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North Korea unveils its first nuclear-powered submarine

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea unveiled for the first time a nuclear-powered submarine under construction, a weapons system that can pose a major security threat to South Korea and the U.S.

State media on Saturday released photos showing what it called «a nuclear-powered strategic guided missile submarine,» as it reported leader Kim Jong Un’s visits to major shipyards where warships are built.

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The Korean Central News Agency, or KCNA, didn’t provide details on the submarine, but said Kim was briefed on its construction.

In this undated photo provided on March 8, 2025, by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, visits a shipyard to construct warships at an undisclosed place in North Korea. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean government. The content of this image is as provided and cannot be independently verified. Korean language watermark on image as provided by source reads: «KCNA» which is the abbreviation for Korean Central News Agency. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP) (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)

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The naval vessel appears to be a 6,000-ton-class or 7,000-ton-class one which can carry about 10 missiles, said Moon Keun-sik, a South Korean submarine expert who teaches at Seoul’s Hanyang University. He said the use of the term «the strategic guided missiles» meant it would carry nuclear-capable weapons.

«It would be absolutely threatening to us and the U.S.,» Moon said.

A nuclear-powered submarine was among a long wishlist of sophisticated weaponry that Kim vowed to introduce during a major political conference in 2021 to cope with what he called escalating U.S.-led military threats. Other weapons were solid-fueled intercontinental ballistic missiles, hypersonic weapons, spy satellites and multi-warhead missiles. North Korea has since performed a run of testing activities to acquire them.

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North Korea obtaining a greater ability to fire missiles from underwater is a worrying development because it’s difficult for its rivals to detect such launches in advance.

Questions about how North Korea, a heavily sanctioned and impoverished country, could get resources and technology to build nuclear-powered submarines have surfaced.

Moon, the submarine expert, said North Korea may have received Russian technological assistance to build a nuclear reactor to be used in the submarine in return for supplying conventional weapons and troops to support Russia’s war efforts against Ukraine.

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un

In this undated photo provided on March 8, 2025, by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, bottom right, visits a shipyard to construct warships at an undisclosed place in North Korea. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean government. The content of this image is as provided and cannot be independently verified. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP) (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)

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He also said North Korea could launch the submarine in one or two years to test its capability before its actual deployment.

North Korea has an estimated 70-90 diesel-powered submarines in one of the world’s largest fleets. However, they are mostly aging ones capable of launching only torpedoes and mines, not missiles.

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In 2023, North Korea said it had launched what it called its first «tactical nuclear attack submarine,» but foreign experts doubted the North’s announcement and speculated it was likely a diesel-powered submarine disclosed in 2019. Moon said there has been no confirmation that it has been deployed.

North Korea has conducted a slew of underwater-launched ballistic missile tests since 2016, but all launches were made from the same 2,000-ton-class submarine which has a single launch tube. Many experts call it a test platform, rather than an operational submarine in active service.

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In recent days, North Korea has been dialing up its fiery rhetoric against the U.S. and South Korea ahead of their upcoming annual military drills set to start Monday.

During his visits to the shipyards, Kim said North Korea aims to modernize water-surface and underwater warships simultaneously. He stressed the need to make «the incomparably overwhelming warships fulfill their mission» to contain «the inveterate gunboat diplomacy of the hostile forces,» KCNA reported Saturday.


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Widespread killing, rape, disease and war make Democratic Republic of Congo hell on earth

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It is one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a woman – or a Christian. Disease is rampant, and children as young as 4 are being forced to work in mines.

The Democratic Republic of Congo is 95% Christian, yet the faithful are being targeted by jihadists. Just last month, Islamist ADF terrorists, who want the eastern part of the country to become a Muslim Caliphate, rounded up 70 Christians and beheaded them – in a church.

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Women are under threat too. According to the U.N., 895 cases of rape were reported in the last two weeks of February alone – an average of more than 60 a day.

In the east, «Sexual violence and human rights abuses remain rampant, as is the looting and destruction of civilian homes and businesses,» Patrick Eba, deputy director of UNHCR’s Division of International Protection, said this week.

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The facade of a church hit by an artillery shell following clashes in Goma on Jan. 30, 2025. M23’s capture of most of Goma, the capital of North Kivu province, is a dramatic escalation of a decade-long conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo. (Alexis Huguet/AFP via Getty Images)

Eba added that «hundreds of thousands of people (are) on the move», fleeing the violence, with many crossing into neighboring countries.

Over 150 women inmates were raped, and many of them then burned to death, in Goma in October last year. As M23 rebels advanced on the city, prison guards at the local jail fled. Hundreds of male inmates are said to have jumped over a wall and raped the women, before escaping.

