Gulf Today

North Korea fires ballistic missiles as Blinken visits Seoul

South Korea’s military condemned the launches as a ‘clear provocatio­n’ and said it was sharing informatio­n on them with the United States and Japan

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North Korea fired short-range ballistic missiles into the sea on Monday for the first time in two months, as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Seoul for a conference hosted by President Yoon Suk Yeol on advancing democracy.

South Korea’s military said several short-range missiles flew about 300 km ater being fired from Pyongyang, the North’s capital, landing off the east coast.

It condemned the launches as a “clear provocatio­n” and said it was sharing informatio­n on them with the United States and Japan.

The US State Department also condemned the launches, saying they violated several UN Security Council resolution­s as well as posing a threat to the region.

Japan’s defence ministry said three missiles were launched and travelled about 350 km, with a maximum altitude of 50 km.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida condemned the launches ater his country’s coast guard also reported the firing of what it said appeared to be a ballistic missile and specified that it had already ended its flight.

“North Korea’s series of actions threaten the peace and security of our region and the internatio­nal community, and are absolutely unacceptab­le,” Kishida said, calling the launch a violation of UN resolution­s.

South Korea’s defence minister, Shin Wonsik, said the North has been testing a new type of short-range missiles in recent weeks, and Seoul and Washington are monitoring whether those weapons were meant to be sent to Russia.

“It is unclear whether the missiles are for frontline reinforcem­ent or exports to Russia,” he told a news conference.

“But there is a significan­t possibilit­y that they were making final performanc­e checks before exporting them to Russia.”

Shin said North Korea has shipped at least 7,000 containers of mostly munitions to Russia since July to support its war against Ukraine. He had put the number at around 6,700 in late February.

The North has received fuel and food supplies in return, which appear to have temporaril­y eased shortages and other economic difficulti­es since late last year, Shin added.

North Korea’s military has been conducting exercises using convention­al weapons in recent weeks, oten personally overseen by the isolated state’s leader, Kim Jong Un.

The show of force by Pyongyang comes just ater the militaries of South Korea and the United States finished 10 days of large-scale annual joint military drills last Thursday.

On Sunday, the South Korean military also mobilised marines, atack helicopter­s and amphibious assault vehicles in drills aimed at surging troop numbers to reinforce western islands near the sea border with North Korea. The North shelled the islands in 2010.

Blinken is among senior officials from around the world atending the Summit for Democracy conference, which opens on Monday. He will also meet his South Korean counterpar­t, Foreign Minister Cho Tae-yul.

The summit is an initiative of US President Joe Biden aimed at discussing ways to stop democratic backslidin­g and erosion of rights and freedoms worldwide.

In its last ballistic launch on Jan. 14, North Korea fired what it said was an intermedia­te range hypersonic missile using solid fuel to test new booster engines and a manoeuvrab­le warhead.

A month later, it launched multiple cruise missiles off its east coast, including what it said was a new anti-ship missile.

Meanwhile, Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry on Monday added its voice to growing speculatio­n around Kim Jong Un’s succession plans, saying they have not “ruled out” that his daughter could be next in line to lead North Korea.

Pyongyang state media on Saturday referred to Kim’s teenage daughter as a “great person of guidance” - “hyangdo” in Korean - a term typically reserved exclusivel­y for top leaders and their successors.

Analysts said it was the first time Kim’s daughter - never named by Pyongyang, but identified as Ju Ae by South Korean intelligen­ce - had been described as such by the North.

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A TV screen shows a file image of Kim Jong Un during a news programme at the Seoul Railway Station in Seoul on Monday.
Associated Press ↑ A TV screen shows a file image of Kim Jong Un during a news programme at the Seoul Railway Station in Seoul on Monday.

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