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The missile was debuted at a military parade which came at the end of an important and rare political meeting |
Several of the missiles were displayed at a parade overseen
by leader Kim Jong-un, reported state media.
The weapon's actual capabilities remain unclear, as it is
not known to have been tested.
The show of military strength comes days before the
inauguration of Joe Biden as US president.
It also follows a rare political meeting where Mr Kim
decried the US as his country's "biggest enemy".
Images released by North Korean state media showed at least four large black-and-white missiles being driven past flag-waving crowds.
Analysts noted it was a previously unseen weapon. "New
year, new Pukguksong," tweeted North Korea expert Ankit Panda, using the
North Korean name for their submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs).
Clad in a leather coat and fur hat, Mr Kim is pictured
smiling and waving as he watched the display in Pyongyang's Kim Il Sung Square,
which also included infantry troops, artillery and tanks.
"The world's most powerful weapon, submarine-launch ballistic missile, entered the square one after another, powerfully demonstrating the might of the revolutionary armed forces," the official Korean Central News Agency said.
The event on Thursday did not showcase North Korea's largest
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), which was unveiled at a much larger
military parade in October. That colossal weapon is believed to be
able to deliver a nuclear warhead to anywhere in the US, and its size had
surprised even seasoned analysts when it was put on show last year.
The country's latest display of its arsenal comes at the end of a five-yearly congress of the ruling Workers' Party.
In his address to members last week, Mr Kim had pledged to
expand North Korea's nuclear weapons and military potential, outlining a list
of desired weapons including long-range ballistic missiles capable of being
launched from land or sea and "super-large warheads".
He also said that the US was Pyongyang's "biggest
obstacle for our revolution and our biggest enemy... no matter who is in power,
the true nature of its policy against North Korea will never change".
Under Mr Kim's leadership North Korea has made rapid
progress in its weapons programme, which it says is necessary to defend itself
against a possible US invasion.
The unveiling of the new missiles appears designed to send
the incoming Biden administration a message of the North's growing military
prowess, say experts.
"They'd like us to notice that they're getting more
proficient with larger solid rocket boosters," Mr Panda tweeted, noting
what appeared to be new solid-fuel short-range ballistic missiles on display
too. These missiles can be launched more quickly than liquid-fuelled varieties.
Flexing North Korea's military muscle
Kim Jong-un has had a busy week. In this rare party congress
at the start of a new year he's earned a new title, pledged to build new
nuclear weapons and now he's shown the world some new missiles.
The general secretary, the title posthumously awarded to his
father by which he is now known, had been pretty quiet in 2020 and appeared
very few times in state media.
But 2021 is looking rather different. The party congress has
offered him a grand daily domestic platform - even if it is not getting the
international attention it may have done due to events in the United States and
a global pandemic.
The parading vehicles include a new submarine-launched
ballistic missile and new short-range ballistic missiles. This is a show of
strength - flexing the military muscle once more to show the people of North
Korea that despite the current bleak economic outlook, this impoverished
country is capable of designing and building new strategic weapons.
It also offers a direct challenge to the incoming US
administration.
North Korea appears willing to continue with its
self-imposed isolation and being subject to strict economic sanctions, and the
state has vowed to continue to build nuclear weapons in defiance of the
international community.
During the transfer of power, President Obama told Donald
Trump that North Korea should be his top national security concern.
In the last four years a combination of US and UN sanctions,
so-called "maximum pressure" policies and three summits between Mr
Trump and Mr Kim have done nothing to alleviate those concerns.
Kim Jong-un has shown the new US president this week that he
faces the daunting prospect of coming up with new solutions for this
decades-old problem.
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