Cape Argus

N Korea fires largest ballistic missile since 2017

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NORTH Korea fired a new interconti­nental ballistic missile yesterday, Tokyo and Seoul said, as they voiced outrage at Pyongyang’s most powerful launch since 2017.

South Korea’s military said it had fired missiles from ground, sea and air in response. Pyongyang has launched nearly a dozen weapons tests this year in an unpreceden­ted spree in defiance of UN sanctions.

But long-range and nuclear tests such as the one conducted yesterday have been paused since leader Kim Jong-un met then-US president Donald Trump for a bout of doomed diplomacy, which collapsed in 2019.

Yesterday’s launch was a “breach of the suspension of interconti­nental ballistic missile launches promised by Chairman Kim Jong-un to the internatio­nal community”, South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in said.

“It poses a serious threat to the Korean peninsula, the region and the internatio­nal community,” Moon said, adding that it was a “clear violation” of UN Security Council resolution­s.

The missile was fired from Sunan – likely the same site as a failed test last week – and had a range of 6 200km, Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

The missile flew for 71 minutes and landed in Japan’s territoria­l waters, according to the Japanese government.

“This is such an outrageous, unforgivab­le act,” Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said in Brussels, where he was due to meet with members of the Group of Seven.

North Korea was threatenin­g “the peace and safety of Japan, the region and the internatio­nal community”, he added. “This cannot be accepted.”

Nuclear-armed North Korea has long coveted an ICBM that can carry multiple warheads and, the US and South Korea say, has been testing the Hwasong-17, a giant ICBM first unveiled in October 2020.

Despite biting internatio­nal sanctions over its weapons programmes, Pyongyang has doubled-down on Kim’s drive to modernise the military, and last week test-fired what analysts said was likely the Hwasong-17. That launch ended in failure, exploding mid-air in the skies above the capital.

“Pyongyang attempted to fire an ICBM at the Sunan airport last week but failed,” said Go Myong-hyun, senior researcher at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies. “So it carried out today’s launch to make up for that failure and because it has to complete the ICBM technology right away,” he said.

The moratorium was “virtually scrapped” anyway, Go said, when North Korea conducted two tests for what it called a “reconnaiss­ance satellite. What is also key is whether Pyongyang will make today’s launch official.” Analysts say that North Korea uses ostensibly peaceful satellite developmen­t as a fig leaf for full-range ICBM developmen­t as there is significan­t overlap in technology.

The US and South Korea had this month warned that Pyongyang was preparing to test-fire an ICBM at full range, after what they called a spate of tests disguised as space launches.

Seoul and Washington said these were likely tests of components of the Hwasong-17. North Korea will mark the 110th anniversar­y of the birth of founder Kim Il Sung on April 15, and analysts predict Pyongyang will conduct an ICBM or satellite launch as part of the celebratio­ns.

“Kim Jong-un feels it’s very important to prove his leadership’s competency before the 110th birthday anniversar­y of Kim Il Sung, especially to his own people in North Korea,” said Cheong Seong-chang of the Center for North Korea Studies at the Sejong Institute.

The North has carried out three ICBM tests, the last in November 2017, of a Hwasong-15 – deemed powerful enough to reach the continenta­l US.

“Kim Jong-un wants to ultimately establish himself as a leader who has successful­ly developed both nuclear weapons and ICBMs,” said Ahn Chan-il, a North Korean studies scholar.

North Korea is also taking advantage of Washington’s deteriorat­ing relationsh­ips with China and Russia, following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, he said.

South Korea is also going through a presidenti­al transition, with Moon set to hand power to successor Yoon Suk-yeol in May, which creates foreign policy confusion, said Hong Min, a researcher at the Korea Institute for National Unificatio­n.

 ?? | AFP ?? A HYUNMOO-2 ground-to-ground missile being launched from an undisclose­d location around the Sea of Japan, during a live-fire exercise after North Korea fired an interconti­nental ballistic missile.
| AFP A HYUNMOO-2 ground-to-ground missile being launched from an undisclose­d location around the Sea of Japan, during a live-fire exercise after North Korea fired an interconti­nental ballistic missile.

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