- Kim Jong Un brought his daughter to the test launch of an ICBM last Friday.
- New photos appeared to show the two holding hands, with a massive missile in the background.
- After the test, North Korea reportedly said that nuclear weapons and missiles are about the country's children.
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- North Korea said this weekend that its nuclear weapons programs are about protecting the country's children after photographs were released showing the country's leader Kim Jong Un and his daughter at a missile launch.
New images released on Friday by state media showed Kim at the launch site of what North Korea identified as the Hwasong-17 intercontinental ballistic missile with a young girl who has not previously appeared in photos or videos out of North Korea. State media outlet KCNA confirmed that the North Korean leader attended the launch "with his beloved daughter and wife."
The photographs were notable because Kim, who is believed to have three children, has historically been quite secretive about his family and personal life, though his wife Ri Sol Ju occasionally appears in photos. In the various images, Kim could be seen holding a young girl's hand, sometimes with the massive Hwasong-17 in the background.
On Sunday, two days after the missile test, North Korean state media reported that Kim views nuclear weapons as a critical aspect of protecting the country's children from a hypothetical US attack, according to the North Korean news and analysis site NK News.
Nuclear weapons are "monuments to be passed down to our descendants for generations to come," the state-run outlet Rodong Sinmun, the paper of the ruling Worker's Party, said, according to NK News. It added that Kim's pursuit of nuclear weapons is intended to prevent "the heartbreaking situation of our children ending up on the streets foraging for food after losing their mothers in enemy bombardments."
NK News further reported that the paper said that Kim is as determined to build nuclear weapons as "the hostile forces are in their hatred [for us] and attempts steal the bright smiles of the faces of our children." In September, the North Korean leader declared North Korea's nuclear-armed status irreversible.
The Hwasong-17 missile launched last week was first unveiled in October 2020 and is North Korea's most giant missile yet — estimated to be able to travel over 9,000 miles after being thrown from a transporter erector launcher, according to Reuters. On Friday, it flew on a lofted trajectory for a little over an hour and landed in the ocean over 600 miles away.
Friday's launch is the second time this month that North Korea has tested an ICBM, which is a long-range weapon capable of delivering conventional and nuclear warheads to distant targets at least 3,400 miles away. This latest missile test came as tensions on the Korean Peninsula have recently soared.