Saturday, January 20, 2024

North Korea Claims to Test ‘Underwater Nuclear Weapon System’ - IT IS HOPED THE NUCLEAR SYSTEM WILL HELP LIPOSUCTION THE BELOVED DICTATOR'S LARDED FACE

 

North Korea Claims to Test ‘Underwater Nuclear Weapon System’

TV news at Seoul's Yongsan Railway Station shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (R) and his daughter (L), believed to be named Kim Ju Ae, attending a banquet to celebrate the country's successful launch of a reconnaissance satellite. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has lauded the country's successful launch …
KIM Jae-Hwan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty

North Korea announced on Friday that it tested a nuclear-capable underwater attack drone, a weapon that could theoretically wipe out entire port cities.

North Korean state media said the test was intended as an intimidating response to United States-South Korean military drills.

“The Underwater Weapon System Institute under the DPRK Academy of Defense Science conducted an important test of its underwater nuclear weapon system ‘Haeil-5-23’ under development in the East Sea of Korea,” Pyongyang’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported.

DPRK stands for Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the North Korean regime’s preferred name for itself. “Haeil” is the name North Korea assigned to a series of undersea drones it has been working on since 2012. Only a few of the earlier tests were publicized, but dictator Kim Jong-un claimed on Friday he has overseen no fewer than 29 tests over the past decade.

“Our army’s underwater nuke-based countering posture is being further rounded off and its various maritime and underwater responsive actions will continue to deter the hostile military maneuvers of the navies of the U.S. and its allies,” KCNA wrote, quoting an unnamed North Korean military official.

When Pyongyang rolled out its latest generation of Unmanned Underwater Vehicles (UUV) in March 2023, it said the purpose of the weapon was to “stealthily infiltrate into operational waters and make a super-scale radioactive tsunami through underwater explosion to destroy naval striker groups and major operational ports of the enemy.”

Friday’s test supposedly involved the Haeil-5-23 drone “cruising along an oval and pattern-8 course at an underwater depth of 80 to 150 meters in the East Sea of Korea for 59 hours and 12 minutes” before detonating a non-nuclear warhead against a mockup of an “enemy port.”

KCNA said the test “verified” the reliability of the Haeil platform and “fully confirmed its lethal strike capability.”

Outside observers were skeptical of North Korea’s claims and especially skeptical that the Haeli UUV is a devastating super-weapon that could slip past South Korea’s undersea defenses.

“What we do know about it, if it’s close to what they tested last year, is that this underwater unmanned vehicle is likely quite slow. It’s a very exotic system,” professor Mason Richey of Seoul’s Hankuk University of Foreign Studies told Al Jazeera News on Friday.

“It probably runs only something around eight knots per hour, which is somewhere around 14 or 15 kilometers per hour. It’s probably quite vulnerable to anti-submarine warfare,” he said.

Richey thought the UUV test was probably a bit of theatrical “political signaling” to show North Korea remains infuriated by United States and South Korean military exercises. The United States, South Korea, and Japan conducted a large-scale three-day combined naval exercise off South Korea’s Jeju Island this week, including the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson.

The North Korean Defense Ministry issued a statement denouncing “the U.S. and its followers” for their “reckless acts of seriously threatening the security of the DPRK” and threatening “catastrophic consequences” if further such drills are held.

The UUV test was conducted the day after Kim Jong-un announced he was abandoning North Korea’s long-professed goal of “reunification” with South Korea, and demanded his national constitution be rewritten to designate South Korea as the North’s “primary foe and invariable principal enemy.”

South Korean intelligence has long accused Pyongyang of exaggerating the capabilities of its UUV program, but it asked the U.N. Security Council (UNSC) to “break the silence” on North Korea’s rapidly escalating weapons tests at an emergency session on Thursday.

The UNSC session was called to discuss North Korea’s test of an intermediate-range ballistic missile on Sunday, the first provocative launch by Pyongyang in 2024.

The launch was particularly troubling because North Korea claims to have developed solid-fuel rocket engines, a system that can be prepared and launched much faster than liquid-fueled missiles. North Korea already has solid-fuel short-range missiles, but the intermediate-range weapon tested on Sunday could be capable of hitting U.S. bases in Guam or Okinawa.

U.S. Deputy Ambassador to the U.N. Robert Wood agreed with South Korea’s representatives that North Korea’s provocative weapons tests “are of great concern.”

Wood noted the North Korean tests are violations of UNSC sanctions, and asked “all Security Council members to enforce those resolutions.”

