In a move that caught even seasoned diplomats off guard, Chinese President Xi Jinping made an unannounced trip to Pyongyang this week, meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The visit, shrouded in secrecy until the last moment, has sent ripples through global capitals and reignited debates about Beijing’s strategic ambitions. For those of us who track the geopolitics of technology and influence, this is not just a diplomatic overture but a signal of China’s intent to recalibrate the global order using North Korea as a lever.
The visit was initially framed as a routine exchange, but the timing is anything but ordinary. With the US-China tech war escalating, sanctions on Russia tightening, and global supply chains fracturing, Xi’s decision to sidestep protocol and meet Kim without prior announcement suggests a deliberate power play. It’s as if China is saying: we can bypass the normal channels when it suits us.
From a tech sovereignty perspective, this is fascinating. North Korea, despite its isolation, has been a testing ground for Chinese surveillance and AI-driven control systems. The visit likely included discussions on data sharing and digital infrastructure, potentially advancing Pyongyang’s ability to monitor its population while giving Beijing access to a new node in its global digital network. This is the kind of algorithm-enabled diplomacy that Silicon Valley expats like me worry about: the use of technology to consolidate authoritarian influence.
Moreover, the visit undermines the UN’s sanctions regime on North Korea. China has long been accused of enabling Pyongyang’s evasion of sanctions, and this meeting can be seen as a public endorsement. For the global community, it raises the spectre of a Sino-North Korean axis that could destabilise Northeast Asia. The US and South Korea will now have to recalibrate their military and economic strategies, potentially accelerating the deployment of missile defence systems that further militarise the region.
But the real alarm is about China’s long-term play. By cosying up to North Korea, Xi is signalling that Beijing is willing to use its geopolitical leverage to reshape norms. In the tech world, we talk about first-mover advantage; here, China is making a first move in a game of global influence where the rules are increasingly rewritten by those with the most integrated digital and physical power.
The user experience of this for the average citizen is troubling. We are seeing a world where diplomatic secrecy, technological control, and economic coercion blend into a new form of governance. For Europe, it means reassessing our own digital sovereignty and alliances. We cannot afford to be naive about the implications of a China-North Korea partnership that merges surveillance tech with nuclear ambition.
In short, this visit is a wake-up call. It’s not just a diplomatic footnote but a strategic inflection point. As someone who analyses the intersection of technology and power, I see this as a calculated move to increase China’s bargaining chip in a world that is rapidly fragmenting. The question now is: how will democracies respond? With more of the same, or with a new framework for digital and geopolitical resilience?











