Intelligence agencies assess heightened nuclear risk after North Korea policy shift - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
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Intelligence agencies assess heightened nuclear risk after North Korea policy shift - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
"North Korea has adopted a dramatic new nuclear policy ordering what amounts to an immediate atomic response if its Supreme Leader, Kim Jong Un, is killed in what it defines as a foreign attack - a move intelligence officials warn could dangerously lower the threshold for nuclear escalation."
"The so-called "dead man switch" doctrine has reportedly been written into the country's constitution following a recent session of the Supreme People's Assembly in Pyongyang, according to South Korean intelligence assessments."
"Under the revised framework, any strike that threatens what North Korea calls its "command-and-control system" - effectively meaning Kim himself - would trigger an automatic nuclear retaliation without further political authorisation."
"South Korea's National Intelligence Service (NIS) said the move reflects both internal regime insecurity and an attempt to hardwire continuity of retaliation into the state's military doctrine, even in the event of leadership decapitation."
North Korea adopted a nuclear policy that orders immediate atomic retaliation if its Supreme Leader, Kim Jong Un, is killed in what it defines as a foreign attack. South Korean intelligence assessments report that a “dead man switch” doctrine was written into the country’s constitution after a session of the Supreme People Assembly in Pyongyang. The revised framework would trigger automatic nuclear response without further political authorization if a strike threatens North Korea’s command-and-control system, effectively Kim himself. The change reflects internal regime insecurity and an effort to hardwire continuity of retaliation into military doctrine even under leadership decapitation. The move occurs amid ongoing missile launches and threats toward South Korea, Japan, and US forces, while North Korea remains heavily sanctioned and diplomatically isolated but maintains ties with Russia and China.
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