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Kim's regime will end,' South Korea said in response to Pyongyang's warning of a nuclear strike

 Kim's regime will end,' South Korea said in response to Pyongyang's warning of a nuclear strike


North Korea and South Korea are at odds with one another, and tensions are rising. While North Korea has openly warned South Korea that it will use nuclear weapons to retaliate if the US submarine arrives there. However, South Korea has also issued a stern warning against the use of nuclear weapons.




Seoul: South Korea has issued a warning to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, who has gained notoriety for his pranks. South Korea issued a warning that any nuclear attack by North Korea will result in the "end" of the Kim Jong Un dictatorship. This South Korean caution Seoul responded to Pyongyang's claims that the stationing of US nuclear-capable submarines and other strategic assets in this area has provoked the use of nuclear weapons by Pyongyang.


The previous day, South Korea's USS Kentucky, an 18,750-tonne Ohio-class nuclear missile-capable submarine (SSBN), and the group's first meeting this week were both criticised in a harsh statement by North Korea's defence minister Kang Sun-nam, according to Yonhap news agency. The Seoul Defence Ministry then issued the alert once more.


Yonhap news agency cited the Seoul ministry as saying, "In the instance of any North Korean nuclear attack regarding the South Korea-US alliance, it will face an immediate, forceful, and significant response from the partnership, and we again strongly warn that this would result in the end of the North Korean regime."


Additionally, it stated that Pyongyang's nuclear programme and provocative missile launches are "clear" violations of resolutions passed by the UN Security Council and "illegal activities". pointing out that it is the 'sole' nation to repeatedly threaten nuclear strikes on the US-South Korea alliance. Let us inform you that the level of tension between the two nations has risen once more. North Korea's danger is still present. After North Korea launched two short-range ballistic missiles on Wednesday and an intercontinental ballistic missile on July 12, things got worse.

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