The Columbus Dispatch

Nkorea launches ballistic missile into eastern waters

Animositie­s rise after Kim’s nuclear comment

- Hyung-jin Kim, Kim Tong-hyung and Mari Yamaguchi

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea launched a ballistic missile toward its eastern waters on Wednesday, South Korean and Japanese officials said, days after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to speed up the developmen­t of his nuclear weapons “at the fastest possible pace” and threatened to use them against rivals.

The launch, the North’s 14th round of weapons firing this year, also came six days before a new conservati­ve South Korean president takes office for a single five-year term.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that the missile was fired from the North’s capital region and flew to the waters off its eastern coast. It called North Korea’s repeated ballistic missile launches “a grave threat” that would undermine internatio­nal peace and security and a violation of U.N. Security Council resolution­s banning any ballistic launch by the North.

The statement said that Won Inchoul, the South Korean JCS chief, held a videoconfe­rence about the launch with Gen. Paul Lacamera, an American general who heads the South Korea-u.s. combined forces command in Seoul, and they agreed to maintain a solid joint defense posture.

Japan also detected the North Korean launch and quickly condemned it.

“North Korea’s series of actions that threatens the peace, safety and stability of the internatio­nal community are

impermissi­ble,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters during his visit to Rome.

Japanese Vice Defense Minister Makoto Oniki said that the missile was believed to have landed in waters outside of the Japanese Exclusive Economic Zone. There has been no report of damage or injury reported from vessels and aircraft in the area.

Observers say North Korea’s unusually fast pace in weapons testing this year underscore­s its dual goal of advancing its missile programs and applying pressure on Washington over a deepening freeze in nuclear negotiatio­ns. They say Kim aims to use his expanded arsenal to win an internatio­nal recognitio­n of North Korea as a nuclear state that he believes would help force

the United States to relax internatio­nal economic sanctions on the North.

One of the North Korean missiles tested recently was an interconti­nental ballistic missile potentiall­y capable of reaching the entirety of the American homeland. That missile’s launch broke Kim’s self-imposed 2018 moratorium on big weapons tests.

There are signs that the North is also preparing for a nuclear test at its remote northeaste­rn testing facility. If made, the nuclear bomb test explosion by North Korea would be the seventh of its kind and the first since 2017.

Last week, Kim Jong Un showcased his most powerful nuclear-capable missiles targeting both the United States and its allies during a military parade in capital, Pyongyang.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN/AP ?? North Korea has launched a ballistic missile days after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to bolster his nuclear arsenal “at the fastest possible pace” and threatened to use the weapons against rivals.
LEE JIN-MAN/AP North Korea has launched a ballistic missile days after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to bolster his nuclear arsenal “at the fastest possible pace” and threatened to use the weapons against rivals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States