THE LARD-FACED DICTATOR OF KOREA BEST BE PACKING FOR CHINA!!! TRUMP IS HEADING HIS WAY WITH A MEAT CLEAVER!
Reports: Japan Seeks Trump Meeting in Anticipation of 2024 Win
Fumio Kishida, former foreign minister, poses for a photo following a press conference after being elected as the new leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), at the LDP headquarters in Tokyo on September 29, 2021. (Photo by Du Xiaoyi / POOL / AFP) (Photo by DU XIAOYI/POOL/AFP via …
DU XIAOYI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Multiple newspapers in Japan reported this week that the government of conservative Prime Minister Kishida Fumio is seeking to establish contact with former President Donald Trump in anticipation of his potential return to the White House.

Trump won a decisive victory in the Iowa primary caucuses the week, defeating his three opponents by the largest margin in the history of the Republican Iowa caucuses. One of the three, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, dropped out of the race and endorsed Trump, leaving Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley in the race. In the increasingly likely possibility that Trump is nominated and runs against incumbent President Joe Biden, recent polls indicate that he is attracting enough support in key states to potentially win the presidency.

WATCH: Endorsed! Vivek Drops Out of Race, Throws “Full” Support Behind Trump

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During his first term in office from 2016 to 2020, Trump made Japan a priority in his foreign policy. The first world leader to meet with him following his election victory in 2016 was the late former prime minister of the country, Abe Shinzo, who developed a close friendship with the president. Kishida, the current prime minister, served as Abe’s foreign minister.

President Donald Trump, left, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe wave to reporters after they signed hats reading “Donald and Shinzo, Make Alliance Even Greater” at the Kasumigaseki Country Club in Kawagoe, near Tokyo, Japan, Sunday, November 5, 2017. (Franck Robichon/Pool Photo via AP)

The left-leaning Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun reported on Wednesday that Kishida may have sent another former prime minister, Aso Taro, to establish contact with Trump’s team during a recent visit to America. Aso is currently serving as the vice president of Kishida’s and Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and is considered highly influential following his term as prime minister.

In the United States between January 9 and 13, Aso reportedly “spoke at an event sponsored by a U.S. think tank and met with U.S. government officials,” according to Asahi, “But according to sources, Aso also tried to meet with former U.S. President Donald Trump, who is on the comeback trail.”

Aso was reportedly in New York at the same time as Trump but the two did not meet. Anonymous sources told Asahi that the Trump team had also “sent out feelers” to Aso to re-establish contact with the Japanese government.

Aso publicly denied having any plans to meet with Trump while in America.

Another Japanese newspaper, the Yomiuri Shimbun, reported the day before that Kishida “believes that Donald Trump is highly likely to win the Republican Party primary” and thus potentially the presidency. The newspaper also reported that Kishida was “pinning his hopes on Taro Aso,” and that Kishida met with Aso to assess his time in America on Monday, shortly after his return to Japan. Yomiuri claimed that, according to unknown sources, the two discussed the American presidential race.

Yomiuri described Biden as an obstacle to Japan’s attempts at contact with Trump: “The relationship with the Biden administration makes it difficult for Japanese government officials to make official contact with Trump’s team.”

The Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post, citing Asahi Shimbun‘s reporting, claimed that the Japanese government was attempting to inflate Trump’s “ego” out of fear that he could seek diplomacy with North Korea. As president, Trump met with North Korea’s communist dictator Kim Jong-un on several occasions, resulting in a significant decline in the number of illegal nuclear missile tests and other belligerent behavior out of Pyongyang.

“Trump forging any sort of alliance with North Korea is Japan’s nightmare scenario,” Toshimitsu Shigemura, a professor of politics and international relations at Waseda University, told the South China Morning Post.

The newspaper omitted that the Japanese government itself has attempted the same kind of diplomacy that Trump did during his presidency. During Trump’s term, Abe, who was prime minister at the time, reportedly sought an in-person meeting with Kim that never happened. Current Prime Minister Kishida invited Kim to meet during his address to the United Nations General Assembly in September.

“From the perspective of opening up a new era together, I would like to convey my determination to meet with President Kim Jong-un face to face at any time without any conditions,” Kishida offered, “and would like to hold high-level talks under my direct supervision to realize a summit meeting at an early time.”

Abe was prime minister for most of Trump’s presidential term, allowing the two to foster close relations. Abe was the first world leader to meet with Trump in 2016 and gave Trump and First Lady Melania Trump a regal welcome in Japan in 2019. Trump was an honored guest alongside Abe and First Lady Abe Akie at a sumo wrestling tournament, where the American president awarded the trophy to the winner.

Abe resigned from the prime ministership in 2020 as a result of health complications from ulcerative colitis. He remained an influential figure in Japanese politics until July 2022, when an assassin killed him in broad daylight during a public event with a homemade firearm.

“Absolutely devastating news that former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan, a truly great man and leader, has been shot, and is in very serious condition,” Trump said in a statement at the time. “He was a true friend of mine and, much more importantly, America. This is a tremendous blow to the wonderful people of Japan, who loved and admired him so much. We are all praying for Shinzo and his beautiful family!”

Follow Frances Martel on Facebook and Twitter.

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