North Korea warns Japan not to seek nukes

Dec 22, 2025 - 15:00
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North Korea warns Japan not to seek nukes

A senior adviser to Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi reportedly told journalists last week that Japan needs nuclear weapons

North Korea has lashed out at Japan after a senior official reportedly suggested that the country needs nuclear weapons. In a statement published by state media on Sunday, Pyongyang warned that allowing Japan to acquire nuclear weapons would result in “a great disaster.”

The remarks come after controversy was sparked last week by a senior adviser to Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, who told reporters that Japan may need to reconsider its post-WWII non-nuclear policy as reliance on the US nuclear deterrent may no longer be sufficient, as reported by NHK.

The off-the-record comments, described as personal views, quickly went viral, raising questions about Tokyo’s official position.

“The Japanese ruling quarters are openly revealing their ambition to possess nuclear weapons, going beyond the red line for a war criminal state,” the North Korean Foreign Ministry said in a statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). “This is not a misstatement or a reckless assertion but clearly reflects Japan’s long-cherished ambition for nuclear armament.”

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The Foreign Ministry said the official’s remarks “clearly show Japan’s bellicose and aggressive nature.” It called Japan “double-faced” for promoting a nuclear-free world while “working hard to go nuclear behind the scenes,” and urged the global community not to allow Japan to proceed with its plans.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko earlier warned that abandoning Japan’s non-nuclear stance would worsen security in Northeast Asia and provoke countermeasures from countries “threatened by that militarization.” Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Guo Jiakun said the remarks, if true, are “extremely serious” and “expose the dangerous scheme by some people in Japan to break international law.”

The remarks also drew criticism in Japan from both the ruling and opposition parties, as well as the atomic bomb survivors group Nihon Hidankyo.

Japan reaffirmed its commitment on Friday to maintain non-nuclear status, with Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara telling a news conference that Tokyo will continue pursuing measures “to achieve a world without nuclear weapons.”

READ MORE: Japan needs nukes – senior PM aide

Japan is the only country to have suffered a nuclear attack after the US bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, killing an estimated 210,000 people. After World War II, it joined the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and pledged not to possess, manufacture, or deploy nuclear weapons, relying instead on the US nuclear umbrella.