Kim Jong Un, placing his foot firmly back
on the gas in his war of wills with the United States, reportedly
ordered more rocket engines and warhead tips for the rogue regime's
ramped-up intercontinental ballistic missile program.
The state's official KCNA news agency released the report stating the
dictator ordered increased production after visiting the Chemical
Material Institute of the Academy of Defense Science, according to South
Korea's Yonhap News Agency.
"He instructed the institute to produce more solid-fuel rocket engines
and rocket warhead tips by further expanding engine production process
and the production capacity of rocket warhead tips and engine jets by
carbon and carbon compound material," the report said.
KCNA also unveiled photos showing disturbing diagrams hanging on the
wall behind the despot during Kim Jong Un's visit to the plant that
makes the solid-fuel engines for the country's ballistic missiles.
One showed a missile called Pukguksong-3, which appears to be the latest
in the Pukguksong, or Polaris, series. The other was more difficult to
discern but appeared to be in the "Hwasong," or Mars, series.
North Korea looks to follow-up on the two successful ICBM launches it
carried out in July -- the second being the longest such test in the
history of the the regime. Officials believe North Korea launched a
KN-20 ICBM both times, the launches coming about two weeks apart from
one another.
But Kim still lacks the materials to obtain atmospheric re-entry
technology, allowing the missiles to withstand the heat and pressure of
re-entry while passing through Earth's atmosphere, Yonhap News Agency
reported. The technology is a key part of developing successful ICBM --
and one of the last hurdles North Korea faces.
North Korea also issued a series of threats earlier this week as U.S.
and South Korea troops kicked off an annual 11-day military training
drill, with the regime vowing "merciless retaliation and unsparing
punishment" in response to the "reckless move." The U.S. and South Korea
kicked off the drills on Monday despite the rogue nation's calls to
pause or downsize them.
The Associated Press contributed to this rep
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