AP Analysis: Damage control N. Korea style: Deny and attack
TOKYO — Faced with the killing of its leader’s half brother in what appears to have all the trappings of a politically motivated hit, North Korea is turning up the volume on a familiar defence: Flatly deny the allegations, viciously attack the accusers.
It’s a position the North has been in before, from dismissing U.N. reports outlining human rights abuses or the findings to disputing who threw the first punch in the Korean War.
But, while master of the message at home, rarely, if ever, has Pyongyang managed to effectively sway world opinion.
With evidence emerging that seems to strongly implicate some kind of North Korea connection to the killing of Kim Jong Un’s estranged half brother Kim Jong Nam, the North is intensifying its public attack on the officials in charge of the investigation in Malaysia.


