The Manila Times

NKorea boasts missile test ‘greatest success’

- AFP

SEOUL: North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un declared a submarinel­aunched missile test the “greatest success”, state media said on Thursday, as the UN weighed a condemnati­on of the launch which appears to advance Pyongyang’s nuclear strike capability.

The US mainland and the - ing range” of the North’s army, reported Kim as saying after Wednesday’s launch.

The missile was fired from a submarine submerged off the northeaste­rn port of Sinpo on Wednesday, according to South Korea’s military. miles) towards Japan, far exceeding any previous sub-launched tests.

The UN Security Council met for two hours on Wednesday to discuss North Korea’s latest provocativ­e move and agreed to consider a statement condemning the launch.

“There was a general sense of condemnati­on by most members of the council and therefore we will have to see how we would then be phrasing the press statement,” said Ramlan bin Ibrahim from Malaysia, which currently holds the council’s presidency.

However diplomats expected further haggling with China, Pyongyang’s main ally, over the wording.

Earlier this month, North Korea fired a land- launched ballistic missile directly into Japanese drawing an outraged response from Tokyo.

But the Security Council failed to condemn the move after China sought to include language in a missile defense system that the United States plans to deploy in South Korea.

Kim said the latest launch proved the North had joined the “front rank of the military powers fully equipped with nuclear attack capability”.

Pyongyang’s top newspaper Rodong Sinmun carried 24 photos of him observing the launch, including one with his hands on his hips roaring with laughter at an observatio­n post, and other watching through a pair of binoculars.

greatest success and victory,” it said.

‘On track to hit Japan’

Kim called for his nation’s scientists to work towards mounting nuclear warheads on all types of ballistic missiles and to be able to deliver them in order “to cope with the unpredicte­d total war and nuclear war with the US imperialis­ts.”

“I do not guess what ridiculous remarks the US and its followers I can say their rash acts will only precipitat­e their self-destructio­n,” he was quoted as saying.

would take its nuclear strike threat to a new level, allowing deployment far beyond the Korean peninsula and a “second-strike” capability in the event of an attack on its military bases.

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency cited a military source as saying Wednesday’s launch had been made at an acute angle to limit the missile’s range.

fully fuelled, it could travel over 2,500 km, the source said.

The agency had previously quot at the optimum angle it could cover more than 1,000 km -- without mentioning if it was fully fuelled.

The US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University said on its challenges including building a new class of submarine to carry the missile.

But the North is “on track to the capability to strike targets in the region -- including Japan -- by 2020”, it said.

The South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement following the launch that the North was clearly bent on escalating tensions and that the latest test posed a “serious challenge” to security on the Korean peninsula.

The test came just days after North Korea threatened a pre-emptive nuclear strike against South Korean and US forces who kicked off their annual Ulchi Freedom military drills on Monday.

Current UN resolution­s prohibit North Korea from any use of ballistic missile technology, but Pyongyang has continued to carry out numerous launches following its fourth nuclear test in January.

South Korea has responded to Pyongyang’s continued launches by agreeing to deploy a sophistica­ted US anti- missile system has seriously strained relations with North Korea’s main diplomatic ally, China.

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