In another sign that tensions are easing following the summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump, North Korea has decided to skip one of the most symbolic and politically charged events of its calendar: the annual “anti-U.S. imperialism” rally marking the start of the Korean War.
Fist-pumping, flag-waving and slogan-shouting masses of Pyongyang residents normally assemble each year for the rally to kick off a month of anti-U.S., Korean War-focused events. It all culminates on July 27, which North Korea celebrates as a national holiday called the day of “Victory in the Fatherland Liberation War.”
North Korea has noticeably toned down its anti-Washington rhetoric over the past several months to create a more friendly atmosphere for the summit and avoid souring attempts by both sides to reduce tensions and increase dialogue.
Last year’s event was held in Kim Il Sung Square with a reported 100,000 people attending. North Korea even issued special anti-U.S. postage stamps.
Officials had no on-the-record comment on the decision not to hold the event this year.
North Korea’s state media were filled with reports, photos and video of the June 12 meeting between Trump and Kim in Singapore.
A 42-minute documentary-style news special was aired on the state television network two days after the summit and has been repeated frequently since, meaning that by now there are probably few North Koreans who are unaware of the changes in the air. For many North Koreans, the program was also quite likely the first time they had ever seen what Trump looks like.
Since the summit, North Korea made significantly fewer references to its need to have nuclear weapons than it was making last year, when Kim was test-launching long-range missiles at a record pace and tensions with Washington neared the boiling point.
North Korea’s decidedly less strident posture these days underscores the delicate position it finds itself in after decades of touting the United States as its archenemy.
State media referred to Trump quite deferentially in their reports of the summit, calling him by his full name and adding the title of president of the United States of America — itself a somewhat jarring contrast to the way it normally spits out merely the surname of U.S. officials, with no titles.
According to The New York Post, the North Korean government has even erased much of its anti-U.S. propaganda by removing posters depicting the U.S. as a “rotten, diseased, pirate nation.”
The Associated Press contributed to this article.