North Korea party conference tackles economy and defence strategies

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North Korea Party Conference Tackles Economy And Defence Strategies
North Korea meeting, © KCNA via KNS
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By Kim Tong-Hyung, AP

With leader Kim Jong Un in attendance, North Korea has opened a key political conference to discuss improving its struggling economy and reviewing defence strategies in the face of growing tensions with rivals, state media reported.

The enlarged plenary meeting of the ruling Workers’ Party’s Central Committee came as the United States sent a nuclear-powered submarine to South Korea in the allies’ latest show of force against the North, which has ramped up its testing of nuclear-capable missiles to record pace in recent months.

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During the first day of meetings on Friday, North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency said, party officials reviewed the country’s economic campaigns for the first half of 2023, and discussed foreign policy and defence strategies to “cope with the changed international situation”.

The agency did not specify what was discussed or mention any comments made by Mr Kim. It said the meeting will continue for at least another day.


Kim Jong Un
Kim Jong Un, pictured last August (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP, File)

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The arrival Friday of the USS Michigan in the South Korean port of Busan came a day after North Korea fired two short-range ballistic missiles into its eastern seas in response to US-South Korean live-fire drills that took place near the inter-Korean border this week.

With the deployment of the USS Michigan, the US and South Korean navies are planning to conduct exercises focused on sharpening their special operation and joint combat capabilities in the allies’ latest combined training to cope with growing North Korean threats.

Pyongyang has condemned the allies’ combined exercises as invasion rehearsals. North Korea has used the expanding US-South Korean drills as a pretext to ramp up its own weapons demonstrations, including test-firing around 100 missiles since the start of 2022.

Weapons tested by the North this year include a new solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile designed to reach the US mainland, and various shorter-range weapons targeting South Korea and Japan.

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Rocket debris
Objects salvaged by South Korea’s military that are presumed to be parts of the North Korean space-launch vehicle that crashed into sea following a launch failure (Yonhap via AP)

Experts say Mr Kim’s aggressive weapons push has put further strain on North Korea’s isolated economy, which was already damaged by decades of mismanagement, crippling US-led sanctions over his nuclear weapons programme, and pandemic-related border closures that reduced trade with China, its main ally and economic lifeline.

Thursday’s missile launches were North Korea’s first rocket activity since May 31, when a long-range rocket carrying the country’s first spy satellite crashed off the Korean Peninsula’s west coast.

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South Korea’s defence ministry said on Friday that military search crews have salvaged what it believes is part of the crashed North Korean rocket.

The debris is to be analysed by the US and South Korean militaries.

The ministry released photos of the white, metal cylinder, which some experts said would have been the rocket’s fuel tank.

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