolerance. China acts in its own national interest and will not sacrifice stability lightly. If China weakens internally during the coming sovereign debt cycle or shifts policy direction post-2030, North Korea’s long-term structure could change. Socrates shows heightened geopolitical volatility around the Korean Peninsula into 2026–2028, with another major structural inflection point into 2032. That does not imply disappearance, but it is not out of the question.



















