Kuwait Times

N Korea fires ballistic missile

Move draws tough response from Trump

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North Korea yesterday fired a ballistic missile into the sea in an apparent test of new US President Donald Trump, who responded by pledging “100 percent” support for Washington’s key regional ally Japan. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose country would be in range of any hostile North Korean launch, called the test “absolutely intolerabl­e” during an impromptu press conference with Trump in Florida. The missile was launched around 7:55 am (2255 GMT Saturday) from Banghyon air base in the western province of North Pyongan, and flew east towards the Sea of Japan (East Sea), the South’s defense ministry said.

It flew about 500 kilometers before falling into the sea, a ministry spokesman said. “Today’s missile launch... is aimed at drawing global attention to the North by boasting it’s nuclear and missile capabiliti­es”, the ministry said in a statement. “It is also believed that it was an armed provocatio­n to test the response from the new US administra­tion under President Trump,” it added. The South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said later the missile was “highly likely” to have been a modified intermedia­terange Musudan missile. It was the first such test since last October.

Trump, speaking alongside Abe, said Washington was committed to his country’s security. “I just want everybody to understand and fully know that the United States of America stands behind Japan, its great ally, 100 percent,” he said, without elaboratin­g. Japan’s top government spokesman Yoshihide Suge told reporters in Tokyo the test was “clearly a provocatio­n to Japan and the region.” North Korea is barred under UN resolution­s from any use of ballistic missile technology. But six sets of UN sanctions since Pyongyang’s first nuclear test in 2006 have failed to halt its drive for what it insists are defensive weapons.

Clear provocatio­n

Last year the country conducted two nuclear tests and numerous missile launches in its quest to develop a nuclear weapons system capable of hitting the US mainland. Seoul-based academic Yang Moo-Jin said the latest test was “a celebrator­y launch” to mark the Feb 16 birthday of Kim Jong-Il, late ruler and father of current leader Kim Jong-Un. Pyongyang often celebrates key anniversar­ies involving current and former leaders with missile launches, Yang, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies, said.

South Korea’s acting president Hwang Gyo-Ahn vowed a “correspond­ing punishment” in response to the launch, which came on the heels of a visit to Seoul by US Defense Secretary James Mattis this month. Mattis had warned Pyongyang that any nuclear attack would be met with an “effective and overwhelmi­ng” response. Trump’s national security adviser Michael Flynn spoke to his South Korean counterpar­t Kim Kwan-Jin by phone and agreed to “seek all possible options” to curb future provocatio­ns by the North, Seoul’s presidenti­al office said.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull also condemned the launch as a “further threat to regional peace and stability” and vowed to work with Beijing, Seoul and Tokyo to heap pressure on Pyongyang. In Jan leader Kim Jong-Un boasted that Pyongyang was in the “final stages” of developing an interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) in an apparent attempt to pressure the incoming US president. Trump shot back on Twitter, saying “It won’t happen.” James Char, senior analyst at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies in Singapore, said the launch was Pyongyang’s “way of showing characteri­stic defiance against Trump.”

Test for Trump

The latest launch poses a test for Trump, who will need the help of the North’s closest ally China to deal with the reclusive state. Relations have thawed in recent days after Trump reaffirmed Washington’s “One China” policy in what he described as a “very warm” telephone conversati­on with President Xi Jinping. Analysts are divided over how close Pyongyang is to realizing its full nuclear ambitions, especially as it has never successful­ly test-fired an ICBM. But all agree it has made enormous strides in that direction since Kim took over after the death of his father in Dec 2011. —AFP Page 8

 ??  ?? SEOUL: People watch the news showing file footage of North Korea’s missile launch at a railway station in Seoul yesterday.
SEOUL: People watch the news showing file footage of North Korea’s missile launch at a railway station in Seoul yesterday.

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