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The sick are also at risk. Earlier this week, the U.N. humanitarian affairs coordination office (OCHA) reported that armed men had raided at least two hospitals in North Kivu’s capital Goma, abducting dozens of patients. 

Disease also stalks people – with three mystery «outbreaks» in the past six months in the DRC. In the latest, the World Health Organization stated late last month that 60 have died and a further 1,318 have shown symptoms of suffering from an as yet unidentified serious illness in Equateur Province.

A child carries many plastic jugs slung on their back as a crowd flees fighting.

Internally displaced civilians from the camps in Munigi and Kibati carry their belongings as they flee following the fight between M23 rebels and the armed forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, in Goma, on Jan. 26, 2025. (Reuters/Aubin Mukoni)

The agency said the disease spreads through the body fast «with a median time from onset of symptoms to death of one day.» Tests for Ebola and the Marburg virus have come back negative so far.

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In the Eastern Kivu provinces of the DRC, hundreds of thousands have been displaced, as rebel groups, often foreign-backed, push back government troops in a war «playing out in one of the poorest regions of earth,» analyst Frans Cronje told Fox News Digital, adding, «Thousands have been killed, disease pandemics are commonplace, (and) women live under the constant fear of rape and abuse.» 

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Boy in orange shirt on top of bags, boy in orange striped shirt holding bag, boy in light brown flannel digging for cobalt in the ground in Democratic Republic of the Congo

Boys working at a mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo. (ILO/UNICEF)

«The conflict in the DRC is essentially about control of critical minerals», Cronje, an advisor for the Yorktown Foundation for Freedom, continued. «Scores of rebel groups and some state actors are engaged in the conflict. The two Kivu provinces contain vast deposits of these minerals that could be used in applications from defense and AI to green energy.»

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Bill Roggio, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and editor of the Long War Journal, told Fox News Digital, «I would argue that the minerals are only partially, or even tangentially, related. The main violence plaguing Congo runs from regional political issues, like Rwanda/M23 (rebel group), to ethnic like CODECO, (an association of militia groups) to religious, like Islamic State Central Africa Province, aka ADF, (rebel group) to just general localized banditry. And some groups do control and make money from artisanal mines, but not all.»

And, for more than a decade, children in some DRC areas have faced extreme exploitation and abuse, reportedly from China, forced to mine deep underground in its quest for metals such as cobalt. An estimated 70% of the world’s cobalt is produced in the DRC, according to Michigan State University’s Global Edge Research Organization. China is said to either own, or co-own with the DRC’s government, 80% of the DRC’s cobalt mines.

U.N. human rights chief accused Rwanda-backed rebels who seized a second major city in Congo of killing children and attacking hospitals and warehouses storing humanitarian aid.

Red Cross workers clear the area in Bukavu, east Congo’s second-largest city, one day after it was taken by M23 rebels, on Feb. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Janvier Barhahiga)

This modern-day child slavery continues despite outcry. A report to a joint House and Senate Committee in November 2023 stated that the DRC «is a country that has been brutally pillaged throughout history, fueled by corrupt men’s unquenchable thirst for power, riches, land, rubber, copper, palm oil, and now cobalt, all at the expense of innocent women, men, and children.» 

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«Children as young as 4 are forced to mine cobalt, «Jason Isaac told Fox News Digital last year. Isaac is the founder and CEO of the American Energy Institute. 

The FDD’s Bill Roggio told Fox News Digital there are steps the Trump administration could take, «from counter-terrorism against one of IS’ most active global branches (ISCAP) to walking back a potential massive regional war, or even to improving good governance, a more stable, secure and prosperous Congo would do wonders for the global economy and regional security.»

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Mother of injured Hamas hostage directs plea to ‘every mother in this world’ to help secure son’s release

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The mother of Alon Ohel, a hostage taken from the Nova Music Festival Oct. 7, 2023, who remains in Hamas captivity, is pleading for her son’s release after the first phase of the ceasefire concluded last week, but no new deal for a second phase has yet been reached. 

«I think every mother in this world, if they just stopped for a second, would [they] even be able to breathe, knowing that their son or daughter have eaten dinner, are not getting any food – they’re being starved, chained and in bad condition,» Idit Ohel  told Fox News Digital. 

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«Would they be able to just do anything?  It’s unbearable. It’s just unbearable.» 

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A poster of Alon Ohel, who was taken hostage at the Nova music festival. (Syndi Pilar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

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Alon and 58 others, including one individual taken separately from the Oct. 7 attacks, remains a hostage after 518 days since the October 2023 Hamas attacks on Israel.

During the attack, Alon hid in a bomb shelter outside the Nova music festival and was injured when shrapnel hit his right eye. 

