SEOUL: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said he would focus on expanding his country's nuclear arsenal and that prospects for improving relations with the US rested entirely on Washington's attitude, state media KCNA reported on Thursday (Feb 26).
North Korea's week-long Ninth Congress of the ruling Workers' Party wrapped with a military parade in the capital Pyongyang on Wednesday, KCNA reported.
The Asian nation's "international status has risen extraordinarily" as it laid out major policy goals for the next five years, Kim said.
"It is our party's firm will to further expand and strengthen our national nuclear power, and thoroughly exercise its status as a nuclear state," Kim said, according to KCNA. "We will focus on projects to increase the number of nuclear weapons and expand nuclear operational means."
North Korea has assembled around 50 warheads, possesses enough fissile material to produce up to 40 more warheads and is accelerating the production of further fissile material, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) think tank estimated last year.
Kim also laid out North Korea's plans to develop stronger intercontinental ballistic missiles, including ones that can be launched from underwater, attack systems using artificial intelligence and unmanned drones, KCNA said.
State media photos of the military parade showed formations of soldiers marching through a brightly-lit Kim Il Sung square under a podium where Kim and his daughter stood with senior officials.
Some troops in the parade were wearing camouflage and special warfare gear and a formation of jets held a fly-by. It was not immediately clear what, if any, military hardware was on display.
The presence of Kim's daughter, known as Ju Ae, will fuel further speculation over whether she is being groomed as his successor.
US RELATIONS
Kim left the door open for discussions with the United States.
"If the US withdraws its policy of confrontation with North Korea by respecting our country's current status ... there is no reason why we cannot get along well with the US," Kim said, according to KCNA.
Kim has so far not accepted overtures by US President Donald Trump, whom he met with three times during Trump's first term.
Kim's remarks "all point to an expected refusal of any US-North Korea talks premised on denuclearisation, though (Kim) still left the door open for dialogue if Washington first abandons what it calls its hostile policy," said Yang Moo-jin, former president of the University of North Korean Studies.
Trump plans to travel to China from Mar 31 to Apr 2. Some North Korea experts including South Korea's spy agency have speculated that Kim could meet Trump during that occasion.
However, Kim called South Korea the "most hostile enemy" and ruled out discussions with its neighbour, saying "the conciliatory attitude that South Korea's current government advocates on the surface is clumsily deceptive and crude," according to KCNA.
Since entering office in June last year, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung's government has made gestures to improve relations between neighbours still technically at war, though North Korea has consistently dismissed efforts by the liberal president.
Kim said Pyongyang "can initiate arbitrary action" if South Korea conducts "obnoxious behaviour" directed at North Korea.
"South Korea's complete collapse cannot be ruled out," Kim said according to KCNA.




































