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Kim Jong Un seen beside apparent submarine in state media photographs

North Korea's state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported that Kim was briefed about the submarine's operational and tactical data and combat weapon systems.
Kim expressed "great satisfaction" and "stressed the need to steadily and reliably increase the national defense capability, by directing big efforts to the development of naval weapons and equipment, such as submarines," KCNA reported.
Kim also said the sub would be deployed to North Korea's territorial waters to the east of the country "soon."
Three photographs released by KCNA show Kim, in a gray collarless suit, standing besides the hulking vessel inside a nondescript warehouse.
North Korea's state-run news agency KCNA released this image of what it says is Kim Jong Un inspecting a submarine.
Analysts say the Kim regime has sought to build a viable nuclear-armed submarine as a way to enhance its deterrence capabilities, as the vessels are hard for adversaries to track and destroy. The regime successfully test-fired a submarine-launched ballistic missile in 2016.
Though Pyongyang is believed to boast a fleet of about 70 submarines, experts say most of them are likely old, loud and unable to fire nuclear-armed ballsitic missiles.
It's unclear exactly how far along the newly-pictured submarine is, said Melissa Hanham, the deputy director of the Open Nuclear Network.
"The submarine is still up in a warehouse, it hasn't been put into the dry docks, it doesn't appear to be finished yet," said Hanham.
Hanham said the images do not reveal the top of the submarine. "That's where the missiles go, that's what I want to see," she said.
The one photograph released that shows a large portion of the sub appears to have been intentionally cropped at the top.
Kim is seen alongside what appears to be a sub in this image released by North Korean state media Tuesday.
Hanham said it's possible Pyongyang released images of Kim visiting a secretive military operation for political reasons, or to send a message to the United States.
"What makes it seem like signaling is they're actually producing photographs, very carefully curated photographs that don't give us as much information as we would hope to glean," she said.
Kim and US President Donald Trump agreed to resume denuclearization talks between the two sides last month, but it's unclear how far things have moved since then.
Last week, North Korea's Foreign Ministry issued a strongly worded statement chastising the US and South Korea for its plans to go ahead with joint military exercises in South Korea, calling them a "rehearsal of war.
Seoul and Washington agreed to end the large-scale drills and replace them with smaller drills, often with more computer simulation, as a way to help complement diplomacy.
North Korea said Trump committed to suspending joint military exercises during his first meeting with Kim in Singapore, and hinted that it could renege on its decision to stop testing nuclear weapons and intercontinental-range ballistic missiles should the drills go ahead.
Pyongyang has made no firm commitments to stop testing shorter range or submarine launched missiles.
"Our discontinuation of the nuclear and ICBM tests and the US suspension of joint military exercises are, to all its intents and purposes, commitments made to improve bilateral relations. They are not a legal document inscribed on a paper," North Korea's Foreign Ministry said.

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