New York Daily News

N. Korea fires off 4 rockets

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un’s missile launches riled Japan.

SEOUL — North Korea fired four banned ballistic missiles Monday that flew about 620 miles — with three of them landing in Japanese waters, South Korean and Japanese officials said.

It was not immediatel­y clear the exact type of missile fired, but the tests will be viewed as a provocatio­n by the Trump administra­tion in Washington, which is working on its policy for North Korea.

The New York Times reported over the weekend that, despite efforts to perfect cyber and electronic strikes against North Korea’s missile program, the United States still can’t effectivel­y counter Pyongyang’s actions.

Pyongyang has staged a series of missile test launches of various ranges in recent months, including a new intermedia­te-range missile last month. It also conducted two nuclear tests last year. The ramped-up tests come as leader Kim Jong Un pushes for a nuclear and missile program that can deter what he calls U.S. and South Korean hostility toward the North.

There have been widespread worries that the North will conduct an ICBM test that, when perfected, could in theory reach the U.S. mainland. Washington would consider such a capability a major threat.

U.S. national security adviser H.R. McMaster and senior South Korean presidenti­al official Kim Kwan-jin held a phone conversati­on after the missile firings. The two condemned the launches and agreed to boost cooperatio­n to get the North to face more effective sanctions and pressure, according to South Korea’s presidenti­al office.

Japanese officials said three of the four missiles landed in the 200-nautical-mile offshore area where Tokyo has sovereign rights for exploring and exploiting resources.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that Monday’s launches were made from the Tongchang-ri area in North Pyongan province. The area is the home of the North’s Sohae rocket launch site, where it has conducted prohibited long-range rocket launches in recent years.

Seoul and Washington call their military drills on the Korean Peninsula, which remains in a technical state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice and not a peace treaty, defensive and routine.

The North hates the military drills, which run until late April and which analysts say force its impoverish­ed military to respond with expensive deployment­s and drills of their own.

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