GETTY North Korea are now capable of striking America, Kim Jong-un has claimed

A fiery editorial in a state-run propaganda newspaper said North Korea would “reduce to ashes” any enemy - including the USA. The sabre-rattling opinion piece said “no force on earth” could stop the despot in his question for nuclear domination. The piece said: “The DPRK is capable of putting the US mainland and any cesspool of evils on earth within the range of its strikes and reducing them to ashes by tipping new-type inter-continental ballistic rockets with more powerful nuclear warheads.

“The DPRK's strategic position has reached its highest level. No force on earth can block the DPRK's advance. Neither sanctions nor blockade nor military pressure can ever frighten it.”

Inside North Korea: The pictures Kim Jong-un doesn't want you to see Thu, March 8, 2018 Photographer Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, he was able to save photos that was forbidden to take inside the segregated state Play slideshow Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Medi 1 of 69 Taking pictures in the DMZ is easy, but if you come too close to the soldiers, they stop you

The North Korean propaganda rag claimed it had won a vital showdown with the US and celebrated its recent controversial missile tests. It said: “The DPRK has made its winning streaks in the showdown with the US which challenged the cause of global independence while styling itself an emperor in the world this year.

GETTY Kim Jong-un has said "no force on earth" can stop North Korea

“The DPRK dealt a telling blow at the US engrossed in nuclear threat and blackmail against it through its H-bomb test and demonstrated to the world the dignity and spirit of Songun Korea. “The test-fire of SLBM was conducted to prove that the DPRK is the military power possessed of strong nuclear attack capability and the U.S. mainland and the Pacific operational theatre are within the range of strikes of the DPRK.” The piece concluded by warning the world North Korea had now caught up with the rest of the world when it came to nuclear war.

GETTY North Korea said they have passed through the "final gate" in nuclear development