The Star Malaysia

Kim test-fires ‘new weapon’

N. Korea claims to have experiment­ed with powerful warhead

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SEOUL: North Korea’s Kim Jongun has supervised the test-firing of a new tactical weapon with a “powerful warhead”, state media reported, in the first test of its kind since nuclear negotiatio­ns with Washington stalled.

The test marks a ratcheting up of tensions weeks after a summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump collapsed without agreement.

It also comes after satellite imagery suggested heightened activity at a nuclear test site.

Wednesday’s test was “conducted in various modes of firing at different targets”, the Korean Central News Agency reported, adding that Kim “guided the testfire”.

The report said Kim described its developmen­t as one “of very weighty significan­ce in increasing the combat power of the People’s Army”.

The “advantages” of the weapon were “the peculiar mode of guiding flight and the load of a powerful warhead”, KCNA said.

Its report gave no details of the weapon.

South Korea had not detected anything on radar so it was unlikely to have been a missile, a military official said.

“When North Korea launches a missile, our radar catches it. But no missile was detected,” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Seoul’s presidenti­al office said it had no comment.

“The descriptio­n makes whatever was tested sound like a missile, but that could be everything from a small anti-tank guided missile to a surface-to-air missile to a rocket artillery system,” said North Korea analyst Ankit Panda.

Earlier in the week, the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a US monitor, said activity had been detected at Yongbyon, the North’s main nuclear testing facility.

The think tank said evidence suggested Pyongyang may be reprocessi­ng radioactiv­e material into bomb fuel.

Kim’s Hanoi summit with Trump, the second between the two men, ended abruptly, with North Korea later protesting that the US was being unreasonab­le in its demands.

Since then, North Korea has said it is mulling options for its diplomacy with the US, and Kim said last week he was open to talks with Trump only if Washington came with the “proper attitude”.

“Kim is trying to make a statement to the Trump administra­tion that his military potential is growing by the day,” said Harry Kazianis, an analyst at the Washington-based Center for the National Interest.

“His regime is becoming frustrated with Washington’s lack of flexibilit­y in recent negotiatio­ns.”

Koh Yu-hwan, professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University, agreed the test was a message to the US showing its displeasur­e over the stalled nuclear talks.

But the fact that it was not a longrange missile or nuclear test “underscore­s Pyongyang wants to keep alive dialogue with Washington”, he added.

“Pyongyang cannot conduct a nuclear or long-range missile launch at this point unless it wants to totally shatter what remains of the US-North talks,” he said.

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