Kim Orders Nuclear, Naval Buildup at Military Meeting
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- Kim Jong Un directed measures to strengthen North Korea's nuclear forces "quantitatively and qualitatively" at a July 9 enlarged meeting of the Workers' Party's Central Military Commission, with KCNA reporting the decision on July 10.
- The Central Military Commission set plans to renew combat system technical infrastructure and standardise, specialise, and modernise the country's military bases.
- North Korea plans to expand the role of the Reconnaissance General Bureau, its military intelligence agency, to sharpen reconnaissance and intelligence-gathering capabilities.
- The commission addressed constructing modern naval bases and upgrading shipyard capacity — KCNA described it as a "major change in the status and role of the navy."
- Kim framed the buildup as existential, saying North Korea's security and "true peace" could only be guaranteed by a military capable of controlling all threats.
Why it matters: North Korea is bundling nuclear, intelligence, and naval upgrades into a single set of commission-level decisions, suggesting Kim is institutionalising a multi-domain arms buildup rather than ad hoc weapons tests. KCNA's own framing of the naval changes as a "major change in status and role" hints at a new pillar of force projection beyond the nuclear program.