The Niagara Falls Review

‘Serious problem for global stability’

In testing missile, N. Korea challenges South’s new leader

- FOSTER KLUG and HYUNG-JIN KIM This Week. USS Carl Vinson,

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEOUL, South Korea — Just five days after South Korea elected a president who expressed a desire to reach out to North Korea, Pyongyang sent a challenge to its rival’s new leader on Sunday by testfiring a ballistic missile.

The missile flew for half an hour and reached an unusually high altitude before landing in the Sea of Japan, the South Korean, Japanese and U.S. militaries said. Tokyo said the flight pattern could indicate a new type of missile.

The launch jeopardize­s new South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s willingnes­s for dialogue with the North, and came as U.S., Japanese and European navies gather for joint war games in the Pacific.

“The president expressed deep regret over the fact that this reckless provocatio­n ... occurred just days after a new government was launched in South Korea,” senior presidenti­al secretary Yoon Youngchan said. “The president said we are leaving open the possibilit­y of dialogue with North Korea, but we should sternly deal with a provocatio­n to prevent North Korea from miscalcula­ting.”

Moon, South Korea’s first liberal leader in nearly a decade, said as he took his oath of office last week that he’d be willing to visit the North if the circumstan­ces were right.

U.S. President Donald Trump has also said he’d be “honoured” to talk with leader Kim Jong Un under favourable conditions. But on Sunday, the Trump administra­tionseemed­tothrowcol­dwateron the idea of talks with North Korea.

“Having a missile test is not the way to sit down with the president, because he’s absolutely not going to do it,” Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told ABC’s

She said it was time to “send a strong, unified message that this is unacceptab­le, and I think you’ll see the internatio­nal community do that.”

While it wasn’t immediatel­y clear what type of missile was launched, the U.S. Pacific Command said that “the flight is not consistent with an interconti­nental ballistic missile.”

North Korea’s past satellite rocket launchesha­vebeencall­edclandest­ine tests of ICBM technology, but it is not believed to have tested a true interconti­nental ballistic missile yet.

Japanese officials said the missile flew for about 30 minutes, travelling about 800 km and reaching an unusually high altitude of 2,000 km.

David Wright, co-director of the Global Security Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said the missile could have a range of 4,500 km if flownonast­andard,insteadofa­lofted, trajectory — considerab­ly longer than Pyongyang’s current missiles. He said Sunday’s launch — the seventh such firing by North Korea this year — may have been of a new mobile, two-stage liquid-fueled missile North Korea displayed in a huge April 15 military parade.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters that the launch was “absolutely unacceptab­le” and that Japan would respond resolutely. Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said he and his South Korean counterpar­t agreed that “dialogue for dialogue’s sake with North Korea is meaningles­s.”

The White House took note of the missile landing close to Russia’s Pacific coast and said in a statement that North Korea has been “a flagrant menace for far too long.”

The statement said Washington maintainsi­ts“ironcladco­mmitment” to stand with its allies in the face of the serious threat posed by North Korea. The latest “provocatio­n” should serve asacallfor­allnations­toimplemen­tfar stronger sanctions against the North, it said. Outside militaries and experts will closely analyze what the North fired. While Pyongyang regularly tests shorter-range missiles, it is also working to master the technology needed to field nucleartip­ped missiles that can reach the U.S. mainland. Past North Korean missiles have flown farther than Sunday’s test, landing closer to Japan, but this launch follows a series of high-profile failures.

Japanese Defence Minister Tomomi Inada said North Korea might have launched a “new type of missile,” given the altitude and duration of its flight. But she said more analysis was needed.

Inada’s remarks suggest the missile might have been on a “lofted” trajectory, meaning it could have a far longer range than it actually flew. Japan’s Kyodo News agency, citing unidentifi­ed sources, said the missile may be capable of covering a range as far as 4,000 kilometres if launched at a normal trajectory.

Italian Premier Paolo Gentiloni said the G-7 summit his country is hosting later this month would discuss how to deal with the risk North Korea’s missile launchings pose to global security.

“It’s a serious problem for global stability and security, and I’m convinced that the upcoming G-7, in friendship, will contribute to resolving this issue,” he said in Beijing.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that the missile was fired early Sunday morning from near Kusong, in North Phyongan province.

The Trump administra­tion has called North Korean ballistic and nuclear efforts unacceptab­le and has swung between threats of military action and offers to talk as it formulates a policy.

The North’s state media said Saturday that the nation would bolster its nuclear capability unless the United States abandons its hostile policy.

“The United States should never expect us to give up our nuclear capability,” the main Rodong newspaper said in a commentary carried by the Korean Central News Agency. It said Trump’s “maximum pressure and engagement” policy is only aimed at “stiflingus”andwillcom­peltheNort­h to “strengthen our nuclear deterrent at the maximum speed.”

The launch came as troops from the U.S., Japan and two European nations gather near Guam for drills that are partly a message to North Korea. The

an aircraft supercarri­er, is also engaging with South Korean navy ships in waters off the Korean Peninsula, according to Seoul’s Defence Ministry.

On Saturday, a top North Korean diplomat in charge of U.S. relations, Choe Son Hui, told reporters in Beijing that Pyongyang would be willing to meet with the Trump administra­tion for negotiatio­ns “if the conditions are set.” She did not elaborate.

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