Xi Jinping’s state visit to Pyongyang this week has sent ripples through Whitehall, where security analysts are scrambling to decode the message. Sources confirm the Chinese president’s first trip to the hermit kingdom in 14 years was not a social call. Behind closed doors, UK intelligence officials are alarmed by the optics: a sitting head of state embracing a regime that tests intercontinental ballistic missiles. This isn’t friendship. It’s leverage.
Documents obtained by our team reveal that the visit was scheduled months in advance, coinciding with a deadlock in denuclearisation talks. China’s play, say analysts, is to position itself as the indispensable broker between Kim Jong-un and the West. But the cost of that position may be borne by the international community.
The trip’s timing is critical. North Korea’s nuclear programme has progressed faster than Western intelligence anticipated. Sources within the Ministry of Defence confirm that satellite imagery shows new activity at the Yongbyon nuclear complex. In return for a photo-op in Pyongyang, Xi may have secured a promise from Kim to freeze testing. But freeze is not dismantle, and promises in such regimes are worth the paper they’re printed on.
Let’s follow the money. China is North Korea’s lifeline, accounting for 90% of its trade. Every ton of coal smuggled, every dollar of sanctions evasion, flows through Chinese intermediaries. The visit, then, is a signal to Washington: Beijing holds the key to any lasting peace, and it expects concessions in return. Trade concessions, security concessions, perhaps even a quiet nod on Taiwan. The West is being asked to pay for a solution China can deliver at any moment but chooses to withhold.
UK security analysts are particularly concerned about the messaging to other authoritarian states. If China can court Pyongyang with impunity, what message does that send to Tehran, to Caracas? The prime minister’s office issued a carefully worded statement calling for “continued pressure” on the Hermit Kingdom, but behind the scenes, sources speak of a growing schism. The US wants tougher sanctions; the EU wants dialogue; and the UK, caught in the middle, fears being left out of the room when the deals are done.
We have seen this playbook before. In 2018, Kim met Trump in Singapore and promised denuclearisation. Nothing came of it. Then he met Moon in Panmunjom. Nothing again. Now he meets Xi, and analysts are weary. The cycle repeats: a summit, a smile, a slow slide back to belligerence.
The real story, however, is not Kim. It’s Xi. The Chinese leader is building a world order where his meetings matter more than any UN resolution. Where economic dependency buys political silence. And where, in the shadows of the Ryugyong Hotel, a new axis of unaccountable power is forming.
UK intelligence is now watching for a follow-up: a summit with Russia, a meeting in Beijing with the Taliban. The pattern is clear. And while Whitehall issues statements of concern, the money talks. The bodies are buried in the fine print of trade agreements.
China’s state media called the visit “a new chapter in bilateral relations”. They are right. But it’s a chapter written in invisible ink, legible only to those who know where to look. We will keep watching.









