North Korea's Kim Oversees ICBM Engine Test

09 September 2025, North Korea: This photo released by the North's official Korean Central News Agency on September 8, 2025, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (R) watching a test of a high-thrust, solid-fuel missile engine using composite carbon fiber material at an unspecified location. Photo: -/KCNA/YNA/dpa
09 September 2025, North Korea: This photo released by the North's official Korean Central News Agency on September 8, 2025, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (R) watching a test of a high-thrust, solid-fuel missile engine using composite carbon fiber material at an unspecified location. Photo: -/KCNA/YNA/dpa
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North Korea's Kim Oversees ICBM Engine Test

09 September 2025, North Korea: This photo released by the North's official Korean Central News Agency on September 8, 2025, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (R) watching a test of a high-thrust, solid-fuel missile engine using composite carbon fiber material at an unspecified location. Photo: -/KCNA/YNA/dpa
09 September 2025, North Korea: This photo released by the North's official Korean Central News Agency on September 8, 2025, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (R) watching a test of a high-thrust, solid-fuel missile engine using composite carbon fiber material at an unspecified location. Photo: -/KCNA/YNA/dpa

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un oversaw a test of a solid-fuel engine used for long range nuclear missiles, state media reported on Tuesday, marking another key step in a weapons program Western powers have failed to stop.

State media said it was the ninth and final test of the engine, indicating that a full test-fire of a new intercontinental ballistic missile could be conducted in coming months.

Kim oversaw the "important test" the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported Tuesday, with images showing the leader looking at the flame from the engine test with binoculars.

Another photo showed what appeared to be a red horizontal flame from the test, said AFP.

It was a "ground jet test of high-thrust solid-fuel engine using the composite carbon fiber material," KCNA said, adding it was the "the last one in the development process".

The news agency quoted Kim as saying that the new rocket engine "heralds a significant change in expanding and strengthening the nuclear strategic forces" of North Korea.

The engine test came a week after the North unveiled its new Hwasong-20, billed as its next-generation ICBM.

The test "indicates the production of a solid-fuel engine to be used for the new ICBM," Yang Moo-jin, former president of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, told AFP.

By describing it as the "last" stage of development, Pyongyang was pointing to "a probable test launch of its new ICBM soon," Yang said, adding that a launch within this year was highly plausible.

North Korea has become one of Russia's main allies since it invaded Ukraine three-and-a-half years ago, sending thousands of troops and container loads of weapons to help the Kremlin push Ukrainian forces out of western Russia, following Kyiv's shock incursion last year.

Analysts have speculated that the North is receiving Russian technical support for its banned weapons and satellite programs in exchange, allowing for more rapid progress on its missile development projects.

With Russian assistance, North Korea's missiles could be reassessed from "'crude' to 'complete,'" Yang added.

China trip

The test also came days after Kim returned to North Korea from a trip to Beijing to attend a military parade marking Japan's surrender in World War II, where he stood side by side with his Chinese and Russian counterparts Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin.

North Korea has for years staged test flights of long-range missiles apparently able to reach the continental United States.

Pyongyang has also rolled out solid-fuel variants that are easier to mobilize, conceal and launch rapidly compared with liquid-fuel missiles.

And with the nuclear-armed North seeking to use carbon-fiber material in its ICBMs, the weapons could gain greater range by becoming lighter, Hong Min, a senior analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, told AFP.

"By securing both light weight and thermal durability, it demonstrates the domestic development of essential materials for the extended range," he said.

North Korea has made repeatedly stated this year that it has no intention of giving up its nuclear weapons, and called South Korean President Lee Jae Myung a "hypocrite" over his remarks calling for a "path to denuclearization".

"The North would remain unchanged in our stand not to abandon the nuclear weapons, the prestige and honor of the state," Pyongyang said in August.



Over 3,300 People Have Died in Iran During War

Commuters make their way past a giant billboard of slain Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei at the Valiasr Square in Tehran on April 19, 2026. (AFP)
Commuters make their way past a giant billboard of slain Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei at the Valiasr Square in Tehran on April 19, 2026. (AFP)
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Over 3,300 People Have Died in Iran During War

Commuters make their way past a giant billboard of slain Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei at the Valiasr Square in Tehran on April 19, 2026. (AFP)
Commuters make their way past a giant billboard of slain Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei at the Valiasr Square in Tehran on April 19, 2026. (AFP)

Iran on Monday offered a new death toll for its war with Israel and the United States, with its forensic chief saying at least 3,375 people had been killed in the conflict.

The figure came from Abbas Masjedi, the head of Iran’s Legal Medicine Organization.

Masjedi, quoted by the judiciary’s Mizan news agency and other outlets Monday, said only four of the dead remain unidentified.

