North Korea fired at least four more cruise missiles Friday, claiming it was in response to ramped-up U.S.-South Korean military drills that "can be regarded as a declaration of war."
The missile tests come after the two allies conducted a tabletop exercise at the Pentagon focused on responses to a nuclear attack by Pyongyang.
North Korean forces held a "strategic cruise missile launching drill" in the early hours of Thursday, firing four Hwasal-2s, the official Korean Central News Agency reported Friday.
The exercise demonstrated North Korea's "deadly nuclear counterattack capability against the hostile forces," it said.
The defense ministry in Seoul questioned that description of the test, saying there was a difference between what was announced and what U.S. and South Korean surveillance detected. It added that an analysis was ongoing.
North Korea is not banned from firing cruise missiles under current U.N. sanctions, but the Thursday drill followed multiple weapons tests this week – including an intercontinental ballistic missile – which was condemned as "provocative" by the U.N. chief.
Pyongyang said that criticism was "unfair and unbalanced," and on Friday called on the global body – which met this week to discuss the North Korean launches – to "bitterly condemn" Seoul and Washington over their joint military exercises.
Following a year in which Pyongyang declared itself an "irreversible" nuclear power and fired a record-breaking number of missiles, Seoul and Washington have moved to ramp up joint exercises and redeploy U.S. strategic assets to the region.
South Korea is eager to reassure its increasingly nervous public about the U.S. commitment to so-called extended deterrence, where U.S. assets, including nuclear weapons, serve to prevent attacks on allies.
South Korea does not have atomic weapons and remains officially committed to nuclear non-proliferation, even as calls grow domestically to consider getting its own nukes.
The joint tabletop exercise involved discussions on "potential options for responding to DPRK nuclear weapons use," Washington and Seoul said in a joint statement, using North Korea's official name.
U.S.-South Korea joint exercises infuriate North Korea, which views them as rehearsals for an invasion.
Soon after the exercise at the Pentagon, Pyongyang issued a statement claiming Washington's "hostile and provocative practices ... can be regarded as a declaration of war."
"The only way for preventing the vicious cycle of escalating military tension ... is for the U.S. to show a clear and practical stand such as abandonment of its commitment to deploying strategic assets," and stopping joint drills, it added.
Relations between the two Koreas are at one of their lowest points in decades, with talks stalled and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un calling for an "exponential" increase in weapons production, including tactical nuclear weapons.
North Korea test-fired scores of banned missiles in 2022, putting East Asian neighbors on edge.
Kim's powerful sister, Kim Yo Jong, this week described the Pacific as the country's "firing range."
North Korea should stop spending on military development when its people are going hungry, South Korea's unification ministry said Friday.
The cost of the three ballistic missiles it fired this week "is enough to buy about 100,000 tons of food for about two to three million vulnerable people for about five months," Lee Hyo-jung, deputy spokesperson of the ministry, told reporters.
South Korean officials have recently warned North Korea could be facing severe food shortages after years of pandemic-linked isolation.