North Korea calls on military to defend Kim Jong Un ‘with their lives’

North Korea marked 10 years since Kim Jong Un’s ascension to power by calling on the country’s 1.2 million-strong military to unite behind him, state-run media reported.

The Rodong Sinmun newspaper — the official mouthpiece of the ruling Workers’ Party — urged the Hermit Kingdom’s military leaders and soldiers in an editorial to become an “impregnable fortress and bulletproof walls in devotedly defending (Kim) with their lives.”

The propaganda sheet hailed Kim’s “energetic leadership” in launching offensives “throughout the country for a fresh advance and leap forward as the stubborn attacking spirit pervaded the times.”

It also called for building a more modern, advanced military that serves as a “reliable guardian of our state and people.”

“With him in the van, the construction of a powerful socialist country is sure to emerge victorious and its future is rosy,” the editorial went on.

North Korean soldiers marching in Pyongyang.
The editorial also called for the military to be a “reliable guardian” for the state and people.
Kyodo News via Getty Images
Kim Jong Un inspecting the troops prior to a military parade in 2018.
Kim Jong Un inspecting the troops prior to a military parade in 2018.
Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

Kim became North Korea’s supreme leader on Dec. 29, 2011, following the death of his predecessor and father, Kim Jong Il, on Dec. 17 of that year from a heart attack. 

The anniversary comes as North Korea’s leaders convene a major political conference where officials were expected to discuss Pyongyang’s relationship with the United States and the problems caused by the coronavirus pandemic. 

With Post wires

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