WONSAN, North Korea — Now here's something you don't see every day: an F-16 fighter jet buzzing through the skies of North Korea and launching — fireworks.

The plane roaring over people's heads at the country's first air show Sunday was actually a remote-controlled mock-up of the fabled U.S Air Force fighter.

The scale models of the F-16 and a Chinese J-10 fighter were featured on the second day of the Wonsan International Friendship Air Festival.

The choice of flying a one-sixth scale F-16 at the show was an odd one considering the outrage North Korea regularly expresses over the presence of U.S. troops and Air Force bases in South Korea.

The North was particularly outraged over recent flights by B-1B Lancer bombers. North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency described the B-1B as an "ill-famed nuclear war means" and accused the United States of resorting to "nuclear threat and blackmail" against the North.

The B-1B doesn't currently carry nuclear weapons under a disarmament treaty, and some U.S. experts do not consider them as nuclear capable in their current configuration.

A remote-controlled F-16 fighter jet lands in front of an Air Koryo commercial airplane at the Kalma Airport after a flight demonstration on Sept. 25, 2016, in Wonsan, North Korea. Thousands of Koreans and hundreds of foreign tourists and journalists invited to Wonsan, for the Wonsan International Friendship Air Festival, were given a glimpse of North Korea's own Air Force fighters, remote-controlled scale mock-up planes including an F-16 fighter jet, and demonstrations of military parachuting, with the first two skydivers descending with huge North Korean and ruling party flags.

Photo Credit: Wong Maye-E/AP

The model fighters did, however, appear to please the crowd watching the air displays Sunday at Wonsan's newly renovated Kalma Airport.

Thousands of North Koreans and hundreds of foreign tourists and journalists invited to the event — which is intended to showcase Wonsan's tourism appeal — were given a rare glimpse of North Korea's own air force fighters, including a MiG-29 and SU-25 ground attack fighter, acquired from Russia.

"This plane is faster than other airplanes and can maneuver quickly, so there is little time to think, you must make fast decisions," Rim Sol, a MiG-21 pilot, said, standing beside her fighter on the tarmac.

The Wonsan airport was long used by the North's military but was upgraded and rebuilt to handle commercial flights, though it is unclear how it would fit into national flag-carrier Air Koryo's very limited international flight schedule.

North Koreans watch as a remote-controlled F-16 fighter jet lands on the runway of Kalma Airport on Sept. 25, 2016, in Wonsan, North Korea.

Photo Credit: Wong Maye-E/AP

The final day also included a demonstration of military parachuting, with the first two skydivers descending with huge North Korean and ruling party flags.

Officials refused to comment on the origin of the model F-16.

The air show's first day opened Saturday with an aerobatic display by U.S.-made Hughes MD 500 military-use helicopters, the origin of which has raised questions of whether international sanctions against North Korea had been violated.

This story has been corrected to show that the B-1B bomber does not currently carry nuclear weapons under a disarmament treaty.

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