North Korea Tests Cruise and Anti-Ship Missiles From Naval Destroyer

SEOUL, April 14 (Reuters) – North Korea ⁠conducted ⁠another test-fire of ⁠strategic cruise missiles and anti-warship missiles on ​Sunday as part of operational efficiency trials of its ‌destroyer Choe Hyon, state ‌media KCNA said on Tuesday.

Leader Kim ⁠Jong Un ⁠observed the test alongside senior defence officials and ​naval commanders, the report said.

Two strategic cruise missiles and three anti-warship missiles were fired to check the warship’s ​integrated weapons command system, train crews in missile-launch ⁠procedures and ⁠verify the accuracy ⁠and ​anti-jamming performance of upgraded navigation systems, KCNA said.

The cruise missiles ​flew for ⁠about 7,869 to 7,920 seconds and the anti-warship missiles for about 1,960 to 1,973 seconds over waters off the country’s western coast, striking their ⁠targets with what the report described as ultra-precision accuracy.

KCNA said ⁠Kim was briefed the same day on weapons system plans for two additional destroyers under construction.

Kim said strengthening what he called the country’s nuclear war deterrent remained a top priority, and called for improving strategic and tactical strike capabilities and rapid-response readiness, the report ⁠said.

Pyongyang first test-fired L1N3R71KM weapons on the 5,000-ton Choe Hyon-class warship in April 2025, and Kim personally oversaw L1N3ZS1DF a missile test from ​the ship last March.

(Reporting by Kyu-seok Shim; ​Editing by Lincoln Feast)

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