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North Korea’s Growing Nuclear Threat

The Congressional Research Service has released a major new report on North Koreas’ nuclear weapons and missile programs.  We present that report for you in two parts.

 Overview 

North Korea continues to advance its nuclear weapons and  missile programs despite UN Security Council sanctions  and high-level diplomatic efforts. The country’s ballistic  missile testing, military parades, and policy statements  suggest that North Korea is continuing to build a nuclear  warfighting capability designed to evade regional ballistic  missile defenses. Such an approach likely reinforces a  deterrence and coercive diplomacy strategy—lending more  credibility as it demonstrates capability—but it also raises  questions about crisis stability and escalation control. Congress may wish to examine U.S. policy toward North  Korea. 

U.S. policy as well as UN resolutions call on North Korea  to abandon its nuclear weapons and missile programs. In  recent years, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has  repeatedly rejected “denuclearization” talks. According to  the U.S. intelligence community’s 2025 annual threat  assessment (ATA), Kim Jong-un views nuclear weapons as  a “guarantor of regime security.”  

In response, the United States and South Korea have  conducted joint military drills and exercises, and  established bilateral consultative mechanisms focused on  strengthening extended deterrence such as the Nuclear  Consultative Group to “discuss nuclear and strategic  planning, and manage the threat the DPRK poses to the  global nonproliferation regime.” The Biden  Administration’s 2022 Nuclear Posture Review said, “Any  nuclear attack by North Korea against the United States or  its Allies and partners is unacceptable and will result in the  end of that regime.” It maintains that U.S. nuclear weapons  will continue to play a role in deterring “rapid strategic  attacks” by North Korea in East Asia. 

Nuclear Doctrine and Plans 

Kim Jong Un said at the 2016 Workers’ Party Congress that  “nuclear weapons of the DPRK can be used only by a final  order of the Supreme Commander of the Korean People’s  Army [Kim Jong Un] to repel invasion or attack from a  hostile nuclear weapons state and make retaliatory strikes.” 

At the 8th North Korean Workers Party Congress in January  2021, Kim announced a Five-Year Defense Plan that said  the country would field a new nuclear-capable submarine,  develop its tactical nuclear weapons, deploy multiple  warheads on a single missile, and improve its ICBMs’ accuracy, among other goals. The plan includes  development of an ICBM with a range of 15,000 km for  “preemptive and retaliatory nuclear strike,” and ground based and sea-based solid-fueled ICBMs. Some analysts predict an increase in missile testing this year in order to  meet these goals by 2026. 

The Korea People’s Assembly adopted a new law in  September 2022 that reportedly expands the conditions  

under which North Korea would use nuclear weapons to  include possible first use in situations that threaten the  regime’s survival. In September 2023, Kim promised to  boost nuclear weapons production “exponentially” and  diversify nuclear strike options. 

Nuclear Testing 

North Korea has tested a nuclear explosive device six times  since 2006. Each test produced underground blasts  progressively higher in magnitude and estimated yield. North Korea conducted its most recent test on September 3,  2017. A North Korean press release stated it had tested a  hydrogen bomb (or two-stage thermonuclear warhead) that  it was perfecting for delivery on an intercontinental ballistic  missile. In April 2018, North Korea announced that it had  achieved its goals, would no longer conduct nuclear tests, and would close down its Punggye-ri nuclear test site. It  dynamited the entrances to two test tunnels in May 2018.  International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reports say  North Korea began restoring test tunnels in March 2022. A  recent U.S. Department of Defense report said that “North  Korea has restored its nuclear test site and is now postured  to conduct a seventh nuclear test at a time of its choosing.” 

Nuclear Material Production 

North Korea reportedly continues to produce fissile  material (plutonium and highly enriched uranium) for  weapons. Fissile material production in large part  determines the number and type of nuclear warheads a  country is able to build. 

North Korea restarted its plutonium production facilities  after it withdrew from a nuclear agreement in 2009, and is also operating centrifuge uranium enrichment plants at the Yongbyon nuclear complex and possibly at Kangson. In March 2025, the IAEA reported construction and operations  at the Yongbyon uranium centrifuge enrichment plant, “undeclared enrichment facilities at both Kangson and  Yongbyon,” and activities at the Radiochemical Laboratory  plant and Experimental Light Water 5MW(e) Reactor site. Spent fuel from that reactor is reprocessed at the Radiochemical Laboratory to extract plutonium for  weapons. The IAEA also reported ongoing uranium mining,  milling, and concentration activities at Pyongsan. 

The report concludes tomorrow

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