World

North Korea’s Kim criticises US-South Korea-Japan partnership

Mr Kim has focused on enlarging and modernising his arsenal of nuclear weapons.

FILE – In this undated photo provided October 6, 2024, by the North Korean government, its leader Kim Jong Un, visits an artillery exercise at an undisclosed place in North Korea (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP, File)
FILE – In this undated photo provided October 6, 2024, by the North Korean government, its leader Kim Jong Un, visits an artillery exercise at an undisclosed place in North Korea (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP, File) (朝鮮通信社/AP)

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said an elevated US security partnership with South Korea and Japan poses a grave threat to his country and vowed to further bolster his nuclear weapons programme, state media reported.

Mr Kim has previously made similar warnings, but his latest statement implies again that the North Korean leader will not likely embrace President Donald Trump’s overture to meet him and revive diplomacy anytime soon.

In a speech marking the 77th founding anniversary of the Korean People’s Army on Saturday, Mr Kim said the US-Japan-South Korea trilateral security partnership established under a US plot to form a Nato-like regional military bloc is inviting military imbalance on the Korean Peninsula and “raising a grave challenge to the security environment of our state”, according to the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

“Referring to a series of new plans for rapidly bolstering all deterrence including nuclear forces, he clarified once again the unshakable policy of more highly developing the nuclear forces,” KCNA said.

Amid stalled diplomacy with the US and South Korea in recent years, Mr Kim has focused on enlarging and modernising his arsenal of nuclear weapons.

FILE – North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, right, and US President Donald Trump meeting in 2019 (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)
FILE – North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, right, and US President Donald Trump meeting in 2019 (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File) (Susan Walsh/AP)

In response, the United States and South Korea have expanded their bilateral military exercises and trilateral training involving Japan. North Korea has lashed out at those drills, calling them rehearsals to invade the country.

Since his January 20 inauguration, Mr Trump has said he would reach out to Mr Kim again as he boasted of his high-stakes summit with him during his first term.

During a joint news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Friday, Mr Trump said: “We will have relations with North Korea, with Kim Jong Un. I got along with him very well, as you know. I think I stopped the war.”

During a Fox News interview broadcast on January 23, Mr Trump called Mr Kim “a smart guy” and “not a religious zealot”. Asked whether he will reach out to Mr Kim again, Mr Trump replied: “I will, yeah.”

Mr Trump met Mr Kim three times in 2018-19 to discuss how to end North Korea’s nuclear programme in what was the first-ever summitry between the leaders of the US and North Korea.

The high-stakes diplomacy eventually collapsed because Mr Trump rejected Mr Kim’s offer to dismantle his main nuclear complex, a partial denuclearisation step, in return for broad sanctions relief.

North Korea has not directly responded to Mr Trump’s recent overture, as it continues weapons testing activities and hostile rhetoric against the US.

Many experts say Mr Kim is now preoccupied with his dispatch of troops to Russia to support its war efforts against Ukraine. They say Mr Kim would still eventually consider returning to diplomacy with Mr Trump if he determines he would fail to maintain the current solid cooperation with Russia after the war ends.

In his Saturday speech, Mr Kim reaffirmed that North Korea “will invariably support and encourage the just cause of the Russian army and people to defend their sovereignty, security and territorial integrity”. Mr Kim accused the US of being behind “the war machine which is stirring up the tragic situation of Ukraine”.

In South Korea, some worry that Mr Trump might abandon the international community’s long-running goal of achieving a complete denuclearisation of North Korea to produce a diplomatic achievement.

But a joint statement issued by Mr Trump and Mr Ishiba after their summit stated the two leaders reaffirmed “their resolute commitment to the complete denuclearization of the DPRK,” the acronym of North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The statement said the US and Japan also affirmed the importance of the Japan-US-South Korean trilateral partnership in responding to North Korea.