Then if you zoom in above the general's head (as NKNews.org points out) you can see a map of the U.S. with lines coming into it (implying lines of attack). The text apparently reads "U.S. Mainland Strike Plan" (which is not subtle). The four cities that are targeted are Austin, San Diego, Honolulu, and Washington DC. Reuters/KCNA
Business Insider: Here are the US targets North Korea most likely wants to nuke
North Korea launched its longest-range, most capable missile ever on Friday morning, and experts say that all of the US, besides Florida, now lies within range of a nuclear attack from Kim Jong Un.
Fortunately, unlike an attack from a nuclear peer state like Russia, North Korea's less-advanced missiles would only be expected to hit a few key targets in the US. And even that limited attack would still take North Korea years to prepare for, since it still needs to perfect its missiles engines with more tests, in addition to guidance systems. It also needs to build and deploy enough of them to survive US missile defenses.
But a North Korean propaganda photo from 2013 showing Kim Jong Un reviewing documents before a missile launch (pictured to the right) may have inadvertently leaked the planned targets for a nuclear attack on the US. On the wall besides Kim and his men, there's a map with lines pointing towards some militarily significant locations.
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Previous Post from Business Insider: North Korea Releases New Photos That Reveal Its 'US Mainland Strike Plan' In The Background (March 29, 2013).
WNU Editor: Even if a U.S. city is not hit with a North Korean nuclear missile .... just one (or more) nuclear strikes on the U.S. mainland will be an enormous psychological blow to the country .... and it will be safe to say that nothing will be the same after that.