Pyongyang paraded a new air-launched weapon that shares visual features similar to the Taurus, a cruise missile used by Seoul ...
The partnership has become a two-way relationship, with missile technology originally transferred to Russia being upgraded and sent back to North Korea.
U.S. defense intelligence believes North Korea will have five-fold the current estimated number of ICBMs by 2035.
North Korea’s only international airport is located in the Sunan district of Pyongyang. Despite being ostensibly a “civilian” ...
U.S. President Donald Trump's new global security roadmap has dropped any reference to denuclearising North Korea as a goal, ...
Analysts say the event served a dual purpose: grooming Kim’s potential successor and angling for Russian jets as payment for ...
Opinion
National Interest on MSNOpinion
North Korea Can Nuke the Continental US Now. Why Is America Pretending It Can’t?
For years, the Western pundit class has insisted that North Korea’s missiles are far away and Pyongyang is not serious about their use—even as evidence mounts to the contrary.
North Korea has unveiled a new short‑range air‑to‑air missile that strongly resembles Germany’s IRIS‑T, Japan’s Type 04 and China’s PL‑10E, with the weapon shown mounted on MiG‑29 fighters and Su‑25 ...
National Security Journal on MSNOpinion
China’s North Korea gamble: Live with a nuclear Kim, risk a nuclear South Korea
China’s new disarmament and arms-control white paper pointedly omits any commitment to North Korean denuclearization, ...
North Korea has hurtled along its path of nuclear tests and trials of delivery systems, despite years of sanctions.
A U.S. envoy reaffirmed Monday that "complete denuclearization" of North Korea remains the policy shared with South Korea, ...
At the same time as its factories grow, North Korea’s nuclear weapons are becoming more advanced than many people realise.
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