Nukes ready, still no invite: Kim Jong Un goes viral amid US–Israel war with Iran

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 Kim Jong Un goes viral amid US–Israel war with Iran

In a week when world politics collided head-on with meme culture, Kim Jong Un, the nuclear-armed leader of North Korea, has inexplicably become the internet’s favourite punchline as the US and Israel’s war with Iran dominates global headlines.

What has sparked the latest wave of viral humour is not a shift in Pyongyang’s foreign policy, but the sheer absurdity of memes portraying Kim as the kid with all the best toys who somehow was not invited to the party.As the US and Israeli militaries launched coordinated strikes on Iran in late February 2026, a campaign that has included air attacks on key Iranian sites and significant escalation following the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, tensions across the Middle East surged.

Retaliatory threats, diplomatic warnings and rising oil market jitters followed. Yet online, a different storyline began to trend.While analysts debated deterrence theory and regional alliances, social media users zeroed in on a far more surreal angle. North Korea’s famously provocative leader, known for missile tests and nuclear posturing, appeared nowhere near the battlefield. That absence became the joke.

The memes range from edited images of Kim staring anxiously at radar screens to captions suggesting he is refreshing X every few seconds, hoping for a notification that says “You have been added to the war.” Others show him standing beside intercontinental ballistic missiles with captions such as “Nukes ready, still no invite” or “Sir, still no missiles headed our way.” The humour paints him as a geopolitical bystander experiencing global-scale FOMO.

Kim Jong Un with his toys

There is, of course, a serious layer beneath the satire. North Korea has officially condemned the US and Israeli strikes as unlawful aggression and warned of destabilising consequences. Security analysts have long argued that Pyongyang views nuclear weapons as essential insurance for regime survival, particularly after observing conflicts involving non-nuclear states. But those strategic calculations are not what is driving the trending charts.

Instead, it is the contrast that fuels the viral moment. A leader synonymous with dramatic missile launches is, at least for now, not directly involved in one of the most volatile conflicts of the year. In the internet’s logic, that makes him the ultimate spectator, fully armed yet oddly excluded.As the Middle East conflict continues to evolve with very real human and geopolitical stakes, social media has once again shown its instinct to process anxiety through absurdity. And somewhere in that swirl of breaking news alerts and meme threads, Kim Jong Un has become the unlikely symbol of a strange digital refrain: ready with nukes, still waiting for the invite.

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