Bangkok Post

Pyongyang fires new missile into sea

Launch came ahead of today’s US-China talks

-

SEOUL: Nuclear-armed North Korea fired a ballistic missile into the Sea of Japan yesterday, in what analysts said was a warning ahead of a China-US summit at which Pyongyang’s accelerati­ng atomic weapons programme is set to top the agenda.

South Korea’s defence ministry said the missile — launched days after Pyongyang warned of retaliatio­n if the global community ramps up sanctions — had flown 60km.

The incident represente­d a “threat to the peace and stability of the whole world”, Seoul said, while Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe labelled it a “grave provocatio­n”.

In a terse statement, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said: “The United States has spoken enough about North Korea. We have no further comment.”

Speaking at a regular news briefing yesterday, China’s foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said all parties should practise “restraint and avoid doing anything that would escalate” the situation.

She also dismissed any possible direct impact of the missile launch on the twoday meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump starting today in the United States.

The launch — a KN-15 medium-range ballistic missile — will fuel internatio­nal concerns about the hermit state’s weapons programme.

Pyongyang is on a quest to develop a long-range missile capable of hitting the US mainland with a nuclear warhead and has so far staged five nuclear tests, two of them last year.

The latest launch came after Mr Trump threatened the US was prepared to go it alone in bringing the North to heel. His comments, in an interview with the Financial Times, were interprete­d as an effort to up the pressure on Beijing ahead of a summit today and tomorrow.

Mr Trump will host Mr Xi at his Mar-aLago resort in Florida for their first face-toface meeting, where the growing tensions on the Korean peninsula are expected to be high on the agenda.

The Trump administra­tion has repeatedly insisted Beijing holds the key to stopping its errant neighbour and is not doing enough to control it.

China is North Korea’s sole major diplomatic friend and a key trading partner that supplies the isolated state with much of its hard currency in the face of stringent global sanctions.

But Beijing is wary of putting too much pressure on North Korea for fear of the unpredicta­ble consequenc­es if the regime collapses.

Chang Yong-seok, a researcher at the Seoul National University’s Institute for Peace and Unificatio­n Studies, said the missile test was Pyongyang’s way of warning China and the US.

It was “a show of force to demonstrat­e its might against potential extra deployment of US troops and weapons near the peninsula”.

“There is a possibilit­y that the North may take it up a notch and stage another nuclear test ... depending on the outcome of the summit.”

North Korea’s foreign ministry on Monday assailed Washington for its tough talk and for an ongoing joint military exercise with South Korea and Japan, which Pyongyang sees as a dress rehearsal for invasion. The “reckless actions” are driving the tense situation on the Korean peninsula “to the brink of a war”, a ministry spokesman was quoted as saying by the official KCNA news agency.

The idea that the US could deprive Pyongyang of its “nuclear deterrent” through sanctions is “the wildest dream”, it said.

The hardened US stance followed recent North Korean missile launches that Pyongyang described as practise for an attack on US bases in Japan. Analysts say that while Pyongyang has made faster progress in its SLBM system than originally expected, it is still years away from deployment. Pyongyang is barred under UN resolution­s from carrying out ballistic missile launches or nuclear tests.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman at a railway station in Seoul yesterday walks past a television screen showing file footage of a North Korean missile launch.
AFP A woman at a railway station in Seoul yesterday walks past a television screen showing file footage of a North Korean missile launch.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand