By Joyce Lee and Jack Kim SEOUL, Feb 26 (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said he would focus on expanding his ...
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un claimed his nuclear-armed country could “completely destroy” South Korea if its security were ...
6don MSN
Kim Jong Un calls South Korea ‘most hostile enemy,’ says North could ‘completely destroy’ it
Kim Jong Un threatens to "completely destroy" South Korea, calling it the "most hostile enemy" while expanding North Korea's ...
Kim said they could get along if the US accepts that Pyongyang's nuclear weapons are here to stay.
Global headlines focus on the US and Israel's war with Iran. Amidst this, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has become an ...
However, the recent attacks on Iran could prompt a reconsideration. The strikes, which resulted in the death of Supreme ...
The North Korean leader, however, took a sterner tone on South Korea, labeling it as a “hostile state and eternal enemy,” and ...
The Iran strikes, which killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, come two months after Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, another leader without a nuclear deterrent, was captured in a raid by ...
Kim Jong Un says North Korea can "get along" with Washington, but only if it accepts Pyongyang as a nuclear state, while ...
Just a week after North Korea signaled openness to dialogue, the U.S. launched a military operation against Iran with a stated goal of regime change.
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