Kim Jong Un's sister threatens West with North Korea's 'overwhelming military force'

Kim Jong Un's sister Kim Yo Jong slammed the US and its "lackeys" for military drills near the peninsular, calling them "criminals" and warning of a response.

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Kim Yo Jong called the US and its allies 'arch criminals'. (Image: Getty)

Kim Jong Un's powerful sister issued a dramatic warning to the US and its allies against interfering with North Korea's "most powerful" military.

Kim Yo Jong is the Deputy Department Director of the Publicity and Information Department of the Workers' Party of Korea, and used her power in the regime to send a disturbing message to who she called "arch criminals".

Referring to US and allied military drills in areas around North Korea, she warned that they have prompted her country to continue with its "overwhelming" military advancements.

The official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) released her statement, in which she criticised the drills for "plunging [North-South Korean relations] deeper into a dangerous vortex", escalating tensions "like a kindled detonating fuse".

She claimed the US had carried out over 80 military drills in the region last year, with South Korea, home to roughly 28,500 American forces, carried out another 60.

READ MORE: North Korea's fires missiles in act of 'clear provocation' as fears grow

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Kim Jong Un's sister referred to the US and its 'lackeys' as she slammed the military drills. (Image: Getty)

She said: "Entering this year, the US has staged more than 80 rounds of military drills with its lackeys and those individually staged by the ROK puppets total more than 60. This evidently shows who the arch criminals straining the regional situation are.

"We will continue to build up our overwhelming and most powerful military muscle to defend our sovereignty and security and regional peace. No one can break our determination."

The same day, the North Korean Foreign Ministry spoke out against the US's criticism of its nuclear missile exercise which saw multiple rockets fired into waters off the peninsular's east coast.

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Its statement read: "[It was] a legitimate exercise of the right to self-defence to deter the outbreak of war. We resolutely oppose the US behaviour of forming exclusive military blocs and pursuing inter-camp confrontation to violate strategic security of other countries, seized by the Cold War way of thinking."

In response, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol told his forces to be on alert "so that North Korea does not dare challenge us at a time when the security situation is more serious than ever", according to a presidential office statement.

This comes as the US and South Korea are currently conducting their largest annual air drills together. The two-week-long set of drills involving over 100 aircraft will last until Friday.

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