US is willing to send North Korea COVID-19 aid despite Kim Jong Un's vows to ramp up its nuclear program, official says

biden kim jong un
Officials said North Korea may be planning a long-range missile test to occur during President Joe Biden's visit to the South Korea this weekend.
  • About a week after reporting its first COVID-19 case, North Korea may have surpassed 2 million cases.
  • A Biden administration official told Bloomberg's Jennifer Jacobs they may be willing to help the country.
  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's nuclear threats have ramped up as Biden visits South Korea.

The Biden administration is open to providing North Korea with COVID-19 aid as the country faces a major outbreak, an unnamed official told Bloomberg's Jennifer Jacobs.

"It is our hope that they will make decisions that will allow for the maximum amount of support in this time of great need need and great crisis," the official said of North Korea, according to a tweet shared by Jacobs on Friday.

North Korea acknowledged its first-ever case of COVID-19 last week. Since then, the estimated number of cases in the isolated country has surpassed 2 million.

Meanwhile, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has vowed to ramp up the country's nuclear weapons program. In March, North Korea tested a new intercontinental ballistic missile system, prompting condemnation from the West.

"We will continue to take steps to strengthen and develop our nation's nuclear capabilities at the fastest pace," Kim said during a military parade in April, according to the BBC.

US and South Korean officials said this week North Korea could be planning a long-range missile test to occur during President Joe Biden's visit to the South. Biden arrived in South Korea on Friday.

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