North Korea says tests included new warheads, missiles

Summary

North Korea said its latest launches tested new warheads, cruise missiles, and rocket artillery systems.

Why this matters

The report underscores North Korea’s continued weapons development and its focus on military deployments near South Korea. It also reflects broader shifts in Pyongyang’s diplomacy, including closer alignment with Russia and stalled talks with Washington.

North Korea said Wednesday that its latest launches included multiple weapons systems, including a nuclear-capable cruise missile that leader Kim Jong Un planned to deploy with front-line units facing South Korea.

The report by North Korean state media came a day after South Korea’s military said it detected multiple North Korean projectiles, including at least one short-range ballistic missile, launched toward western waters. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said the missile flew about 80 kilometers (50 miles), but did not specify other weapons involved.

North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency said Kim supervised Tuesday’s tests, which it said included ballistic missiles with new warheads for battlefield nuclear use, nuclear-capable cruise missiles using artificial intelligence for guidance, and 240-millimeter rocket artillery with “ultra-precision” navigation systems.

KCNA said Kim was satisfied with the tests, especially the performance of cruise missile systems intended for deployment with front-line long-range artillery units near the inter-Korean border. He called for faster efforts to modernize and strengthen artillery forces so that “no one can match,” the agency said.

During a meeting with military commanders last week, Kim discussed strengthening front-line units along the border in line with a state goal of turning the frontier into “an impregnable fortress,” state media said.

Kim’s foreign policy has increasingly focused on Russia, which has received thousands of North Korean troops and large shipments of conventional weapons to support its war in Ukraine. He has also sought closer ties with China, North Korea’s main ally and economic lifeline, while portraying Pyongyang as part of a broader front against Washington.

Trump has repeatedly said he wants to revive diplomacy with Kim, but Pyongyang has ignored those overtures and said Washington must drop demands for North Korea’s nuclear disarmament as a precondition for talks.

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