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‘Tactical nuclear strike drill’ by N Korea as US, S Korea hold exercises | Weapons News

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Pyongyang’s latest launch follows deployment of B1-B bomber in joint US-South Korea exercises that end on Friday.

North Korea has fired two short-range ballistic missiles in a drill simulating a “scorched-earth” nuclear strike on targets in South Korea, in response to ongoing joint military exercises by the United States and South Korea, state media said.

Pyongyang correctly carried out its “nuclear strike mission,” the general staff of the North Korean People’s Army (KPA) said in a statement carried by the news agency KCNA on Thursday.

“The KPA staged a tactical nuclear strike drill simulating scorched-earth strikes at major command centres and operational airfields of the ‘ROK’ military gangsters on Wednesday night,” it said, using the acronym for South Korea’s official name, the Republic of Korea.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said in a statement that the North Korean missiles were launched from a site around Pyongyang and travelled about 360 kilometres (225 miles) before landing off the peninsula’s east coast.

The JCS called the launches “a grave provocation” that threatened international peace and breached United Nations Security Council resolutions that ban any ballistic launches by North Korea. It said the South Korean and US intelligence authorities were analysing the details of the launch.

The launch came hours after the US deployed strategic B1-B bombers as part of the large-scale Ulchi Freedom Shield exercises that take place each year and wrap up on Friday. Pyongyang claims the drills are a rehearsal for invasion.

Pyongyang has conducted a record number of weapons tests this year, as leader Kim Jong Un moves ahead with his plan to develop new weaponry and modernise the country’s military. Last week, the country tried and failed for a second time to put a military spy satellite into orbit.

KCNA reported North Korea had also been staging its own military drills – aimed at preparing the armed forces for an all-out war with South Korea – with Kim visiting a training command post earlier this week.

The drill simulated repelling a sudden invasion, then launching a counterattack to occupy “the whole territory of the southern half”, the report said.

Kim has also called for improvements to North Korea’s navy, saying the country’s waters brimmed with “the danger of a nuclear war”, state media reported. Developing the country’s naval force had become a “very urgent” issue, state media quoted him as saying.

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