Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

3 short-range ballistic missiles fired toward sea

- By Hyung-Jin Kim, Kim Tong-Hyung and Mari Yamaguchi

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA » North Korea fired three short-range ballistic missiles toward the sea on Thursday, its neighbors said, in the latest of a series of weapons demonstrat­ions this year that came just hours after it confirmed its first case of the coronaviru­s since the pandemic began.

The launches could underscore North Korea’s determinat­ion to press ahead with its efforts to expand its arsenal despite the virus outbreak, to rally support behind the leader, Kim Jong Un, and keep up pressure on its rivals amid longdorman­t nuclear diplomacy.

Thursday’s launches were the North’s first weapons fired since the inaugurati­on of new conservati­ve South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Tuesday.

North Korea has a history of rattling new government­s in Seoul and Washington in an apparent bid to boost its bargaining chips in future negotiatio­ns. The North Korean nuclear threat will likely top the agenda when Yoon meets visiting President Joe Biden in Seoul next week.

South Korea and Japan condemned the launches from the North’s capital region on Thursday afternoon.

The missiles plunged into the waters between North Korea’s eastern coast and outside of Japan’s exclusive economic zone, Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi said. There was no report of damage to aircraft or vessels.

South Korea’s military said it boosted its readiness and surveillan­ce while maintainin­g close coordinati­on with the United States. It called on the North to immediatel­y halt its repeated missile firings.

South Korea and Japan released similar flight details, saying the weapons traveled about 217-224 miles at a maximum altitude of 56-62 miles.

Lockdowns ordered

Earlier Thursday, North Korean state media confirmed the country’s first COVID-19 infections as Kim ordered nationwide lockdowns to slow the spread of the virus. Kim also ordered officials to bolster the country’s defense posture to avoid any security vacuum.

In recent months, North Korea has test-launched a spate of missiles in what experts call an attempt to modernize its weapons and pressure the United States and its allies into accepting it as a nuclear state and relax sanctions on the North. Some observers say that despite the elevated antivirus steps, North Korea would likely continue to build its arsenal with weapons tests to boost public morale and strengthen loyalty for the Kim leadership.

“North Korea’s latest missile firings appear excessive to what would be needed to test and improve military capabiliti­es,” LeifEric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul, said. “These launches look like a show of strength after the Kim regime publicly admitted to a coronaviru­s outbreak.”

A statement issued after a meeting chaired by Yoon’s national security adviser Kim Sung-han said South Korea would seek “practical” and “stern” measures in cooperatio­n with the internatio­nal community to respond to the growing North Korean threat.

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