North Korea says World War 3 will be South Korea's 'MISERABLE FATE' for alliance with USA
The threat of conflict between nuclear-armed North and the South, backed by , has been looming over the Korean Peninsula for months.
And today the rogue state warned of an impending "showdown" between the two nations. Kim's regime has ramped up its anti-US rhetoric ever since President Trump visited East Asia as part of a 12-day tour aimed at boosting trade and drumming up support for a solution to the . The secretive kingdom's state-controlled media service told the North Korean people today how their former countrymen south of the Demilitarised Zone are suffering "untold pains under the US occupation and domination".
A statement from the puppet media service said: "They have to experience all sorts of sufferings, with their sovereignty usurped and vital rights cruelly violated. "This is their miserable fate. It comes on the same day Rodong Sinmun, the regime-run newspaper, warned the North would "surely win in the showdown" with the US and South Korea.
Earlier this week, President Donald Trump warned North Korea: "Do not underestimate us. Do not try us.".
And in a warning directed at young dictator Kim, he said: "The weapons you are acquiring are not making you safer". They are putting your regime in grave danger.
Every step you take down this dark path increases the peril you face. He made the remarks during a visit to Seoul, where he spoke with South Korean leaders on how to deal with the menacing rogue state.
Mr Trump also urged other nations to join forces to combat the growing threat posed by Pyongyang.
Following his stop in South Korea, the President travelled on to China - North Korea's biggest ally and trading partner. The Asian giant is keeping the economically unstable nation financially afloat, and Trump has claimed China "can fix this problem easily – and quickly" by using its influence over the hermit state.
But the Communist superpower has been relucant to deal with Kim over fears of a conflict or failed state on its doorstep. Kim's regime has continued to carry out nuclear and ballistic missile tests despite widespread international condemnation and a series of crippling sanctions aimed at strangling the state's cash sources.

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