Waikato Times

Kim’s latest missile ‘harder’ to detect

- – The Times

NORTH KOREA/UNITED STATES: A new interconti­nental ballistic missile fired by North Korea from a mobile launcher this week may be more difficult to detect, but analysts believe it would be unlikely to reach the United States with a full nuclear payload.

Dozens of photograph­s showed the Hwasong-15 being fired from a launch vehicle, overseen by a beaming Kim Jong Un, the supreme leader. The pictures showed the size of the rocket and the progress made since the launch of the smaller Hwasong-14 in September.

Independen­t experts believe that Pyongyang cannot yet launch a nuclear attack on most of the US because the weight of any feasible warhead would significan­tly reduce the missile’s range.

North Korea’s first missile launch in two months this week continued to reverberat­e yesterday in Washington, Moscow and Beijing.

President Donald Trump tweeted that China’s envoy to North Korea had recently returned from a trip to Pyongyang without success. ‘‘The Chinese envoy, who just returned from North Korea, seems to have had no impact on Little Rocket Man. Hard to believe his people, and the military, put up with living in such horrible conditions. Russia and China condemned the launch.’’

Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, questioned Trump’s strategy with North Korea. ‘‘One gets the impression that everything has been done on purpose to make Kim Jong Un snap and carry out further inadvisabl­e actions.’’

The North Korean state media said that the Hwasong-15 flew for 53 minutes before landing in the Sea of Japan more than 950km away. The Korea Central News Agency said the missile could have travelled as far as 13,000km, putting most of the world in range, including America’s east coast.

A report by Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, however, claimed that the 13,000km range could be achieved only by a missile carrying a light dummy warhead.

 ?? PHOTO: KOREA CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, third from left, and what the North Korean government calls the Hwasong-15 interconti­nental ballistic missile.
PHOTO: KOREA CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, third from left, and what the North Korean government calls the Hwasong-15 interconti­nental ballistic missile.

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