
Kim said on Jan 1 that his nuclear-capable country was close to test-launching an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
“The ICBM will be launched anytime and anywhere determined by the supreme headquarters of the DPRK,” an unnamed Foreign Ministry spokesman was quoted as saying by the official KCNA news agency.
US defence secretary Ash Carter said on Sunday that DPRK’s nuclear weapons capabilities and ballistic missile defense programs constituted a “serious threat” to the United States and that it was prepared to shoot down a DPRK missile launch or test.
“We only would shoot them down … if it was threatening, that is if it were coming toward our territory or the territory of our friends and allies,” Carter said during an appearance on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program.
The United States said on Jan 5 that DPRK had demonstrated a “qualitative” improvement in its nuclear and missile capabilities after an unprecedented level of tests last year.
DPRK has been testing rocket engines and heat-shields for an ICBM while developing the technology to guide a missile after re-entry into the atmosphere following a liftoff, experts have said.
While Pyongyang is close to a test, it is likely to take some years to perfect the weapon, according to the experts.
Once fully developed, a DPRK ICBM could threaten the continental United States, which is around 9,000km away. ICBMs have a minimum range of about 5,500km, but some are designed to travel 10,000km or farther.
US President-elect Donald Trump responded to Kim’s comments on an ICBM test by declaring in a tweet last week: “It won’t happen!”
Asked for comment on Sunday, the White House referred to Jan 3 comments by White House press secretary Josh Earnest in which he said the US military believed it could protect against the threat emanating from DPRK.
In that briefing, Earnest also touted the defensive measures the United States had taken to guard against the threat, such as anti-ballistic missile facilities that had been installed around the Pacific region and diplomatic pressure to discourage DPRK from pursuing its nuclear program.
A US State Department spokesman said last week that the United States did not believe that DPRK was capable of mounting a nuclear warhead on a ballistic missile.
DPRK has been under UN sanctions since 2006 over its nuclear and ballistic missile tests. The sanctions were tightened last month after Pyongyang conducted its fifth and largest nuclear test on Sept 9.
“The US is wholly to blame for pushing the DPRK to have developed ICBM as it has desperately resorted to anachronistic policy hostile toward the DPRK for decades to encroach upon its sovereignty and vital rights,” KCNA quoted the spokesman as saying.
“Anyone who wants to deal with the DPRK would be well advised to secure a new way of thinking after having clear understanding of it,” the spokesman said, according to KCNA.