BusinessMirror

North Korea tests new cruise missiles that can hit Japan

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North Korea said it successful­ly test-fired a new model of long-range cruise missile this weekend, in the latest sign that the regime is trying to bolster its capability for nuclear strikes against Japan and South Korea.

The missiles flew in “pattern-8 flight orbits” for more than two hours on Saturday and Sunday, covering some 1,500 kilometers (930 miles) over land and waters off North Korea before hitting targets, the official Korea Central News Agency said Monday. That range would be sufficient to strike most of Japan, and the KCNA report called the new missile a “strategic weapon of great significan­ce.”

The tests, if confirmed, would be North Korea’s first known missile launches since firing off two short-range ballistic missiles in March. They were announced as US President Joe Biden’s nuclear envoy, Sung Kim, heads to Asia for talks with counterpar­ts from Japan and South Korea aimed at bringing Pyongyang back to stalled disarmamen­t talks.

The United Nations nuclear watchdog said last month that the regime had from around July resumed plutonium-producing operations at its Yongbyon nuclear facility. North Korea also staged its first military parade since Biden became president last week, with Kim presiding over an event with scaled down displays of weaponry and no missiles.

Jeffrey lewis, the director of the east Asia nonprolife­ration program at the Middlebury institute of internatio­nal Studies at Monterey, said cruise missiles’ ability to fly below the radar and evade defense systems fits with Kim’s goal of deterring a Us-led attack.

“North Korea’s war plan is to preemptive­ly strike US forces in South Korea and Japan if an invasion appears imminent,” lewis said. “Cruise missiles offer significan­t advantages in terms of surprise, penetratio­n of defenses and accuracy.”

There has been no confirmati­on of the details offered by North Korea. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said it was analyzing the reports in cooperatio­n with US intelligen­ce.

The US indo-pacific Command said: “we are aware of reports of DPRK cruise missile launches. we will continue to monitor the situation and are consulting closely with our allies and partners,” referring to North Korea by its formal name.

Pyongyang has touted efforts to build up its tactical strike capability, with leader Kim Jong Un telling a top ruling party meeting before Biden came to office in January that he was putting North Korea on a path to develop more advanced nuclear technologi­es and missiles. The plan included making smaller and lighter nuclear weapons and suggested a sweeping modernizat­ion of the country’s nuclear and convention­al forces.

North Korea’s descriptio­n of the cruise missile as a “strategic weapon” implies nuclear capability, said daniel Pinkston, an internatio­nal relations lecturer at Troy University in Seoul and a former Korean linguist with the US Air Force. “with a range of 1,500 km, it can strike all of Japan including the US military bases on okinawa, which certainly enhances Pyongyang’s ability to deter outside interventi­on for certain contingenc­ies on the Korean Peninsula,” Pinkston said.

while the US and its allies have systems to shoot down missiles, the new weapon could erode their ability to respond fast enough.

Under Biden, Kim has refrained from engaging in the types of provocatio­ns like the nuclear tests and long-range-missile launches when Barack obama and donald Trump began their presidenti­al terms. North Korea is barred from launching ballistic missiles under United Nations resolution­s, but doesn’t have the same restrictio­ns on its cruise-missile program.

“The purpose of this system may be to further stress South Korean and Japanese missiledef­ense capabiliti­es,” said Ankit Panda, the Stanton senior fellow in the nuclear policy program at the Carnegie endowment for internatio­nal Peace. he noted how cruise missiles present a different set of detection and intercepti­on challenges from their ballistic counterpar­ts.

North Korea showed off the new missiles in october 2020 during a military parade, Panda said, adding: “This missile is new, but its testing is unsurprisi­ng.”

Kim is struggling with an economy that has only gotten smaller since he took power about a decade ago in large part from sanctions to punish him for tests of nuclear weapons and missiles to deliver warheads. The North Korean leader has so far shown no interest in sitting down with the Biden administra­tion, which has said it’s open for discussion­s and indicated it could offer economic incentives in exchange for disarmamen­t steps.

“it’s North Korea’s way of yet again reminding us that pandemic and all notwithsta­nding, the regime will continue to hold on to its weapons capabiliti­es for provocatio­n and coercive purposes,” said Soo Kim, a Rand Corp. policy analyst who previously worked at the Central intelligen­ce Agency.

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