
Kim Jong Un
Supreme Leader of North Korea
of 100 · declining trend · Goodness is mostly theoretical
Standing
10/100
Raw Score
10/85
Confidence
90%
Evidence
Strong with material contested areas
About
Kim Jong Un has maintained dynastic control over North Korea since 2011, pairing state-building projects and selective economic promises with severe repression, a rapidly expanded nuclear posture, and credible long-running allegations of grave human rights abuse.
The strongest observable positives are resilience, regime durability, and some limited evidence of attention to food supply and regional development. But the broader public record is dominated by violent consolidation of power, closed coercive governance, rights abuses documented by the UN and rights groups, and little credible evidence of God-centered accountability, worship, or trustworthy restraint.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
The public record shows stamina and some limited attention to state provision, but observable goodness alignment remains extremely weak because repression, coercion, militarization, and the absence of trustworthy God-centered accountability dominate the evidence base.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Public ideology centers on dynastic state power and personality rule, not observable God-centered accountability.
No reliable public evidence shows a last-day accountability framework shaping his rule.
The public record emphasizes regime survival and military deterrence rather than spiritually ordered moral limits.
No credible public evidence shows scripture-guided life or revealed moral orientation.
No meaningful public evidence of prophetic modeling was found.
Contribution to Others
Public evidence mostly shows dynastic loyalty and image management, not broad family-directed care.
Some state youth and housing messaging exists, but humane direct care evidence is limited and indirect.
Food and regional-development rhetoric offers limited positive evidence, but chronic hardship and repression dominate outcomes.
The state under Kim is defined more by isolation and movement restriction than hospitality toward cut-off people.
There is no strong public record of open, direct, answerable care to those who ask for help.
The observable pattern is the opposite: the regime is credibly accused of coercion, detention, and harsh social control.
Personal Discipline
No reliable public evidence of regular prayer or visible worship discipline.
No reliable public evidence of disciplined God-oriented charitable obligation.
Reliability
The public record is dominated by secrecy, coercion, broken trust, and little evidence of transparent, trustworthy restraint.
Stability Under Pressure
Kim has kept the regime intact through sanctions, scarcity, and prolonged isolation.
He survived a high-pressure succession and maintained control in an unusually dangerous political environment.
He remains durable under conflict pressure, but the response pattern skews toward escalation rather than morally disciplined restraint.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Succeeded Kim Jong Il and became North Korea's supreme leader
After his father's death in December 2011, Kim Jong Un was presented as North Korea's new supreme leader and moved quickly to consolidate authority over the party, state, and military.
→ Established dynastic continuity and gave Kim direct control over a highly centralized authoritarian state.
highOversaw the purge and execution of Jang Song Thaek
Kim's uncle Jang Song Thaek, once seen as a key regime power broker, was purged and executed during Kim's early consolidation of power.
→ Deepened Kim's control but reinforced a public pattern of ruthless internal coercion.
highMet the U.S. president in Singapore in the first summit of its kind
Kim met Donald Trump in Singapore, creating a rare diplomatic opening and temporarily lowering the temperature around direct U.S.-North Korea confrontation.
→ Produced a major symbolic opening, but it did not lead to lasting denuclearization or durable trust.
highCalled food provision and regional development a serious political issue
Kim said failure to provide basic living necessities including food was a serious political issue and pushed regional development and factory-building efforts amid chronic shortages and widening inequality.
→ Shows some observable concern for material provision, but evidence of broad humane improvement remains limited and indirect.
mediumUN and rights monitors said North Koreans had endured a lost decade of repression
UN human rights reporting and corroborating rights-group analysis said the country under Kim remained marked by suffering, fear, severe surveillance, and failure to meet international obligations a decade after the landmark 2014 commission of inquiry.
→ Reinforced the view that regime stability has been maintained through sustained coercion rather than trustworthy care.
highReelection, nuclear expansion messaging, and overt military support for Russia deepened confrontation
In early 2026 Kim was reelected to the top party post, promised further nuclear expansion, and publicly tied North Korea closer to Russia while honoring troops sent into the Ukraine war.
→ Recent evidence points toward continued external militarization and internal control rather than de-escalation.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Early succession and elite consolidation
2011Kim inherited power at a young age inside a heavily militarized dynastic system after his father's death.
Response: He consolidated control successfully, but did so through opaque force-centered methods rather than visible magnanimity or trust-building.
mixed_but_net_negativeChronic shortages and rural inequality
2024Food insecurity and regional inequality remained visible enough that Kim publicly called them serious political issues.
Response: He pushed regional-development and factory rhetoric, showing some regime attention to provision, but without clear broader liberalization or independently verified humane relief.
mixed2026 confrontation cycle
2026Reelection, nuclear expansion language, and support for Russia's war effort raised the stakes of Kim's rule in a tense geopolitical moment.
Response: He met pressure by doubling down on deterrence, alignment with Moscow, and coercive strength rather than restraint.
negative_for_integrityProgression
crisis years
A brief opening suggested tactical flexibility without deep moral or structural reform.
mixedcurrent stage
Recent years show continued repression at home and sharper militarization abroad.
downearly years
A little-known heir became the uncontested face of dynastic rule.
upgrowth years
Power consolidation hardened through purges, nuclear acceleration, and fear-based discipline.
downBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Maintains long-term regime discipline under severe external pressure and sanctions.
- • Occasionally acknowledges shortages and regional inequality rather than denying all hardship.
- • Can shift tactically from threat posture to diplomacy when regime interests demand it.
Concerns
- • Uses fear-based coercion and purges as visible tools of political consolidation.
- • Public welfare claims are narrow, hard to verify, and overshadowed by systemic repression.
- • Recent conduct reinforces militarization and external conflict alignment rather than humane reform.
Evidence Quality
8
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong_with_material_contested_areas
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and documented patterns, not inner belief, salvation, or hidden intentions. North Korea's closed information environment lowers certainty around some internal claims.