North Korea State Media Says Japan Overseas Aggression Is Reality, Not Hypothetical

North Korea State Media Says Japan Overseas Aggression Is Reality, Not Hypothetical

SEOUL, July 7 (Reuters) – A commentary ⁠carried ⁠by North Korean state ⁠media KCNA on Tuesday criticised Japan’s military ​expansion, saying its overseas aggression was “not hypothetical but reality” and citing ‌Japanese plans to develop ‌unmanned submarines capable of anti-ship attacks.

The commentary said ⁠the vessels ⁠could carry torpedoes and naval mines and be deployed ​near the coastlines of neighbouring countries, allowing the launch of pre-emptive attacks on enemy ships in a conflict.

It accused Tokyo of ​abandoning its long-professed doctrine of exclusively defence-oriented policy and ⁠transforming its ⁠military into a “thoroughly offensive ⁠and ​aggressive force.”

KCNA also pointed to Japan’s efforts to mass produce ​domestically developed long-range ⁠missiles, pursue a new ballistic missile with a range of up to 3,000 kilometres (1,864 miles), deploy upgraded anti-ship missiles and hypersonic glide weapons, and acquire foreign-made missiles including ⁠U.S. Tomahawks.

Japan’s foreign ministry did not answer telephone calls seeking comment.

The ⁠commentary comes as North Korea has increasingly highlighted its own naval modernisation drive.

On Sunday, KCNA reported that leader Kim Jong Un observed the launch of a strategic cruise missile and tests of weapons systems aboard the new 5,000-ton destroyer Kang Kon.

Kim has called for expanding the country’s naval combat capabilities and ⁠ordered the vessel to enter service within two months.

North Korea recently commissioned the 5,000-ton destroyer Choe Hyon and has outlined plans to build additional warships, including ​larger 10,000-ton vessels.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok Shim; Editing by ​Tom Hogue and Kevin Buckland)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Reuters

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