logo
Kim Jong-un's commanders disappear from official picture amid speculation they have been executed over humiliating warship launch failure

Kim Jong-un's commanders disappear from official picture amid speculation they have been executed over humiliating warship launch failure

Daily Mail​18-06-2025
Kim Jong-un has erased a top military commander and another senior official from state photos after the North Korean leader was reportedly left fuming over a failed warship launch.
Navy Commander Admiral Kim Myong Sil and and shipyard boss Hong Kil Ho were airbrushed from images showing them with their leader back in March, sparking speculation that they may have been executed.
Original snaps showed Admiral King and the shipyard boss gathered next to the North Korean leader as he inspected the ship.
But now, in a move reminiscent of Joseph Stalin's tactics to erase his enemies from Soviet history, the officials have seemingly disappeared from the photos that were originally broadcast on state television.
Founder of NK Leadership Watch Michael Madden told The Sun that the removal of a North Korean official from a state media image was a 'strong indication that the person in question has been executed.'
Admiral Kim and Hong Kil Ho are understood to have been among the four officials arrested at the northern Chongjin shipyard after Kim Jong-un's guided-missile destroyer sank during its launch on May 21.
The North Korean leader was left fuming after the disastrous launch last month, and he accused those responsible for 'severely damaging the [country's] dignity and pride.'
Satellite images appeared to show the naval destroyer languishing on its side alongside the dock where the launch ceremony had been held.
State media said the 5,000-ton ship, which had been due to enter service next year, is designed to carry weapons systems including near-capable ballistic and cruise missiles.
Kim Jong Un, who wants bigger warships to deal with what he calls escalating US-led threats against his country, declared the mishap a 'criminal act caused by absolute carelessness' that 'could not be tolerated'.
He ordered the destroyer be restored by June, but Admiral Kim and Hong Kil Ho were both noticeably absent from the relaunch ceremony.
In April Kim unveiled the nuclear-capable naval destroyer that he says will bolster North Korea 's ability to defend itself in the face of perceived aggression from the US and its regional allies.
The North Korean leader attended the warship's launch ceremony at the western port of Nampo with his teenage daughter Kim Ju Ae, according to state-run media.
Ju Ae has been widely regarded by analysts as the likely successor to Kim since she was referred to as a 'great person of guidance' in an official report last year.
Kim said the 5,000-ton vessel would bolster efforts to expand the operational range and preemptive strike capabilities of his nuclear-armed military.
The 'multi-purpose' destroyer, designed to handle a variety of arms including nuclear-capable ballistic and cruise missiles, was touted as the first in a new class of heavily armed warships.
This picture taken on June 12, 2025 and released from North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) via KNS on June 13, 2025 shows North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un (2nd R) encouraging sailors at the launch ceremony for the destroyer 'Kang Kon' at the Rajin shipyard at the port near Rason in North Korea
North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un (C) and daughter Ju Ae (center L) boarding the destroyer 'Kang Kon'
Kim, who has framed the arms buildup as a response to the supposed danger posed by the US and its allies in Asia, said the destroyer would be handed over to the navy early next year before beginning active duty.
Jo Chun Ryong, a secretary in the ruling Workers' party, claimed the ship was equipped with the 'most powerful weapons' and was built 'within 400-odd days'.
Kim also took aim at efforts by the US and South Korea to expand joint military exercises and update their nuclear deterrence strategies, which he portrayed as preparations for war.
He vowed to 'respond decisively to this geopolitical crisis and ongoing developments,' the Korean Central News Agency reported.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US lets GE restart jet engine shipments to China's COMAC, source says
US lets GE restart jet engine shipments to China's COMAC, source says

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

US lets GE restart jet engine shipments to China's COMAC, source says

July 3 (Reuters) - The U.S. told GE Aerospace (GE.N), opens new tab on Thursday that it can restart jet engine shipments to China's COMAC, according to a person familiar with the matter, in a further sign of de-escalating U.S.-Sino trade tensions that included concessions from Beijing over rare earths. The United States this week also lifted restrictions on exports to China for chip design software developers and ethane producers, suggesting trade talks between the two countries are moving forward. License suspensions and new license requirements on the different exports had been issued several weeks ago as part of the ongoing trade war between the world's two biggest economies. GE did not respond to an email request for comment, nor did the Commerce Department, which notified GE it could restart shipments. Licenses for GE Aerospace affect engines sold to China's state-owned aerospace manufacturer COMAC, which wants to compete internationally against dominant plane makers Airbus ( opens new tab and Boeing (BA.N), opens new tab. A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The restrictions were among the many countermeasures imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration in response to China's export restrictions on rare earths and related magnets in April. Beijing's move on rare earths, part of retaliation against Trump's earlier tariffs this year, has upended supply chains central to automakers, aerospace manufacturers, semiconductor companies and military contractors. The issue threatened to scupper a bilateral trade deal. The license suspensions lifted for GE affect LEAP-1C engines to COMAC for its C919 single-aisle aircraft, and GE's CF34 engine for COMAC's C909 regional jet, according to the person familiar, who declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak publicly. The LEAP 1-C engines are the product of a joint venture between GE Aerospace and France's Safran ( opens new tab. The C919 is made in China but many of its components come from overseas. At least one other aerospace company also had its license suspensions for China lifted on Thursday, according to another person, who declined to identify the company. Honeywell (HON.O), opens new tab Aerospace has supplied COMAC's C919, too, providing an auxiliary power system, wheels and brakes, flight control package, and navigation package. Honeywell did not return a request for comment. Collins Aerospace, a subsidiary of RTX (RTX.N), opens new tab, which also supplies components for COMAC, declined to comment on the status of its licenses. In recent weeks, the U.S. also suspended licenses for nuclear equipment suppliers to sell to China's power plants. U.S. nuclear equipment suppliers include Westinghouse and Emerson (EMR.N), opens new tab.

