North Korea should build two warships a year in next five years, Kim says

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un speaks during the second plenary meeting of the Ninth Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK), in Pyongyang, North Korea, in this picture released on June 23, 2026, by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency. Photo: KCNA via REUTERS

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un speaks during the second plenary meeting of the Ninth Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK), in Pyongyang, North Korea, in this picture released on June 23, 2026, by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency. Photo: KCNA via REUTERS

North ​Korea should build two warships as large as ‌its 5,000-metric-ton Choe Hyon vessel ​every year in the next five ⁠years, leader Kim Jong Un said at a commissioning ceremony of a destroyer on ‌Tuesday(June 23, 2026), according to state media KCNA.

Mr. Kim attended the ceremony held at ‌the Nampho port in North Korea ‌to ⁠celebrate the deployment of the ⁠new multipurpose destroyer Choe Hyon, KCNA reported.

The destroyer successfully completed military operational tests over the past ​14 months, KCNA ‌added.

The country plans to deploy another 5,000-ton destroyer named Kang Kon soon along with 10,000-ton strategic warships, Mr. Kim said, ‌according to the report.

Kang Kon ​was repaired last year after partially capsizing during a launch ceremony.

The ⁠Navy had been the weakest part of North Korea’s military forces, Mr. Kim said, ‌adding that its capabilities would now be “something incredible beyond imagination.”

“Building a modernised naval base has emerged as a desperate and essential task,” Mr. Kim said.

He said officials of the ruling ‌Workers’ Party’s Central Committee discussed plans to build ​new naval bases at a meeting on Monday (June 22, 2026).

The most important change ⁠for the navy would be a shift ⁠in its status, role and scope of operations, Mr. Kim said, without elaborating.

The ‌Navy’s nuclearisation is “advancing along its own course,” contributing to the country’s nuclear ​deterrence, he said. 

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