Tuesday, November 5, 2024

North, South Korea test missiles hours apart

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North and South Korea have tested ballistic missiles hours apart from each other, highlighting an arms race on the peninsula as nuclear talks with the North remain stalled.

The North fired two ballistic missiles across its east coast, its first test with such missiles in six months and a fresh breach of United Nations (UN) resolutions.

The tests came as South Korea and China discussed the North’s nuclear issue.

Hours later, the South tested its first submarine-launched ballistic missile.

The test of the missile known as SLBM was pre-planned and not in reaction to the North’s latest launches. It makes South Korea the seventh country in the world with such technology.

President Moon Jae-in, who attended the test, said South Korea now had “sufficient deterrence to respond to North Korea’s provocations at any time”, urging the South to continue increasing its weapons programmes to “overwhelm North Korea’s asymmetric power”.

The comments were criticised by Kim Yo Jong, sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, who described them as illogical and regrettable, warning that they could lead to a breakdown in ties, state news agency KCNA reported.

In North Korea’s test, the short-range missiles flew around 800km (500 miles) at a maximum altitude of 60km, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said.

They were launched from central inland areas of the country, and flew east towards the Sea of Japan, also known as the East Sea, the JCS added. South Korea and the US were conducting analysis to determine which type of missile was used.

The Japanese defence minister said later the missiles had landed inside Japan’s exclusive economic zone.

UN resolutions ban North Korea from carrying out tests with ballistic missiles – which can carry either nuclear or conventional warheads – in efforts to curb the country’s nuclear programme.

“It’s extraordinary timing that you have not one but two Koreas testing ballistic missiles on the same day,” Professor John Delury at Yonsei University told AFP news agency. “It does speak to the fact that there’s an arms race in this region.”

The recent launches show North Korea has continued to develop its weapons despite a severe economic crisis.

Experts say Pyongyang carries out such tests to improve its technology while trying to increase its leverage in negotiations with Washington. -AFP

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