The Capital

NKorea fires cruise missiles to protest US-SKorea drills

- By Hyung-Jin Kim and Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea launched cruise missiles toward the sea Wednesday, South Korea’s military said, three days after the North carried out what it called a simulated nuclear attack on South Korea to protest its military drills with the United States.

North Korea has stepped up its weapons testing activities, saying they are in response to the ongoing South Korean-U.S. military training that it sees as an invasion rehearsal. Analysts say North Korean leader Kim Jong Un likely intends to enlarge his arsenal to win greater outside concession­s, while trying to boost an image of a strong leader amid domestic economic hardships.

The 11-day South Korean-U.S. drills are to end Thursday. But North Korea is expected to continue its weapons tests as the United States reportedly plans to send an aircraft carrier in coming days for another round of joint drills with South Korea.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said it detected several cruise missile launches from the North’s eastern coastal town of Hamhung. It said the missiles flew into the waters off the North’s east coast.

The launches are the North’s sixth round of missile tests this month and the fourth since U.S. and South Korean forces early last week began large-scale drills, which include field exercises and computer simulation­s. The field training is the largest of its kind since 2018.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff said the South Korean military will maintain a firm readiness and successful­ly complete the rest of the drills with the United States.

North Korea keeps a huge stockpile of ballistic missile systems whose tests are banned by multiple U.N. Security Council resolution­s. Eleven rounds of U.N. sanctions imposed on North Korea since 2006 were approved because of North Korea’s previous ballistic missile and nuclear test explosions.

Cruise missile tests by

North Korea aren’t prohibited by the U.N. council. But experts say they still pose a threat to its neighbors because they are designed to fly at a lower altitude to avoid radar detection. Experts say the main mission of North Korean cruise missiles includes striking U.S. aircraft carriers or other big enemy ships in the event of conflict.

North Korea has called some of its cruise and ballistic missiles “strategic” weapons, a suggestion that it wants to arm them with nuclear warheads. Foreign experts debate whether the North has overcome the remaining technologi­cal hurdles to possess functionin­g nuclear missiles.

After more than 70 missile tests last year — the largest number for a year — North Korea has extended its provocativ­e run of weapons demonstrat­ions into 2023, launching around 20 missiles in 10 separate events. The weapons tested so far this year included short-range, nuclear-capable ballistic missiles capable of striking South Korea and interconti­nental ballistic missiles designed to attack the mainland U.S.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP ?? U.S. Army soldiers get ready to take part in a live-fire exercise with South Korean forces Wednesday in Pocheon, South Korea. The drills are set to end Thursday.
AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP U.S. Army soldiers get ready to take part in a live-fire exercise with South Korean forces Wednesday in Pocheon, South Korea. The drills are set to end Thursday.

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