North Korea slams Quad for calling it to denuclearise, KCNA says
North Korea slams Quad for calling it to denuclearise, KCNA says

Reuters

time3 hours ago

  • Reuters

North Korea slams Quad for calling it to denuclearise, KCNA says

SEOUL, July 4 (Reuters) - North Korea slammed on Friday the Quad grouping of the United States, India, Japan and Australia for insisting North Korea denuclearise, according to its state media KCNA. North Korea also said the U.S. fabricated a "cyber threat" from North Korea, citing its Foreign Ministry spokesperson. The U.S. Department of Justice announced last month an arrest and indictments targeting North Korea's so-called "IT worker" program, in which North Koreans obtain remote IT-related positions at U.S. companies, and use that access to steal money and information from a host of companies around the world.

Trump gets major win - but debate over his mega-bill is just beginning
Trump gets major win - but debate over his mega-bill is just beginning

BBC News

time6 hours ago

  • BBC News

Trump gets major win - but debate over his mega-bill is just beginning

Donald Trump has his first major legislative victory of his second presidential "big, beautiful bill", as he calls it, is a sprawling package that includes many key pieces of his agenda – delivering on promises he made on the campaign trail. It also, however, contains the seeds of political peril for the president and his Trump and his team were able to shepherd the legislation through Congress despite narrow majorities in both the House of Representatives and the Senate is no small achievement. His success required him and his allies to win over budget hawks within his Republican Party who were intent on slashing government spending, as well as centrists who were wary of cuts to social this congressional session started in January, there were doubts about whether House Republicans could even agree to return Congressman Mike Johnson to the speaker's chair, let alone agree on major pieces of they did, however – as did Republicans in the Senate, a notoriously unwieldy chamber. Live updates on Trump's mega-billA look at the key items in the legislationBBC Verify: Fact-checking three claims about the bill The spending package approved by lawmakers directs about $150bn (£110bn) in new spending for border security, detention centres and immigration enforcement officers. Another $150bn is allocated for military expenditures, including the president's "gold dome" missile defence really big numbers, however, are in the tax cuts in this legislation. They amount to more than $4.5tn over 10 years. Some of these are cuts that were first enacted in Trump's first term, and were set to expire before the bill makes them permanent. Others, like ending taxes on tips and overtime, where 2024 campaign promises that are implemented by will end in this adds up to massive new debt for the US. The White House contends that the tax cuts will spur economic growth that will generate sufficient new revenue, when taken alongside tariff collections. But outside projections suggest that this legislation will add more than $3tn in new US debt. As critics like Republican Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky have pointed out, the legislation raises the amount of new debt the federal government can issue by $5tn – a step that would not be necessary if the White House truly believed their budget and others like tech multibillionaire Elon Musk have warned that this massive amount of debt will be growing burden on the federal government, as interest payments crowd out other spending and drive up interest rates. A fiscal reckoning is coming, they senator who voted against the legislation, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, had a different warning for Trump and his party. In a fiery speech on the floor of the chamber, he accused the president of breaking a promise to those who supported him - citing the bill's cuts worth approximately $1tn to Medicaid, a government-run health insurance programme for low-income Americans."Republicans are about to make a mistake on healthcare and betray a promise," he said, declaring that more than 660,000 people in North Carolina would be "pushed off" Medicaid. A year after Trump made inroads with working-class Americans, including minority voters who traditionally have supported opposing Democrats, his legislation will cause nearly 12 million Americans to lose Medicaid coverage in the next 10 years, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget are already preparing an onslaught of attacks against Republicans for what they say is legislation that cuts social service in order to provide tax cuts to wealthier Americans. Although those cuts won't come into effect until after next year's congressional midterm elections, Democrats will try to remind American voters of the consequences the decisions Republicans made over the past few is preparing what should be a celebratory bill signing ceremony on 4 July - American Independence Day - and will tout his ability to govern not just through executive order, but also through enacting new the fight to define the benefits – and consequences – of this bill is just beginning.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store