North Korea Amends Constitution to Mandate Automatic Nuclear Response if Leader Is Assassinated
North Korea has reportedly updated its constitution to include a clause mandating an automatic nuclear strike in the event that leader Kim Jong Un is assassinated, marking a significant escalation in the country’s military doctrine and nuclear posture.
The constitutional amendment signals Pyongyang’s growing emphasis on deterrence and leadership protection amid rising regional tensions and ongoing security concerns on the Korean Peninsula. Analysts view the move as an attempt to reinforce the regime’s survival strategy by ensuring that any attack targeting the country’s leadership would trigger an immediate and devastating response.
The reported change further deepens international concerns over North Korea’s expanding nuclear capabilities and increasingly aggressive rhetoric. In recent years, Pyongyang has accelerated weapons testing, including intercontinental ballistic missiles and tactical nuclear systems, while repeatedly warning of possible confrontation with the United States and its allies.
Observers say the amendment could complicate diplomatic efforts aimed at denuclearization and regional stability, as it formalizes a rapid-response nuclear policy directly tied to the safety of the country’s supreme leader.
The development is expected to draw strong reactions from neighboring countries, including South Korea and Japan, as well as from Western governments monitoring security developments in East Asia.
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