The Borneo Post

North Korea says it testfired hypersonic missile

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SEOUL: North Korea said Monday it had successful­ly testfired a new ballistic missile tipped with a hypersonic maneuverab­le warhead, the latest breakthrou­gh in its pursuit of advanced weaponry to threaten South Korean and US targets.

The launch, Pyongyang’s first known weapons test this year and its first ever test of a solidfuel hypersonic intermedia­terange ballistic missile (IRBM), was detected by Seoul’s military Sunday afternoon.

A short report in the official Korean Central News Agency said that the solid-fuel IRMB was “loaded with a hypersonic maneuverab­le controlled warhead.”

The test was meant to verify “the gliding and maneuverin­g characteri­stics” of the warhead and the “reliabilit­y of newly developed multi-stage highthrust solid-fuel engines,” KCNA said.

KCNA said that Sunday’s launch “never affected the security of any neighbouri­ng country and had nothing to do with the regional situation.”

But it came just days after Pyongyang staged live-fire exercises near the country’s tense maritime border with South Korea, which prompted counter-exercises and evacuation orders for some South Korean border islands. It also comes after Kim earlier this week branded Seoul his “principal enemy” and warned he would not hesitate to annihilate South Korea, as he toured major weapons factories.

Solid-fuel missiles are easier to hide and quicker to fire, and hypersonic missiles typically allow the user to manoeuvre them in flight to better hit targets. Both technologi­es have long been on Kim’s laundry list of weapons technology.

“North Korea appears to be pursuing the developmen­t of hypersonic missiles and IRBMs using solid fuel rocket boosters at the same time,” said Chang Young-keun, a missile expert at the Korea Research Institute for National Strategy.

“Mid- to long-range hypersonic missiles will be particular­ly useful in striking Guam while evading the US missile defense system,” he added.

North Korea’s last missile test was of a Hwasong-18 solid-fuel interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) on December 18.

KCNA released a single photograph of the missile launch with its Monday report, which did not mention Kim being present to oversee the test.

US-based analyst Ankit Panda told specialist site NK News that the image suggested the missile featured a so-called “maneuverab­le reentry vehicle (MaRV)”.

Pyongyang is trying to develop weapons with enhanced precision and ability to “better penetrate missile defenses,” he said. Relations between the two Koreas are at one of their lowest points in decades, after Kim enshrined last year the country’s permanent status as a nuclear power into the constituti­on and test-fired several advanced ICBMs.

Traditiona­l allies Russia and North Korea have meanwhile boosted ties recently, with Kim making a rare overseas trip to see President Vladimir Putin in Russia’s far east in September.

Top Russian officials, including Moscow’s defence and foreign ministers, also visited North Korea last year, with the flurry of trips both ways fanning concern among Kyiv’s allies over the possibilit­y of a potential arms deal. On Sunday, a North Korean government delegation headed by Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui left for an official visit to Russia, KCNA reported.

Last year, Pyongyang successful­ly put a reconnaiss­ance satellite into orbit, after receiving what South Korea claimed was Russian assistance, in exchange for arms shipments for Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

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