The Propaganda and Agitation Department (PAD, Korean: 선전선동부[1]),[a] officially translated as the Publicity and Information Department,[3] is a department of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) tasked with coordinating the creation and dissemination of propaganda in North Korea. It is the highest propaganda organization in the country.
The history of the department can be traced back to the Soviet Civil Administration following the division of Korea in 1945. Agitation operations by the department reached their height in the years after the Korean War.
Although nominally under the Central Committee of the WPK, the department reports directly to Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un. The department is currently under the effective guidance of its deputy department director Kim Yo-jong, sister of Kim Jong Un, while its nominal head is Ri Il-hwan. The department has various bureaus and offices under its control.
The department sets guidelines for all propaganda materials produced and all North Korean media is overseen by it. However, in order to maintain its clandestine nature, actions relating to repression of the media are nominally attributed to the Ministry of Culture [ko]. When newspapers are published in North Korea, they go through three rounds of censorship. The first is handled by the editors of the paper. The second and third levels are taken care of by the department.
The department also translates foreign works, which are censored from the public, for the use of the country's political elite.[4]
All propaganda materials are produced in accordance with guidelines set by the PAD,[11] and all media is overseen by it.[12] Limits set for content by the PAD are strict.[13] The PAD controls the press in North Korea, but in order to maintain its behind-the-scenes nature, actions relating to repression of the media are often publicly attributed to the Ministry of Culture [ko] instead.[14] When newspapers are published in North Korea, they go through three rounds of censorship. The first is handled by the editors of the paper. The second and third levels are taken care of by the PAD. Its General Bureau of Publication Guidance reviews both newspapers and other types of publications and broadcasts. The PAD's Newspaper Administration is the final level of press censorship.[15] Likewise, radio and television broadcasts and the Korean Central News Agency are also under supervision of the PAD through the Korean Central Broadcasting Committee, to which it appoints personnel; only the Voice of National Salvation [ko] is controlled by the United Front Department of the party instead.[16] The PAD cooperates with the State Security Department and Ministry of Social Security to curtail international broadcasting into North Korea.[7] The General Propaganda and Agitation Department of the Ministry of Defense maintains a separate structure, but the PAD cooperates with it. Other partners include the Party History Institute and the Korean Documentary Films Studio.[5]
Kim To-man was the chief of the PAD until his involvement with the Kapsan faction incident that sought to oust Kim Il Sung in 1967.[18] Kim To-man had commissioned Act of Sincerity – described variously as either a film or a stage play[19] – about the life of Pak Kum-chol without the approval of Kim Il Sung. In North Korean society, this was an inexcusable offense, and Kim To-man was forced to go.[20]Kim Jong Il probably helped in purging him.[21] After this and related purges the PAD shaped the societal landscape of North Korea to allow Kim Il Sung to cement his rule and become the supreme leader of North Korea.[7]
Kim Jong-il
Kim Jong Il had entered service of the PAD in February 1966.[22] He was appointed the head of the PAD's Guidance Section of Culture and Art and Publication and Press section in September 1967 after a meeting in which Kim Il Sung criticized those who were associated with the Kapsan faction incident.[23][6] In 1969, Kim Jong Il was promoted the deputy chief of the entire PAD. During this time, he not only designed and issued party IDs and oversaw the handling of portraits of Kim Il-sung. In practice, Kim Jong Il ran the entire department because his nominal superior Kim Kuk-tae suffered from ill health and Yang Hyong-sop, who was tasked with ideological affairs, was engaged with science and education policy instead of propaganda.[24] In September 1973, Kim Jong Il became the chief of the PAD, a position which he held until 1985.[6]
Kim Jong Il's years in the PAD were marked by his effort to become an expert in the field of propaganda,[6] as well as him developing his charisma.[25] Kim Jong Il's main contribution in the department was to devise the "monolithic ideological system", later codified as the Ten Principles for the Establishment of a Monolithic Ideological System. Kim's various efforts greatly benefited the North Korean cult of personality.[24] During this time, the film director Choe Ik-gyu, a close confidant of his, also rose in the ranks of the PAD, becoming its vice director in 1972.[26] Choe developed mass games that would evolve into the Arirang Festival,[27] the organizing of which he is still overseeing.[28] Choe fell in and out of favor repeatedly,[29] and finally resigned from the PAD for good in 2010 after being briefly its director.[30][31] The department was important because of role in mass mobilization.[32] Kim Jong Il was known as a great fan of music, film, and theater since young age and his position within the department was natural fit.[33]
The PAD helped to create a cultural milieu in which Kim Jong Il was named his father's successor at the Sixth Congress of the Workers' Party of Korea in 1980.[7] When his succession became urgent in the 1990s, the PAD fabricated a convincing personal history for him because he lacked any true military credentials.[34] He continued to influence the daily affairs of the PAD after his succession.[5]
Kim Jong-un
Before the death of Kim Jong-il, it was already speculated that the imminent succession would employ the PAD.[35]Kim Jong Un's sister Kim Yo-jong became the de facto leader of PAD when she was appointed its first deputy director and put in charge of "idolization projects" of Kim Jong Un.[36][37] The nominal director is Pak Kwang-ho.[3][38]
Baek Seung Joo (2008). "Prospects on characteristics of the North Korean succession system and its foreign policy in the Post-Kim Jong Il era". Korean Journal of Defense Analysis. 20 (3): 215–230. doi:10.1080/10163270802309105. ISSN1016-3271.
"Choe Ik-gyu"(PDF). North Korea Leadership Watch. October 2009. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
Fischer, Paul (2016). A Kim Jong-Il Production: Kidnap, Torture, Murder... Making Movies North Korean-Style. London: Penguin Books. ISBN978-0-241-97000-3.
Lankov, Andrei N. (1999). "Kim Il Sung's Campaign against the Soviet Faction in Late 1955 and the Birth of Chuch'e". Korean Studies. 23 (1): 43–67. doi:10.1353/ks.1999.0003. ISSN1529-1529. S2CID154905899.
— (1974). "On the Elimination of Formalism and Bureaucracy in Party Work and the Revolutionization of Functionaries: Speech to Functionaries of the Department of Organizational Leadership and Propaganda and Agitation, Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, October 18, 1966". Selected Works. Vol. IV (2nd ed.). Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House. pp. 421–458. OCLC184772404.
— (1992). On Breaking Outdated Patterns and Bringing about a Fresh Change in Party Work: Speech to Officials of the Organizational Leadership Department and the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, February 28, 1974. Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House. OCLC622619429.