North Korea's Kim says country will exercise its position as nuclear state, KCNA reports
Kim Jong Un's Statements on Nuclear Policy and Global Security
Kim Jong Un's Justification for Nuclear Policy
SEOUL, June 23 (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said exercising the country's position as a nuclear state is the only way to cope with an unpredictable and complicated global security situation, KCNA state news agency reported on Tuesday.
"Unimaginable, astonishing incidents and events" are occurring because of the "gangster-like" greed of hegemonic forces, making confrontations around the world more violent, Kim said, blaming the U.S. for worsening bloodshed in Europe and the Middle East.
Central Committee Meeting and Accusations Against the U.S. and South Korea
Details of the Workers' Party Meeting
Kim spoke at a Central Committee meeting of the ruling Workers' Party, which began on Saturday and closed on Monday, KCNA said.
Security Concerns on the Korean Peninsula
Kim accused the U.S. and South Korea of making the security situation on the Korean Peninsula more dangerous by steadily upgrading their combined nuclear posture, the only purpose of which, he said, is to attack North Korea.
North Korea's Nuclear and Military Strategy
Expansion of Nuclear Forces
"To steadily expand and strengthen the nuclear forces ... and to thoroughly exercise the position of a nuclear weapons state is the most correct and unique way to actively and confidently cope with the unpredictable international military and political situation getting complicated in multiple ways," KCNA said.
KCNA did not elaborate on specific actions regarding the country's nuclear arsenal that might be taken.
Conventional Weapons and Missile Development
Strategic Missile Cruiser Construction
Kim also ordered the buildup of conventional weapons and an acceleration of the construction of a 10,000-ton strategic guided missile cruiser, KCNA said.
International Response and North Korea's Defiance
Sanctions and Diplomatic Efforts
North Korea has defied a slew of sanctions imposed by both the United Nations and the U.S. between 2006 and 2017 banning Pyongyang from developing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles to deliver them. Its stance has alarmed regional powers.
It has declared itself a nuclear state and has said nothing would convince it to abandon its atomic weapons, despite years of diplomatic efforts by the U.S., China and South Korea.
(Reporting by Jack Kim in Seoul; Editing by Nia Williams and Matthew Lewis)

