The Morning: North Korea’s next leader?
Plus, Al Jazeera journalists, trade and Ukraine.
The Morning
August 11, 2025

Good morning. Here’s the latest:

  • Trade: The tech companies Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices are expected to pay the U.S. government 15 percent of the money they make selling A.I. chips to China.
  • Gaza: An Israeli strike near a hospital in Gaza City killed four Al Jazeera journalists, the network said. Israel said it targeted one of the men killed and claimed he was a Hamas fighter. He and Al Jazeera had denied that accusation.
  • Ukraine: Vice President JD Vance said the government is working to secure a meeting with President Trump, Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky.

More news is below. But first, we look at succession in North Korea.

A photo of Kim Ju-ae and Kim Jong-un walking across a flight field, a grounded missile in the background.
Korean Central News Agency, via Reuters

Dear daughter

Pablo Robles headshotChoe Sang-Hun headshot

by Pablo Robles and Choe Sang-Hun

We analyzed hundreds of images and videos of North Korea’s first family.

Kim Jong-un introduced his daughter to the world in November 2022 with a show of affection and menace, holding her hand in front of an intercontinental ballistic missile. Since then, state media has shown Kim Ju-ae more and more prominently next to her father, the leader of North Korea. Now she is being hailed as a “great person of guidance” — a sign, experts say, that she is perhaps being groomed to take the reins of the isolated, nuclear-armed regime one day.

She holds no known official title in North Korea. The outside world has never heard her voice. The North’s state media has not even named her, referring to her only as the “most beloved,” “respected” or “dear” daughter of its leader.

But intelligence officials and analysts consider her to be her father’s most likely successor. She is believed to be just 12. We studied Ju-ae’s public appearances since her debut three years ago to trace her transformation from a shy girl by her father’s side to a poised public figure who shares center stage with him.

A new face

She is showing up in domestic photo ops and some diplomatic receptions with her father. But most telling may be her presence in military settings — the first area where Kim consolidated his power after his father died.

A slide show of photos that show Kim Ju-ae and Kim Jong-un at events: Kim Jong-un sits for a photo with some officials, Kim Ju-ae is beside him; Ju-ae stands next to her father in front of some missiles; Ju-ae listens as her father talks to some officials; Ju-ae and her father board a plane with crowds in the background.

Senior military officers have made demonstrations of loyalty to Ju-ae, analysts said. At one military parade in 2023, a top general was seen kneeling before her, a gesture of deference that had once been reserved for her father:

An official kneels down to whisper in Kim Ju-ae’s ear at an event. Kim Jong-un sits down and waves at an unseen crowd.
Korean Central Television

A needed heir

South Korean intelligence officials believe that Kim likely has two children. There are also unconfirmed reports that he might have a third child. But only Ju-ae has made public appearances. If she is her father’s designated successor, she would be in line to become the first woman to rule North Korea’s deeply patriarchal and highly militarized society and the world’s newest nuclear power.

Kim is just 41, but preparing a successor makes sense: He has a family history of heart trouble; he’s about 5-foot-7 and weighs about 310 pounds, according to South Korean intelligence officials. They added that he had unhealthy habits, including chain-smoking, heavy wining and dining, and frequently staying up until early mornings to surf the internet, where he likes to browse weapons websites.

A grid of four photos showing Kim Jong-un smoking beside Kim Ju-ae.
Source: Korean Central News Agency

We combed through many images to spotlight the ones that suggest Ju-ae’s importance here.

THE LATEST NEWS

Trade

  • Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices’s deal with the government is unusual: There are few precedents for the U.S. agreeing to grant export licenses in exchange for a share of revenue.
  • AriZona Iced Teas still cost 99 cents, despite inflation. Trump’s aluminum tariffs may change that.
  • Chinese car-carrier ships are taking a dangerous shortcut through the Suez Canal to beat competitors to European markets. (Many automakers avoid it because of Houthi attacks.)

Trump Administration

  • The government plans to temporarily reassign 120 F.B.I. agents in Washington to nighttime patrol duties as part of Trump’s crackdown on street crime there.
  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wants to make it easier for people to claim compensation for vaccine injuries. Experts worry that could lead to more lawsuits and, ultimately, reduced vaccine access.
  • A Harvard-trained lawyer is worked with the government to stop her alma mater from enrolling international students. Read about her influence.

International News

A man and a woman standing at lecterns with Australian flags beside them.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of Australia, right, and Penny Wong, the country’s foreign minister. Mick Tsikas/Australian Associated Press, via Reuters

Other Big Stories

  • Heavy rains in southeastern Wisconsin brought flash floods that prompted rescues and damaged homes.
  • In Texas, some undocumented victims of the recent floods may not be seeking assistance because they are afraid of deportation, immigrant aid groups say.
  • New Hampshire is backing away from a promise to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to people who were sexually abused in state care. Other states are also rethinking payouts.
  • AOL said it would discontinue its dial-up internet service, a service synonymous with the early days of the internet.

OPINIONS

Spain is a relatively pro-immigrant country because it knows what happens to an economy when you force millions to leave, Omar Encarnación writes.

Most people who medically transition and later reverse it don’t do so out of regret. Read about Kinnon MacKinnon’s research on “detransitioning.”

Here is a column by Michelle Goldberg on the Republican Party’s corruption.

The Games Sale. Our best offer won’t last.

Let the fun begin. Subscribe to New York Times Games for up to 75% off your first year. As a subscriber you can strengthen your strategy with Wordle Bot, reach Genius on Spelling Bee, play the Crossword and more.

MORNING READS

In an ornate library, a balcony curves along enormously tall shelves of books, as people sit below.
In Quebec City. Nasuna Stuart-Ulin for The New York Times

Quebec: A library is a sanctuary for English speakers.

Myths: Here are six misconceptions about running that could be slowing you down.

“Sharenting”: With the rise of A.I., parents should rethink posting photos of their children online, our columnist explains.

Work Friend: What to do when your manager doesn’t work. Like, at all.

Metropolitan Diary: When we were fangirls.

Your pick: The most clicked article in The Morning yesterday was about Mark Zuckerberg’s Palo Alto compound.

Lives Lived: Terry Reid was a British vocal alchemist and songwriter whose powerful voice earned him the nickname Superlungs. Despite turning down the chance to become the lead singer of Led Zeppelin, he came to be celebrated by luminaries like Aretha Franklin. Reid died at 75.

SPORTS

A’ja Wilson smiling with a towel around her neck. A smiling teammate grabs her shoulder.
A’ja Wilson Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun, via Associated Press

W.N.B.A.: The Las Vegas Aces defeated the Connecticut Sun, 94-86. During the game, Aces star A’ja Wilson became the first player in the league to score at least 30 points and grab at least 20 rebounds.

Gymnastics: Hezly Rivera won the U.S. Gymnastics Championships.

A.I. AND ITS USES

A close-up of the ChatGPT icon on a smartphone screen.
Kiichiro Sato/Associated Press

The Times spoke with 21 people about how they are using A.I. in their work. A restaurant owner uses ChatGPT to pick wines for his menus; a psychotherapist harnesses the technology to write up therapy plans; and a music teacher turns to an A.I. chatbot to (more politely) let students know that they didn’t make the cut for a competitive high school jazz program.

Read about more uses here.

More on culture

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In Queens, New York. Mila De La Torre for The New York Times
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  • Real-life siblings Lupita and Junior Nyong’o are playing twins in Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night” at the newly reopened Delacorte Theater in Central Park.
  • How to craft a dumb joke that’s actually funny? The makers of the new “Naked Gun” movie break down