The Star Malaysia

North Korea aims for nuclear might

Kim vows to build world’s strongest force after launch of latest missile

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Seoul: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un said his country aimed to have the world’s most powerful nuclear force as he celebrated the launch of its newest interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) at a ceremony with his young daughter.

Kim also handed promotions to more than 100 officials and scientists for their work on the Hwasong-17 – dubbed the “monster missile” by analysts and believed to be capable of reaching the US mainland – just days after Pyongyang test-fired it in one of its most powerful launches yet.

Hailing the new ICBM as “the world’s strongest strategic weapon”, Kim said North Korean scientists had made a “wonderful leap forward in the developmen­t of the technology of mounting nuclear warheads on ballistic missiles”, the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported yesterday.

Building the nuclear force to protect the dignity and sovereignt­y of the state and the people “is the greatest and most important revolution­ary cause, and its ultimate goal is to possess the world’s most powerful strategic force, the absolute force unpreceden­ted in the century”, Kim was quoted as saying in his order promoting the officials.

The launching vehicle for the new Hwasong-17 ICBM was awarded the title of “DPRK Hero”.

It “clearly proved before the world that the DPRK is a full-fledged nuclear power”, the report said, adding that the North “fully demonstrat­ed its might as the most powerful ICBM state”.

Hong Min of the Korea Institute for National Unificatio­n said the North’s trumpeting of the Hwasong17’s test-firing was aimed at elevating its status as a nuclear power.

“If the (launch of the) Hwasong-15 in 2017 was focused on becoming a nation that can threaten the US mainland with nukes, the latest missile is focusing on becoming the most powerful ICBM state,” he said.

The UN Security Council has passed nearly a dozen resolution­s imposing sanctions on North Korea over its nuclear and missile activity since 2006.

Attending a photo session on Saturday with officials and scientists who had contribute­d to the successful test-firing of the missile, Kim called for “limitless bolstering of the defence capabiliti­es”, reported KCNA.

The official Rodong Sinmun newspaper carried more than a dozen pictures of Kim at the photo session with his “beloved daughter”, who was revealed to the world for the first time at last week’s ICBM launch.

Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said the daughter’s presence was meant to portray Hwasong-17 as “the protector of the future generation”.

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