The Korean Central News Agency reported on the 27th that the North Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Institute for American Studies released a memorandum on the 26th, stating that the United States' planned "Golden Dome" missile defense system is a typical product of "America First."
The North Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Institute for American Studies pointed out that the "Golden Dome" plan is a "typical manifestation of arrogance, high-handedness, and self-righteousness, representing a space nuclear war scenario."
The memorandum states that the establishment of a new missile defense system by the United States aims to threaten the strategic security of nuclear-armed countries hostile to the U.S., allowing the U.S. to more smoothly use its offensive military forces.
The memorandum says, "Strenuously justifying its hegemonic space military expansion activities, under the guise of 'homeland defense,' accelerating the completion of space militarization, thereby prioritizing military superiority across all defense fields, and on this basis, arbitrarily launching military attacks against hostile nations. This is the military strategic goal pursued by the United States, and the main purpose of the 'Golden Dome' plan valued most by the current U.S. administration."
The memorandum points out that the "Golden Dome" missile defense system concept proposes the objective of defending the North American continent from the ballistic, cruise, and hypersonic missile attacks of strategic enemy countries, supporting the U.S. single-stage dominance strategy's space nuclear war script with the priority construction of space-based military infrastructure, rather than as "precautionary measures" against "threats."
The memorandum emphasizes, "The concept of establishing a new missile defense system in the U.S. not only stimulates the security concerns of nuclear-armed nations, triggering a global nuclear and space arms race, but is also the root cause of transforming outer space into a potential nuclear battlefield."
The memorandum says that due to the U.S.'s more blatant activities of space militarization, the global security environment is becoming increasingly uncertain.
The North Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Institute for American Studies pointed out that the "Golden Dome" plan is a "typical manifestation of arrogance, high-handedness, and self-righteousness, representing a space nuclear war scenario."
The memorandum states that the establishment of a new missile defense system by the United States aims to threaten the strategic security of nuclear-armed countries hostile to the U.S., allowing the U.S. to more smoothly use its offensive military forces.
The memorandum says, "Strenuously justifying its hegemonic space military expansion activities, under the guise of 'homeland defense,' accelerating the completion of space militarization, thereby prioritizing military superiority across all defense fields, and on this basis, arbitrarily launching military attacks against hostile nations. This is the military strategic goal pursued by the United States, and the main purpose of the 'Golden Dome' plan valued most by the current U.S. administration."
The memorandum points out that the "Golden Dome" missile defense system concept proposes the objective of defending the North American continent from the ballistic, cruise, and hypersonic missile attacks of strategic enemy countries, supporting the U.S. single-stage dominance strategy's space nuclear war script with the priority construction of space-based military infrastructure, rather than as "precautionary measures" against "threats."
The memorandum emphasizes, "The concept of establishing a new missile defense system in the U.S. not only stimulates the security concerns of nuclear-armed nations, triggering a global nuclear and space arms race, but is also the root cause of transforming outer space into a potential nuclear battlefield."
The memorandum says that due to the U.S.'s more blatant activities of space militarization, the global security environment is becoming increasingly uncertain.