Truro News

South Korea conducts cruise missile drill amid North Korea threats

- SEOUL, KOREA, REPUBLIC Of

South Korea said Wednesday it had conducted its first live-fire drill for an advanced air-launched cruise missile that would strengthen its pre-emptive strike capability against North Korea in the event of crisis.

South Korea’s military said the Taurus missile fired from an F-15 fighter jet travelled through obstacles at low altitudes before hitting a target off the country’s western coast during drills Tuesday.

The missile, manufactur­ed by Germany’s Taurus Systems, has a maximum range of 500 kilometres and is equipped with stealth characteri­stics that will allow it to avoid radar detection before hitting North Korean targets, according to Seoul’s Defence Ministry.

South Korea has been accelerati­ng efforts to ramp up its military capabiliti­es in face of a torrent of nuclear weapons tests by North Korea, which on Sept. 3 conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test to date.

Shortly after the nuke test,

Seoul announced it reached an agreement with Washington to remove the warhead weight limits on South Korean ballistic missiles, which under a bilateral guideline could be built for a maximum range of 800 kilometres.

A pre-emptive strike against Pyongyang’s leadership would be difficult to undertake, but it’s widely seen as the most realistic of the limited military options Seoul has to deny a nuclear attack from its rival.

The North said its latest nuclear test was a detonation of a thermonucl­ear weapon built for its developmen­tal interconti­nental ballistic missiles that were flight tested twice in July. The country is also developing solid-fuel missiles that could be fired from land mobile launchers or submarines. It flew a powerful new midrange missile over northern Japan last month while declaring more missile tests targeting the Pacific Ocean.

Meanwhile, South Korea said it found a small amount of radioactiv­ity in air samples collected days after the North’s test.

The Nuclear Safety and Security Commission said the discovery of the xenon-133 isotope is linked to the recent test but it couldn’t verify exactly what kind of bomb was detonated because several other isotopes that typically accompany a nuclear explosion were not found.

Those isotopes could show if the bomb tested on Sept. 3 was a plutonium or uranium device, according to the South Korean agency. It said it also hasn’t found traces of tritium, which accompany a test of a thermonucl­ear, or hydrogen, bomb.

North Korea did a poor job obscuring its first nuclear test in 2006, when xenon and krypton isotopes detected in the atmosphere allowed scientists to conclude that the country had used a plutonium-fueled device.

The country has since improved the design of its nuclear tests to make radioactiv­ity less detectable from a distance.

 ?? SOUTH KOREA DEfENSE MINISTRy vIA AP ?? In this photo provided by South Korea Defense Ministry, a South Korean air force F-15K fighter jet flies with a Taurus missile during a drill off the country’s western coast yesterday.
SOUTH KOREA DEfENSE MINISTRy vIA AP In this photo provided by South Korea Defense Ministry, a South Korean air force F-15K fighter jet flies with a Taurus missile during a drill off the country’s western coast yesterday.

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