KCNA: Japan's Overseas Aggression Is 'Reality, Not Hypothetical'
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- KCNA on July 7 published a commentary accusing Japan of abandoning its defense-only policy and transforming its military into a "thoroughly offensive and aggressive force" with overseas reach.
- The commentary cited Japanese plans for unmanned submarines capable of anti-ship attacks, capable of carrying torpedoes and naval mines near neighboring coastlines for pre-emptive strikes.
- Japan's missile buildup includes domestically developed long-range missiles, a new ballistic missile with a range of up to 3,000km, upgraded anti-ship missiles, hypersonic glide weapons, and US-made Tomahawks.
- On July 5, Kim Jong Un observed the launch of a strategic cruise missile and weapons tests aboard the new 5,000-ton destroyer Kang Kon, ordering the vessel into service within two months.
- North Korea recently commissioned the 5,000-ton destroyer Choe Hyon and has outlined plans to build larger 10,000-ton warships as part of its naval modernization drive.
- Japan's foreign ministry did not respond to telephone calls seeking comment on the KCNA accusations.
Why it matters: The commentary reveals how Pyongyang frames Tokyo's military upgrades as an active threat rather than abstract concern, framing unmanned submarine strike capabilities and 3,000km-range missiles as proof of offensive intent. The timing — paired with Kim Jong Un's July 5 push to put the Kang Kon destroyer into service within two months — reflects parallel naval buildups on both sides that harden the rhetorical standoff in Northeast Asia.