His comments did not break down casualties among civilians and security forces, instead just saying that 2,875 were male and 496 were female.

Masjedi said 383 of the dead were children 18 years old and under.

Masjedi’s figures raised questions about whether or not they included security force members, particularly given the levels of intense bombings targeting military bases and arsenals in the country.


China Voices Concern Over US Seizure of Iranian Cargo Ship, Urges Further Talks

13 April 2026, China, Beijing: Guo Jiakun, spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, speaks to journalists. (dpa)
13 April 2026, China, Beijing: Guo Jiakun, spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, speaks to journalists. (dpa)
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China Voices Concern Over US Seizure of Iranian Cargo Ship, Urges Further Talks

13 April 2026, China, Beijing: Guo Jiakun, spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, speaks to journalists. (dpa)
13 April 2026, China, Beijing: Guo Jiakun, spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, speaks to journalists. (dpa)

China has expressed concern over the "forced interception" by the US of an Iranian-flagged cargo ship, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said on Monday, urging relevant parties to abide by the ceasefire agreement in a responsible ‌manner.

"The situation ‌in the Strait of ‌Hormuz ⁠is sensitive and complicated," ⁠said spokesman Guo Jiakun during a regular press briefing. Parties involved should avoid further escalation and "create the necessary conditions for normal transit through the strait ⁠to resume," he added.

The ‌US said ‌earlier it fired on and seized ‌an Iranian cargo ship that tried ‌to run its blockade of Iranian ports.

Iran's military said the ship had been travelling from China ‌and vowed retaliation against what it called "armed piracy by the US ⁠military."

Beijing ⁠on Monday also urged relevant parties to "continue to maintain the momentum of the ceasefire and negotiations".

"Now that a window for peace has opened, favorable conditions should be created to bring the war to an end as soon as possible," Guo said.


Russia Arrests German Woman in Alleged Bomb Plot

People visit the observation deck at Vorobyovy gory (Sparrow Hills) with the main building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia in the background during a spring day in Moscow, Russia, 17 April 2026. (EPA)
People visit the observation deck at Vorobyovy gory (Sparrow Hills) with the main building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia in the background during a spring day in Moscow, Russia, 17 April 2026. (EPA)
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Russia Arrests German Woman in Alleged Bomb Plot

People visit the observation deck at Vorobyovy gory (Sparrow Hills) with the main building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia in the background during a spring day in Moscow, Russia, 17 April 2026. (EPA)
People visit the observation deck at Vorobyovy gory (Sparrow Hills) with the main building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia in the background during a spring day in Moscow, Russia, 17 April 2026. (EPA)

Russia said Monday it had arrested a German woman found with a homemade bomb in her backpack in what it alleged was a Ukrainian-hatched plot to blow up a security services facility in the south.

Russia has arrested dozens of people throughout the four-year war, mostly its own citizens, on allegations of working for Ukraine to carry out sabotage attacks.

There has been a string of high-profile arrests of Western citizens since Moscow ordered its troops into Ukraine -- typically on espionage charges that are widely seen as baseless, with those detained later swapped in exchange for Russians jailed abroad.

Detentions of Western citizens for carrying out or preparing actual attacks are much rarer.

The FSB security agency said the woman, born in 1969, had been dragged into the alleged plot by a citizen from a Central Asian country, who was working on orders from Ukraine.

She was detained and found with an improvised explosive device in her bag in the Caucasus city of Pyatigorsk, the FSB said.

The FSB said it had "prevented a terrorist attack planned by the Kyiv regime against a law enforcement facility in the Stavropol region, involving a German citizen born in 1969," the agency said in a statement.

The FSB said the device -- which contained an explosive charge equivalent to 1.5 kilograms (three pounds) of TNT -- was supposed to be detonated remotely, killing the German woman.

The blast was prevented by electronic jamming, the FSB added.

- 'Radical ideology' -

A man from an unidentified Central Asian state, born in 1997 and "a supporter of radical ideology", was found and arrested near the targeted site, it added.

The pair face life in prison on terrorist charges.

There was no immediate reaction to the allegations in Kyiv or Berlin.

Video footage of the purported arrest published on state media showed armed Russian security agents approach the woman, who was lying face down dressed in all black in a car park.

Another video showed masked plainclothes agents pulling a man into a station, followed by a controlled explosion of the backpack.

Russia has previously accused Ukraine of working with fundamentalists to carry out terror attacks inside Russia, without providing evidence.

Officials initially alleged that the perpetrators of a 2024 massacre at a concert hall on the outskirts of Moscow that killed 150 people were ISIS members in coordination with Ukraine.

ISIS claimed responsibility for that attack, making no reference of any Ukrainian involvement, for which no evidence was presented by Moscow and which Kyiv denies.