Fears of another missile launch
INTELLIGENCE: NORTH KOREAN TRANSPORTERS COULD BE PREPARING TO TEST A NEW ICBM
Kim’s latest move adds to the tension in the Koreas.
Speculation intensified yesterday that North Korea is preparing another missile launch to coincide with a military anniversary, just weeks after conducting its first successful test of an ICBM that experts warned could reach Alaska.
US and South Korean media reports cited intelligence and military officials as saying transporter vehicles carrying launching equipment had been seen on the move.
The test – which both Seoul and Washington warned could be of another intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) – could coincide with the 64th anniversary of the end of the Korean War on July 27, reports said.
This is a public holiday in the nuclear-armed North and celebrated as Victory Day.
The two Koreas have remained technically at war since the three-year conflict ended in 1953 only with a ceasefire rather than a full peace treaty.
The North in 2014 marked the armistice anniversary by firing a Scud-B short-range missile on July 26.
Yonhap also cited a South Korean military source as saying Pyongyang may be preparing to test a new type of ICBM or an intermediate-range missile.
On Monday CNN cited a US defence official as saying the North appeared to be preparing for another missile test. He said transporter vehicles carrying launching equipment were seen arriving at Kusong in North Pyongyang last Friday.
The US network earlier cited US intelligence as indicating preparations for another test of an ICBM or intermediate-range missile.
Kusong has been the scene of past tests, including in May when an intermediate-range ballistic missile travelled more than 700km.
Pyongyang triggered global alarm on July 4, US Independence Day, when it test-fired its first ICBM which experts believe can reach Alaska – a landmark development in its weapons programme.
North Korean leader Kim JongUn, who personally oversaw the launch, described it as gift to the “American bastards”. – AFP