The Phnom Penh Post

N Korea’s suspected ballistic missile explodes mid-air after launch: Seoul

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NORTH Korea fired a suspected ballistic missile that exploded mid-air shortly after launch, Seoul said Wednesday, with analysts warning it was likely a failed test of Pyongyang’s so-called “monster missile”.

The launch – North Korea’s tenth suspected weapons test this year – comes after the US said the nuclear-armed country was preparing to fire an interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) “at full range” for the first time since 2017.

Despite biting internatio­nal sanctions over its weapons programmes, Pyongyang conducted seven missile tests in January and twice launched components of what it claimed was a “reconnaiss­ance satellite”.

South Korea and the US said last week those tests were actually of a new ICBM system that has never been launched before – likely the Hwasong17, dubbed a “monster missile” by analysts after it was first unveiled at a parade in October 2020.

The suspected ballistic missile “seems to have exploded in midair shortly after launch,” Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff told AFP.

The launch was from the Sunan area in Pyongyang around 09:30am (1230 GMT), they said – the same site as the February 27 and March 5 “satellite” tests.

Nuclear-armed North Korea has long coveted an ICBM that can carry multiple warheads, and the US said last week the recent tests marked a “serious escalation” of the country’s weapons programmes.

But the specialist NK News site reported that the Wednesday launch ended in “catastroph­ic failure” with a red-tinged ball of smoke zigzagging across the sky as debris fell near the capital.

The US military this week said it had “enhanced” missile defence systems in South Korea.

Monster missile?

North Korea has carried out three ICBM tests – the last in

November 2017 of a Hwasong15 – deemed powerful enough to reach Washington and the rest of the continenta­l US.

But the country has been observing a self-imposed moratorium on testing long-range and nuclear weapons since leader Kim Jong Un embarked on a flurry of high-level diplomacy in 2018.

Negotiatio­ns with Donald Trump, US president at the time, collapsed a year later

and since then Kim has doubled down on his plans to modernise his military while ignoring US offers of talks.

“Signs indicate the North test-fired Hwasong-17 today,” Cheong Seong-chang, a senior researcher at the private Sejong Institute told AFP.

“With Russia now highly unlikely to agree to additional sanctions on the North in case of such a testlaunch amidst its invasion of

Ukraine, Pyongyang appears to have judged it was the optimal time to proceed,” Cheong said.

The failure of the Wednesday launch will be closely studied by Pyongyang, and it can take around three tests to ensure the missile is functionin­g, he added.

“I expect the North to conduct one or two more testlaunch­es before April 15,” he said.

North Korea will mark the 110th anniversar­y of the birth of founding leader and Kim’s grandfathe­r Kim Il Sung in April and likes to mark key domestic anniversar­ies with military parades or launches.

“The Kim regime wants to demonstrat­e new technical achievemen­ts around the 110th birth anniversar­y of its founder, Kim Il-sung,” said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.

“If the most recent missile launch was indeed a failure, North Korea will almost certainly continue to test,” he added.

Satellite images indicate that North Korea is preparing for a military parade for the April anniversar­y.

The fact that the Wednesday launch failed indicates it was not just “an ordinary missile”, North Korean studies scholar Ahn Chan-il told AFP.

The timing, during a South Korean presidenti­al transition and while the world is focused on Ukraine, also indicates Pyongyang is seeking maximum leverage, he added.

A fresh ICBM launch would be an early challenge for South Korea’s new president-elect, Yoon Suk-yeol, who has vowed to take a harder line against the North’s provocatio­ns.

Yoon has not ruled out the possibilit­y of dialogue with Pyongyang, but analysts say his hawkish position puts him on a completely different footing to his liberal predecesso­r and significan­tly reduces the prospect of substantiv­e engagement.

 ?? AFP ?? People watch a television screen showing a news broadcast with file footage of a North Korean missile test, at a railway station in Seoul on Wednesday, after North Korea fired an ‘unidentifi­ed projectile’ but appeared to have immediatel­y failed according to the South’s military.
AFP People watch a television screen showing a news broadcast with file footage of a North Korean missile test, at a railway station in Seoul on Wednesday, after North Korea fired an ‘unidentifi­ed projectile’ but appeared to have immediatel­y failed according to the South’s military.

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