North Korea's Kim criticizes US "state terror" but does not mention Trump in his address on a third term.

rss · SCMP 2026-03-24T06:55:43Z auto
He accused the United States of "state terror." He vowed that North Korea would never surrender its nuclear weapons. And yet, Kim Jong-un's address to the Supreme People's Assembly contained one notable omission: any direct attack on Donald Trump. That absence, analysts said, was an attempt to leave the door to diplomacy ajar, even as North Korea's supreme leader slammed it shut on the notion that his nuclear-armed nation could be pressured, coerced, or subdued like other US adversaries. "The United States is currently committing acts of state terror and aggression all over the world," Kim told the assembly on Monday, according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency. "Whether our adversaries choose confrontation or peaceful coexistence, that is their choice, and we are prepared to respond." Kim (center) attends an event on Monday celebrating the work of the first session of the Supreme People's Assembly in Pyongyang. Photo: KCNA/Reuters. The speech came as North Korea's rubber-stamp parliament confirmed Kim to a third consecutive term as head of state. But it was his rhetorical offensive, bristling with nuclear confidence, that drew the most attention from observers. Much of Kim's address appeared aimed at pre-empting any comparisons between North Korea and Venezuela or Iran, whose leaders were abducted and killed, respectively, in US-led operations this year.

Translated from auto by translategemma:12b

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