Mercury (Hobart)

Kim’s vow on nukes

- Pyongyang

LEADER Kim Jong-un says North Korea will never give up its nuclear weapons as long as the US and its allies continue their “blackmail and war drills” at its doorstep.

The North’s official Korean Central News Agency took the oft-repeated stance as it reviewed the country’s major nuclear weapons and missile tests this year.

North Korea conducted its most powerful nuclear test to date in September and launched three interconti­nental ballistic missiles into the sea in July and November, indicating it is closer to gaining a nuclear arsenal that could viably target the mainland US.

The aggressive tests have led to more internatio­nal sanctions and pressure on the country amid concerns the window for stopping or rolling back its nuclear program is closing rapidly.

The US and South Korea have maintained they will not negotiate with the North unless it is willing to discuss curbing its nuclear weapons and missile program.

In its report, KCNA said North Korea had taken steps for “bolstering the capabiliti­es for self-defence and pre- emptive attacks with nuclear force” in the face of a continued “nuclear threat and blackmail and war drills” by the US and its “vassal forces.”

The North often lashes out at the annual military drills between the US and South Korea, which the allies describe as defensive in nature.

KCNA accused US President Donald Trump of employing unpreceden­ted hostile policies against North Korea and threatenin­g it with talks of pre-emptive strikes.

It described North Korea as an “undeniable new strategic state and nuclear power”.

“Do not expect any change in its policy. Its entity as an invincible power can neither be undermined nor be stamped out,” KCNA said.

“The DPRK, as a responsibl­e nuclear weapons state, will lead the trend of history to the only road of independen­ce,” it added, referring to North Korea by its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

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