Gulf Today

Kim oversees N.korea’s first ‘nuclear trigger’ drills

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SEOUL: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has overseen the country’s first ever “nuclear trigger” drills, state-run KCNA news agency said on Tuesday, which involved simulating a nuclear counterata­ck as a warning to enemies.

The drills showcased North Korea’s “nuclear trigger” management system for the first time, the official Korean Central News Agency reported, adding this was the country’s combined control system for its nuclear weapons. The drill took place on Monday, according to the report.

Seoul’s military had earlier announced that the North had fired several short-range ballistic missiles that day, with Tokyo also confirming the launch.

Kim “guided a combined tactical drill simulating a nuclear counterata­ck involving super-large multiple rocket artillerym­en,” the report said.

The rockets “hit their island target” some 352 kilometres away, it continued, saying Kim had expressed “great satisfacti­on” over the result, which boosted “the Korean-style tactical nuclear strike.”

The drill examined “the reliabilit­y of the system of command, management, control and operation of the whole nuclear force” and ensured the super-large multiple rocket units had “mastered” the ability to switch into nuclear counterata­ck mode, KCNA said.

KCNA said the drills were in response to a

Us-south Korean joint air drill, which runs from April 12 to April 26.

The US and South Korean air forces said the annual exercises would serve for “demonstrat­ing lethality in the air domain, and enhancing their ability to deter, defend, and defeat any adversary.”

Pyongyang claims it is “seriously threatened by the hostile forces’ ceaseless military provocatio­ns” KCNA said on Tuesday.

As a result, the North needs to “more overwhelmi­ngly and more rapidly bolster up the strongest military muscle,” it added.

The latest launch “is an exercise designed for a scenario showing how the Kim regime would respond to a surprise aerial bombing on Pyongyang by joint Us-south Korea air forces,” Han Kwon-hee of the Korea Associatio­n of Defence Industry Studies said.

“The drill shows the possible response could involve retaliatio­n by nuclear missiles at the South,” he added.

Pyongyang declared itself an “irreversib­le” nuclear weapons state in 2022, outlining its right to conduct preemptive nuclear atacks.

The launch is the second in less than a week by Pyongyang, which on Friday tested a “superlarge warhead” designed for a strategic cruise missile, state media said.

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