World

Chinese Leader Xi Travels to North Korea: In Pictures

Xi Jinping was given a lavish state welcome for two days of talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on the Chinese president’s first visit to North Korea visit in seven years..

Upon arriving in the North Korean capital at noon on Monday, Xi was received by Kim and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, Chinese state media reported. Kim’s teenage daughter-widely viewed as his most likely successor-was also in attendance, according to photographs released by Chinese state media.

Throngs of citizens in festive dress enthusiastically waving the flags of both countries lined the route to Kim Il Sung Square, where more flag-wavers awaited alongside an honor guard that the two leaders reviewed.



Named after Kim’s grandfather and the founder of the communist state, the square is the principal stage for North Korea‘s choreographed mass performances, military displays and other propaganda events designed to reinforce state ideology.

Monday’s ceremony also included a 21-gun salute as a military band played the Chinese and North Korean national anthems.

China is Pyongyang’s only treaty ally and by far its most important economic partner, having for decades helped sustain North Korea’s heavily sanctioned economy.

“Relations between the two countries stand at a new historical starting point, facing new development opportunities and shouldering new missions of the times,” Xi wrote in an op-ed published ahead of the trip on the front page of North Korea’s state newspaper, the Rodong Sinmun, according to a translation by the Korea Times.

Newsweek reached out to the North Korean Embassy in Beijing by email with a request for comment.

The geopolitical landscape has shifted significantly since Xi’s last visit to North Korea-and the trip comes just weeks after the Chinese president hosted his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump. They followed a succession of European and Asian leaders this year as Beijing seeks to burnish its credentials as a global diplomatic power.

Kim has greatly strengthened ties with Moscow, including through shipments of missiles, artillery munitions and troops to support Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

The U.S. and South Korea believe Pyongyang has received Russian technical expertise in return, potentially benefiting its expanding missile and nuclear weapons programs.

The growing cooperation has stoked tensions with Seoul and brought U.S. and allied attention to China’s doorstep.

Another headache for Xi is North Korea’s continued expansion of its U.N.-sanctioned nuclear weapons program.

The White House maintains that Xi and Trump agreed they remained committed to a denuclearized North Korea.

Kim Jong Un’s powerful sister, Kim Yo Jong, dismissed this goal as a “complete fabrication.”

“The DPRK’s status as a nuclear weapons state is the line of no retreat and it is a stark reality whether anyone recognizes it or not,” she said in a statement carried Sunday by the state-run Korean Central News Agency.

The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) is North Korea’s formal name.

Pyongyang insists its nuclear arsenal is an essential deterrent, citing U.S., South Korean and Japanese military exercises focused on a potential conflict on the peninsula. Last year, North Korea’s rubber-state parliament enshrined the nuclear weapons capability in the nation’s constitution.

2026 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.

This story was originally published June 8, 2026 at 5:48 AM.

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