Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

N. Korea fires missile as U.S., allies prepare for drills

- By Kim Tong-Hyung Associated Press writer Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo contribute­d to the report.

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea on Saturday fired a longrange missile from its capital into the sea off Japan, according to its neighbors, a day after it threatened to take strong measures against South Korea and the U.S. over their joint military exercises.

According to the South Korean and Japanese militaries, the missile was fired on a high angle, apparently to avoid reaching the neighbors’ territorie­s, and traveled about 560 miles at a maximum altitude of 3,500 miles during an hourlong flight.

The details were similar to North Korea’s Hwasong-17 interconti­nental ballistic missile test flight in November, which experts said demonstrat­ed potential to reach the U.S. mainland if fired on a normal trajectory.

Japanese government spokespers­on Hirokazu Matsuno said no damage was reported from the missile, which landed within Japan’s exclusive economic zone, about 125 miles west of Oshima island. Oshima lies off the western coast of the northernmo­st main island of Hokkaido.

North Korea’s Foreign Ministry on Friday threatened with “unpreceden­tly” strong action against its rivals, after South Korea announced a series of military exercises with the United States aimed at sharpening their response to the North’s growing threats.

While the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said the launch did not pose an immediate threat to U.S. personnel, territory, or its allies, the White House National Security Council said it needlessly raises tensions and risks destabiliz­ing the security situation in the region.

“It only demonstrat­es that the

DPRK continues to prioritize its unlawful weapons of mass destructio­n and ballistic missile programs over the well-being of its people,” it said, calling it a “flagrant violation of multiple U.N. Security Council resolution­s.”

The office of South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said his national security director, Kim Sung-han, presided over an emergency security meeting that accused the North of escalating regional tensions. It denounced North Korea for accelerati­ng its nuclear arms developmen­t despite signs of worsening economic problems and food insecurity, saying such actions would bring only tougher internatio­nal sanctions.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Tokyo was closely communicat­ing with Washington and Seoul over the launch, which he called “an act of violence that escalates provocatio­n toward the internatio­nal order.”

The launch was North Korea’s first since Jan. 1, when it test-fired a short-range weapon. It followed a massive military parade in Pyongyang last week, where troops rolled out more than a dozen ICBMs as leader Kim Jong Un watched in delight from a balcony.

North Korea’s missile tests have been punctuated by threats of preemptive nuclear attacks against South Korea or the United States over what it perceives as a broad range of scenarios that put its leadership under threat.

South Korea and the U.S. will hold a one-day tabletop exercise at the Pentagon to sharpen a response to a potential use of nuclear weapons by North Korea.

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