Footage shared with Fox News Digital showed the harrowing state he and others were in during the attack and their subsequent abduction. 

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According to Israelis who were held hostage with Alon, his injury was never properly treated, and he is now at risk of going blind in both eyes, Idit explained.

Alon was confirmed last month to still be alive after the release of three hostages who were held with him. He is now believed to be held on his own.

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«I have no idea where Allen is right now, but I do know as a mother that I’m frightened for him, and I know that he needs to be back as soon as possible. It’s urgent,» Idit explained to Fox News Digital. 

Idit Ohel, mother of Alon Ohel

Idit Ohel, the mother of Israeli Serbian citizen Alon Ohel, who is being held hostage in Gaza by Hamas, holds a portrait of her son during a news conference at the Palace of Serbia in Belgrade Sept. 11, 2024.  (Oliver Bunic/AFP via Getty Images)

President Donald Trump this week met with hostages released from Gaza who told the president they believed he had «been sent by God» to secure their release.

Idit, who is Israeli, has not heard from either the Trump administration or from Netanyahu’s office.

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But she believes Trump will help to return her son.

«I know that Trump can bring my son home. I know this because he has the power to do it. And when he wants something, he does it,» Idit said. «I’m rooting for him.

«I came all the way from Israel to D.C. to make sure that I’m heard, that Alon is heard,» she added. «I’m advocating for him. Alon is being held. He can’t speak.»

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News this week revealed the Trump administration was directly communicating with Hamas to secure the release of five American hostages still held in Gaza, including the only surviving American, Edan Alexander.

Reports also noted that the administration was directly negotiating with the terrorist organization, an unprecedented move that has reportedly frustrated Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to try to secure a 60-day ceasefire in exchange for the release of 10 hostages.

But there are 25 hostages still believed to be alive, including Ohel.

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Family of Alon Ohel

The family of Alon Ohel, who was taken hostage by Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, continues to fight for his release.  (Idit Ohel)

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In a direct message to her son, Idit said, «We pray for you, and I am doing everything in my power to make sure that you are not forgotten. 

«You are not forgotten,» she added. «People here think about you every day, and they want to save you and want to bring you back home. 

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«Your father and I, and your sister and your brother, are with you all the time.»


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Norway’s crown princess condition worsens as she battles lung disease

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Norwegian Crown Princess Mette-Marit’s chronic lung disease has worsened to the point where it’s affecting «her ability to perform her duties,» the Royal House of Norway announced. 

Mette-Marit, 51, is suffering from pulmonary fibrosis, described by the Mayo Clinic as a condition that irreparably damages and scars the lungs, leading to shortness of breath. 

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«The Crown Princess has daily symptoms and ailments that affect her ability to perform her duties,» the Royal House of Norway said in a statement, noting her disease has «progressed.» 

«The Crown Princess needs more rest, and her daily routine changes more quickly than before. This means that changes to her official schedule may occur more frequently, and at shorter notice than we are used to,» it added. 

FLASHBACK: METTE-MARIT OF NORWAY REVEALS SHE’S BEEN DIAGNOSED WITH CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE 

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Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway visits the International Library of Fashion at Stasjonsmesterbygningen on Jan. 24, 2025 in Oslo. (Rune Hellestad/Corbis/Getty Images)

«The Crown Princess has a strong desire to continue working, and therefore we will organize her official program in the future in the best possible way so that her health and work can be combined,» the Royal House of Norway also said. 

Mette-Marit was diagnosed with the disease in October 2018. 

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«For a number of years, I have had health challenges on a regular basis, and now we know more about what is involved. The condition means that my working capacity will vary,» she said at the time.  

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Crown Prince Hakon Magnus and Crown Princess Mette-Marit

Crown Prince Hakon Magnus and Crown Princess Mette-Marit attend the Save the Children Peace Prize Party at the Nobel Peace Center on Dec. 10, 2024 in Oslo, Norway. (Per Ole Hagen/Getty Images)

«The Crown Prince and I are choosing to make this public now partly because in future there will be a need to plan periods of time without an official program to accommodate treatment and when the disease is more active,» she added. 

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The Mayo Clinic said some people with pulmonary fibrosis «can stay stable for a long time, but the condition gets worse faster in others.»  

Crown Princess Mette-Marit visits elementary school in Norway

Crown Princess Mette-Marit visits Lilleby Elementary School on Sept. 12, 2024 in Trondheim, Norway.  (Rune Hellestad/Corbis/Getty Images)

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«As it gets worse, people become more and more short of breath,» it also said. «Medicines and therapies can sometimes help slow down the rate of fibrosis, ease symptoms and improve quality of life. For some people, a lung transplant might be an option.» 

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