The Herald

North Korea claims it has fired new hypersonic missile

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NORTH Korea said yesterday it had tested a new hypersonic intermedia­te-range missile powered with solid propellant­s, extending a run of weapons tests that is deepening a nuclear stand-off with neighbours and the United States.

With the supposed success of the demonstrat­ion, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un declared his country had acquired the ability to build solid-fuel, nuclear-capable missiles of all ranges, as he pursues an arsenal that can credibly threaten rivals in Asia and the United States.

But the South Korean military said the North is exaggerati­ng the success of the test and its overall missile prowess.

The report by North Korean state media came a day after the South Korean and Japanese militaries detected a missile launched from near the North’s capital towards its eastern sea.

State media said the test was supervised by Kim, who described the Hwasong-16b missile as a key piece of his nuclear deterrent he vowed to further build up to counter his “enemies”, a reference to the United States, South Korea and Japan.

In recent years, North Korea has been developing more missiles with built-in solid propellant­s. Such weapons are easier to move and hide, and can be launched quicker than liquid-propellant missiles, which need to be fuelled before launch and cannot stay fuelled for long periods of time.

North Korea tested a solid-fuel interconti­nental ballistic missile for the first time last year, adding to its arsenal of long-range weapons targeting the US mainland.

The country also has an extensive line-up of short-range and mid-range solid-fuel missiles that can be fired from land vehicles, ships and submarines, and are potentiall­y capable of hitting targets throughout South Korea and Japan.

In recent months, the North demonstrat­ed some of these missiles in drills it described as simulated nuclear strikes.

Since 2021, it has also been testing hypersonic weapons designed to fly at more than five times the speed of sound.

If perfected, such systems could potentiall­y pose a challenge to regional missile defence systems. However, it is unclear whether these missiles are consistent­ly flying at the speeds the North claims.

North Korean official media KCNA claimed that during the Tuesday test, the missile’s hypersonic glide warhead reached a peak altitude of 62 miles and flew about 621 miles after separating from the launch rocket, and performed various manoeuvres before landing in waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff maintained its assessment that the missile flew about 372 miles and accused North Korea of exaggerati­ng the missile’s flight performanc­e, although acknowledg­ing that the North’s technologi­es were improving.

The previous day, Japan reported a similar flight distance, although its Defence Ministry reported a maximum height close to that claimed by the North.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff said it remains unclear whether the North has perfected the technologi­es to ensure that the warheads of its hypersonic solid-fuel missiles and interconti­nental ballistic missiles survive the harsh conditions of atmospheri­c re-entry.

“Hypersonic missiles are weapons systems that are still being developed by advanced nations (the United States, China and Russia etc) and they require highly difficult technologi­es,” the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a text message to reporters. “It’s difficult to predict when they will be deployed operationa­lly, but it’s expected to take a considerab­le amount of time.”

The North also tested a purported hypersonic intermedia­te-range ballistic missile in January, years after it flight-tested liquid-fuel IRBMS. Experts say such weapons, if perfected, are potentiall­y capable of reaching remote US targets in the Pacific.

The United States and South Korea have responded by expanding their combined training and trilateral drills involving Japan.

 ?? ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, left, supervises artillery firing drills
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, left, supervises artillery firing drills

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