Thae, who defected to the South in 2016 and is now a ruling party lawmaker, said the closures “show that UN sanctions against North Korea are working well around the world.”
North Korea’s embassies in Africa were until recently lucrative endeavours, allowing the country to earn hard cash for its services from construction to military deals, but the tightening of global sanctions over Kim’s banned weapons programmes has started to bite, experts say.
Now, even Pyongyang’s far-flung traditional allies “are having difficulties making financial payments to North Korea [so] it has no choice but to close its embassies,” Thae said.
Seoul’s Unification Ministry said this week that the global “strengthening of sanctions against North Korea has disrupted its foreign currency earnings”.
“This is a glimpse of North Korea’s dire economic situation, where it is difficult to maintain even minimal diplomatic relations with traditional allies,” it said.
North Korea has diplomatic ties with more than 150 countries, according to the ministry, but the number of missions it maintains overseas has been shrinking since the 1990s due to financial constraints.
The latest round of closures also highlights a shift in Pyongyang’s diplomatic strategy: while it once sought to maintain a so-called non-aligned strategy and balance between Cold War superpowers, now it is throwing in its lot with China and Russia.
Kim Jong-un and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, held a summit in September in Russia’s far east, with the United States and South Korea subsequently claiming Pyongyang had begun providing Moscow with weapons, in exchange for satellite technology advice.
“Because of the war in Ukraine, North Korea believes that it can survive by sending a lot of manpower to Russia and China and intensively strengthening military and economic cooperation with these two countries,” former diplomat Thae said.
“It shows that the strategic position of Africa has weakened while the strategic importance of China and Russia has grown in North Korea’s overall diplomatic strategy.”
The seeds of the embassy closures may have been sown as far back as 2019 when a summit in Hanoi between then-US president Donald Trump and Kim collapsed, said Cho Han-bum, senior research fellow at the Korea Institute for National Unification.
At that time, “North Korea declared a prolonged war” by deciding to focus on its banned weapons programmes, not negotiations, he said.
But the pandemic made it hard to move personnel around, so the changes to the country’s overseas missions are only just being carried out.
Reports indicate the country will eventually close 10 out of its around 50 embassies, Cho said, “which is a 20 per cent reduction in the number of foreign embassies.
“It is difficult to find cases like this internationally, unless there is an economic crisis,” he added.
North Korea’s dire economic situation has only worsened since the country sealed its borders in 2020 as a pandemic precaution, with its trade deficit increasing and foreign currency reserves being run down, according to Cho.
“Cyber hacking is not enough to run their economy,” he said. “It seems economic hardship and depletion of foreign currency are the biggest reasons for the closure of embassies abroad.”
“North Korea will bolster its so-called new Cold War diplomacy by maintaining or strengthening its bases with important countries like China, Russia, Syria, Iran, and Cuba while clearing out those that are difficult and burdensome to maintain,” he said.
“However, a reduction in North Korea’s overall diplomatic capabilities can be seen as inevitable.”