North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s sister on Sunday denounced upcoming joint military drills by the United States, South Korea and Japan as a “reckless show of strength” that she warned would lead to “bad results,” state media reported.
The allies are set to hold joint military drills from Monday through Friday off the South’s Jeju Island, combining naval, air and missile defense exercises to better prepare against threats from the nuclear-armed North.
Seoul and Washington, which stations around 28,500 troops in South Korea, will also stage a tabletop military exercise, aimed at integrating their military assets.
Kim Yo Jong slammed the drills as a “dangerous idea,” in a statement carried by state news outlet KCNA.
“The reckless show of strength made by them (the allies) in real action in the vicinity of the DPRK, which is the wrong place, will inevitably bring bad results to themselves,” she said, using the acronym for North Korea.
Pyongyang has long baulked at such joint military drills involving the allies, calling them rehearsals for an invasion.
The North perceives the trilateral drills as “scenarios for limited or full-scale nuclear strikes and attempts to neutralise its launch platforms,” Hong Min, a senior analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, told AFP.
“The North is likely using the allied exercises as a pretext to push ahead with nuclear modernisation and conventional upgrades,” he added.
Kim Jo Yong’s statement follows a visit by her brother to weapons research facilities this week, where he said Pyongyang “would put forward the policy of simultaneously pushing forward the building of nuclear forces and conventional armed forces.”
Since a failed summit with the United States in 2019 on denuclearization, North Korea has repeatedly said it will never give up its nuclear weapons and declared itself an “irreversible” nuclear state.
Kim Jong Un has been emboldened by the war in Ukraine, securing critical support from Russia after sending thousands of North Korean troops to fight alongside Moscow.
Moscow and Pyongyang signed a mutual defense pact last year when Russian President Vladimir Putin visited the reclusive state.