The Sunday Guardian

North Korea launches more short-range missiles

- JOYCE LEE SEOUL REUTERS

North Korea fired what appeared to be two short-range ballistic missiles into the sea off its east coast on Saturday, the South Korean military said, the latest in a series of launches in recent weeks amid stalled denucleari­sation talks.

Saturday’s launch was the seventh by North Korea since US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un met at the inter-korean border in June. The launches have complicate­d attempts to restart talks between US and North Korean negotiator­s over the future of Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes.

The two leaders agreed in June to restart working-level negotiatio­ns but the United States has so far been unsuccessf­ul in its attempts to get the talks going again. The process has been stalled since an unsuccessf­ul second summit between Trump and Kim in Hanoi in February.

Trump said earlier this month Kim told him he was ready to resume talks on North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes and would stop missile testing as soon as Us-south Korea military exercises ended.

However, while the joint military drills are over, North Korea’s continued launches caused “strong concern”, South Korea’s National Security Council (NSC) said on Saturday.

Trump said after the latest launches the United States has a good relationsh­ip with North Korea. “Kim Jong Un has been ... pretty straight with me,” Trump told reporters at the White House. North Korea has repeatedly criticised the mostly computersi­mulated drills in recent weeks, as well as South Korea’s import of high-tech weapons such as F-35 stealth jets and the US testing of its intermedia­te-range cruise missile as threatenin­g and hindering dialogue.

North Korea’s top diplomat called US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo a “diehard toxin” on Friday, saying: “We are ready for both dialogue and standoff.”

Those remarks came after US envoy on North Korea Stephen Biegun was in Seoul this week to discuss ways to get negotiatio­ns back on track.

The North kept up its harsh criticism of sanctions imposed because of its nuclear and missile programmes.

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