The Columbus Dispatch

NKorea launches missile over Japan

- By Foster Klug and Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea fired a ballistic missile from its capital, Pyongyang, that flew over Japan before plunging into the northern Pacific Ocean, officials said Tuesday, an especially aggressive test-flight that will rattle an already anxious region.

Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said the missile traveled around 1,677 miles and reached a maximum height of 341 miles as it flew over the northern Japanese island of

Hokkaido. The joint chiefs said it is analyzing the launch with the United States and also that South Korea’s military had strengthen­ed its monitoring and preparatio­n in case of further actions from North Korea.

Japanese officials said there was no damage reported. Japan’s NHK TV said the missile separated into three parts. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters, “We will do our utmost to protect people’s lives.”

North Korean missile launches, which have been proceeding at an unusually fast pace this year, have Washington and its allies in

Asia rattled because each one puts the North a step closer toward its goal of an arsenal of nuclear missiles that can reliably target the United States. Some analysts think that could be achieved before the end of U.S. President Donald Trump’s first term in early 2021.

Tuesday’s launch came days after the North fired what was assessed as three short-range ballistic missiles into the sea and a month after its second test-flight of an interconti­nental ballistic missile, which analysts say could reach deep into the U.S. mainland when perfected.

North Korea typically reacts with anger to U.S.-South Korean military drills, which are happening now, often staging weapons tests and

releasing threats to Seoul and Washington in its state-controlled media. But animosity is higher than usual after threats by Trump to unleash “fire and fury” on the North, and Pyongyang’s stated plan to consider firing some of its missiles toward Guam.

Kim Dong-yub, a former South Korean military official who is now an analyst at Seoul’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies, said the early flight data suggest the North Korean missile was likely a Hwasong-12, a new intermedia­te-range missile that the North has recently threatened to fire toward Guam. Kim said it may also have been a midrange Musudan, a missile with a potential 2,180-mile range that puts much of the Asia-Pacific region within reach, or a Pukguksong-2, a solid-fuel missile that can be fired faster and more secretly than weapons using liquid fuel.

North Korea first fired a rocket over Japanese territory in August 1998, when a multistage rocket that outside experts called “Taepodong-1” — based on the name of the village it was launched from — flew about 932 miles before landing in the Pacific Ocean. The North later said it launched a satellite.

North Korea flew another rocket over Japan in April 2009 and said that, too, was carrying a satellite. The North claimed success, but the U.S. North American Aerospace Defense Command said no satellite reached orbit.

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