The Manila Times

NKorea: ICBM drill a warning to US, Seoul

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SEOUL: North Korea said Sunday it had test-fired an interconti­nental ballistic missile as a warning to Washington and Seoul, saying the successful “surprise” drill demonstrat­ed Pyongyang’s “capacity of fatal nuclear counteratt­ack.”

Leader Kim Jong Un ordered the “sudden launching drill” at 8 a.m. Saturday (2300 GMT) and a Hwasong-15 missile — a weapon first tested by the North in 2017 — was fired from Pyongyang airport that afternoon, the official KCNA reported.

South Korea’s military said it detected an ICBM launch at 5:22 p.m. (0822 GMT) Saturday, which Japan said flew for 66 minutes before splashing down in its exclusive economic zone, with their analysis indicating it was capable of hitting the mainland United States.

North Korea’s leadership hailed the test — the country’s first in seven weeks — saying it showed “the actual war capacity of the ICBM units which are ready for mobile and mighty counteratt­ack,” KCNA said.

The launch was “actual proof” of the country’s “capacity of fatal nuclear counteratt­ack on the hostile forces,” it added.

The sanctions-busting launch came just days before Seoul and Washington are due to start joint tabletop exercises aimed at improving their response in the event of a North Korean nuclear attack.

Pyongyang had last week warned of an “unpreceden­tedly” strong response to upcoming US-South Korea drills, which it describes as preparatio­ns for war and blames for the deteriorat­ing security situation on the Korean peninsula.

New milestone?

The Saturday test is significan­t, as “the event was ordered the day-of and so this is not so much a traditiona­l “test” but an exercise,” US-based analyst Ankit Panda told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“We should expect to see additional exercises of this sort,” he added.

Yang Moo-jin, professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said the test showed Pyongyang was “equipped with a system capable of launching even a liquid-fuelled ICBM in less than half a day at unannounce­d orders without prior planning.”

He warned that it now looked like the security situation on the peninsula would deteriorat­e further in the next few months “as South Korea and the US are expected to proceed with the joint training schedule and North Korea will ... take a hardline response.”

Relations between the two Koreas are already at one of their lowest point in years, after North Korea declared itself an “irreversib­le” nuclear state and leader Kim called for an “exponentia­l” increase in weapons production, including tactical nukes.

In response, South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol has sought to boost cooperatio­n with key security ally America, pledging to expand joint military exercises and improve Washington’s so-called extended deterrence offering, including with nuclear assets.

On Sunday, North Korea spokesman and Kim’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, claimed it was these moves by Seoul and Washington that “further endangers the situation every moment, destroying the stability of the region,” according to a KCNA report.

“I warn that we will watch every movement of the enemy and take correspond­ing and very powerful and overwhelmi­ng counteract­ion against its every move hostile to us,” she added.

Food shortages?

All of this points to “the start of high-intensity provocatio­ns from North Korea,” Park Won-gon, professor at Ewha University, told AFP.

“What’s different from 2022 is that last year their justificat­ion was that the launches were part of their five-year military plan,” he said.

“Now they are making clear that they will counter the United States and South Korea,” Park said.

He said that the redoubled aggression from Pyongyang could also indicate the domestic situation had worsened. South Korean officials recently warned the country could be facing severe food shortages after years of pandemic-linked isolation.

“North Korea always takes a hardline approach and creates external crisis as part of its ‘seize mentality’ tactic to overcome internal struggles. It is a typical North Korean behavior to unite the people by highlighti­ng the South Korea-US threat.”

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? PERSISTENT PROVOCATIO­N
This picture taken on Saturday, Feb. 18, 2023, and released from North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency on Sunday shows test-firing of the interconti­nental ballistic missile Hwasong-15 at Pyongyang Internatio­nal Airport.
AFP PHOTO PERSISTENT PROVOCATIO­N This picture taken on Saturday, Feb. 18, 2023, and released from North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency on Sunday shows test-firing of the interconti­nental ballistic missile Hwasong-15 at Pyongyang Internatio­nal Airport.

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