The Asian Age

N. Korea fires suspected ballistic missile into sea

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Seoul, Jan. 5: North Korea fired a suspected ballistic missile into the sea on Wednesday, the South Korean and Japanese militaries said, its first public weapons launch in about two months and a signal that Pyongyang isn’t interested in rejoining denucleari­sation talks anytime soon and would rather focus on boosting its weapons arsenal.

The latest launch came after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to further boost his military capability — without disclosing any new policies toward the United States or South Korea — at a high-profile ruling party conference last week.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that North Korea fired a suspected ballistic missile toward its eastern waters on Wednesday morning. It said ●

South Korean and US intelligen­ce authoritie­s were trying to analyse more informatio­n about the launch. The Japanese Defence Ministry also detected the North Korean launch, saying the country likely fired a missile. “We find it truly regrettabl­e that North Korea has continued to fire missiles from last year,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said.

Kishida said other details about the North Korean launch weren’t immediatel­y available, including where the suspected missile landed and whether there had been any damage. He said he ordered officials to confirm the safety of ships and planes in the area where the suspected missile likely flew and fell.

Wednesday’s launch was the first such firing since North Korea tested a series of newly developed weapons between September and November, including nuclear-capable missiles that place South Korea and Japan, both key US allies in the region, within striking distance.

Some experts said North Korea was applying more pressure on its rivals to accept it as a nuclear power state in the hopes of winning relief from economic sanctions on the country. The Biden administra­tion has repeatedly said it is open to resuming nuclear diplomacy with North Korea “anywhere and at any time”. — AP

Joe Biden

JAPANESE PM Fumio Kishida said other details about the North Korean launch weren’t available, including where the suspected missile landed and whether there had been any damage.

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