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North Korea's Kim Jong Un oversees delivery of tactical ballistic missile launchers

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said front-line troops could use the 250 new launchers to threaten the South.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un oversaw the delivery of 250 new tactical ballistic missile launchers to front-line troops, state media KCNA reported on Monday, which Seoul said could be used to threaten South Korea.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a ceremony hailing the transfer of new tactical ballistic missile launchers in Pyongyang on Sunday.KCNA via AFP - Getty Images
/ Source: Reuters

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un oversaw the delivery of 250 new tactical ballistic missile launchers to front-line troops, state media KCNA reported on Monday, which Seoul said could be used to threaten South Korea.

The launchers have been described by state media as a modern tactical attack weapon personally designed by Kim and ready to be transferred to Korean People’s Army units on the border with the South.

North Korea said it test-fired a new tactical ballistic missile last month.

“We believe (the missile launchers) are intended to be used in various ways, such as to attack or threaten South Korea,” Lee Sung-joon, spokesperson for South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a media briefing, noting deployment near the border would mean the range was not long.

Photographs released by KCNA showed rows of launchers lined up beside red banners that called for victory under floodlights at the event held at night and attended by Kim.

In a speech, Kim blamed the United States for creating a “nuclear-based military bloc” that forced his country to further strengthen military capabilities.

A spokesperson for Seoul’s unification ministry handling inter-Korean affairs said North Korea’s illegal nuclear and missile programs were the primary threat to peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un oversaw the delivery of 250 new tactical ballistic missile launchers to front-line troops, state media KCNA reported on Monday, which Seoul said could be used to threaten South Korea.
Tactical ballistic missile launchers are arranged in rows during a ceremony in Pyongyang, North Korea, on Sunday.KCNA via AFP - Getty Images

Cha Du Hyeogn, a principal research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, said that Pyongyang wanted to show it had the capacity to strike its neighbor.

“South Korea talks of the U.S. extended nuclear deterrence commitment or its three-pronged deterrence system, and North Korea is showing it seeks to have the ability to attack that cannot be managed by such (systems),” Cha said.

The North’s increasingly strident rhetoric is also likely aimed at the U.S. presidential election, Cha said, potentially preparing the ground for negotiations if former President Donald Trump wins.

Kim and Trump held a number of unprecedented meetings before a summit in Vietnam in 2019 collapsed over sanctions.

Koh Yu-hwan, an emeritus professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University, said while Pyongyang had ramped up the rhetoric it had fallen short of strategic provocations.

“South Korea and the U.S. are set to hold a major military exercise in August. ... (North Korea) is making these remarks as a response to such military exercises,” Koh said.