The test was conducted as a show of âdeterrenceâ less than a day after the US raid on Venezuela
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un personally observed a missile drill on Sunday, designed to test the readiness of the countryâs âwar deterrent,â in a move that came just hours after Pyongyang condemned recent US military intervention in Venezuela.
The drill, conducted early Sunday morning local time, involved a hypersonic missile launched from Pyongyangâs Ryokpho District. It traveled 1,000 kilometers before hitting a target in the Sea of Japan, according to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). State media framed the test as an operational evaluation of the countryâs strategic weapons.
While not explicitly linking the test to Venezuela, Pyongyang closely juxtaposed the two events in its official messaging. Around the time of the launch, the Foreign Ministry had sharply denounced the US action in Venezuela as âthe most serious form of encroachment on sovereigntyâ and proof of Washingtonâs ârogue and brutal nature.â
© KCNA
Overseeing the launch, Kim Jong-un caleled the exercise a âvery important strategic taskâ to maintain and expand a âpowerful and reliable nuclear deterrent.â
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âOur activity is clearly aimed at gradually putting the nuclear war deterrent on a high-developed basis. Why it is necessary is exemplified by the recent geopolitical crisis and complicated international events,â he stated, according to KCNA.
Kim Jong-un praised the launch unit for âplaying the prelude of the first combat drill in the new yearâ and extended New Year greetings to the countryâs missile forces, calling them a âreliable shield for defending sovereignty and security.â
Pyongyang has long insisted its weapons programs are a justified act of self-defense, focusing on developing increasingly sophisticated hypersonic missiles. It has accused the US, South Korea, and Japan of undermining regional security through joint military exercises, calling them an attempt to create an âAsian version of NATO.â
