Daily Mail

Could Kim’s new missile hit the US?

Nuclear conflict fears as North Korea tests long-range weapon

- By Larisa Brown Defence and Security Editor

FEARS of a global war were stoked dramatical­ly yesterday after North Korea claimed it had successful­ly tested a missile that could hit the US.

Pyongyang said the Hwasong-14 interconti­nental ballistic missile hit its target 580 miles away after a 39minute flight during which it reached an altitude of 1,740 miles.

The launch, personally supervised by leader Kim Jong-un, showed North Korea has the capability to strike ‘anywhere in the world’, officials claimed, heightenin­g tensions in the region.

State television showed pictures of an elated dictator pumping clenched fists and applauding with his subordinat­es. The missile landed in the Sea of Japan, around 200 miles off Japan.

But experts say that on a standard trajectory it could have flown more than 4,000 miles, giving it the potential for use in a nuclear strike on Alaska, although not the main islands of Hawaii or the other 48 US states.

The test, on America’s Independen­ce Day holiday and ahead of this week’s G20 summit of world leaders in Germany, was in defiance of a UN Security Council ban on the rogue state’s ballistic activities. It provoked immediate condemnati­on around the world.

Donald Trump mocked Kim on Twitter and suggested China do more to restrain its neighbour following a series of missile tests.

The US President said: ‘ Does this guy have anything better to do with his life? Hard to believe that South Korea and Japan will put up with this much longer. Perhaps China will put a heavy move on North Korea and end this nonsense once and for all!’

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said in a statement: ‘This is yet another reminder of the grave danger that North Korea poses to her neighbours, particular­ly Japan and South Korea, who are our friends and allies.’

He said he expected the issue to be on the G20 agenda, adding: ‘The internatio­nal community must redouble its efforts to impose a price on this regime, which strains every nerve and sinew to build nuclear weapons and launch illegal missiles, even as the people of North Korea endure starvation and poverty.’

Russia and China pledged to work together to defuse the deepening crisis. They said the launch was unacceptab­le and called on Kim to freeze his weapons pro- gramme. They also called on the US and South Korea to end largescale military exercises in the region and on Washington to halt its deployment of a missile shield.

North Korea brought out one of its most symbolic media assets to announce the key moment in its missile developmen­t – a woman TV presenter in her 70s.

Ri Chun-hee has previously told her loyal viewers of momentous news such as the deaths of the country’s founder Kim Il-sung and his son Kim Jong-il. Her appearance­s are rare nowadays but state broadcaste­r Korean Central Television called her back into the studio yesterday. North Korea was ‘ a strong nuclear state which, in addition to its atomic weapons, has very powerful ICBMs that can strike any place in the world in its possession’, she said. It would ‘proudly protect peace and security on the Korean peninsula as well as in the region’.

‘Strike anywhere in the world’

 ??  ?? Blast off: State TV footage of the missile test
Blast off: State TV footage of the missile test
 ??  ?? Missile being prepared for firing yesterday
Missile being prepared for firing yesterday
 ??  ?? Defiant: Kim supervisin­g the launch
Defiant: Kim supervisin­g the launch
 ??  ??

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