North Korea on Sunday tested its most
powerful missile since 2017, ramping up the firepower for its record-breaking
seventh launch this month as Seoul warned nuclear and long-range tests could
be next.
Pyongyang has never test-fired this many missiles in a calendar month
before and last week threatened to abandon a nearly five-year-long self-
imposed moratorium on testing long-range and nuclear weapons.
With peace talks with the US stalled, North Korea has doubled-down on
leader Kim Jong Un's vow to modernise the regime's armed forces, flexing
Pyongyang's military muscles despite biting international sanctions.
South Korea said Sunday that North Korea appeared to be following a
"similar pattern" to 2017 -- when tensions were last at breaking-point on the
peninsula -- warning Pyongyang could soon restart nuclear and
intercontinental missile tests.
North Korea "has come close to destroying the moratorium declaration",
South Korea's President Moon Jae-in said in a statement following an
emergency meeting of Seoul's National Security Council.
South Korea's military said Sunday North Korea test-fires most powerful missile since 2017
North Korea on Sunday tested its most
powerful missile since 2017, ramping up the firepower for its record-breaking
seventh launch this month as Seoul warned nuclear and long-range tests could
be next.
Pyongyang has never test-fired this many missiles in a calendar month
before and last week threatened to abandon a nearly five-year-long self-
imposed moratorium on testing long-range and nuclear weapons.
With peace talks with the US stalled, North Korea has doubled-down on
leader Kim Jong Un's vow to modernise the regime's armed forces, flexing
Pyongyang's military muscles despite biting international sanctions.
South Korea said Sunday that North Korea appeared to be following a
"similar pattern" to 2017 -- when tensions were last at breaking-point on the
peninsula -- warning Pyongyang could soon restart nuclear and
intercontinental missile tests.
North Korea "has come close to destroying the moratorium declaration",
South Korea's President Moon Jae-in said in a statement following an
emergency meeting of Seoul's National Security Council.
South Korea's military said Sunday it had "detected an intermediate-range
ballistic missile fired at a lofted angle eastward towards the East Sea."
A lofted trajectory involves missiles being fired at a high angle instead
of out to their full range.
Sunday's ballistic missile was estimated to have hit a maximum altitude of
2,000 kilometers and flown around 800 kilometers for half an hour, Seoul's
Joint Chiefs of Staff said.
That indicated that Pyongyang may have tested its "first Intermediate-Range
Ballistic Missile (IRBM) since 2017", Joseph Dempsey, an analyst with the
International Institute for Strategic Studies, wrote on Twitter.
The last time Pyongyang tested a similar missile was in 2017, when the
Hwasong-12 flew 787 kilometers at an apogee of just over 2,111 kilometers.
Analysts said at the time that the trajectory indicated that the missile
could have flown around 4,500 km if fired on a range-maximizing ballistic
trajectory -- putting the US territory of Guam in range.
Japan's top government spokesman Hirokazu Matsuno said Sunday that the
ballistic missile "was one with intermediate-range or longer range."
it had "detected an intermediate-range
ballistic missile fired at a lofted angle eastward towards the East Sea."
A lofted trajectory involves missiles being fired at a high angle instead
of out to their full range.
Sunday's ballistic missile was estimated to have hit a maximum altitude of
2,000 kilometers and flown around 800 kilometers for half an hour, Seoul's
Joint Chiefs of Staff said.
That indicated that Pyongyang may have tested its "first Intermediate-Range
Ballistic Missile (IRBM) since 2017", Joseph Dempsey, an analyst with the
International Institute for Strategic Studies, wrote on Twitter.
The last time Pyongyang tested a similar missile was in 2017, when the
Hwasong-12 flew 787 kilometers at an apogee of just over 2,111 kilometers.
Analysts said at the time that the trajectory indicated that the missile
could have flown around 4,500 km if fired on a range-maximizing ballistic
trajectory -- putting the US territory of Guam in range.
Japan's top government spokesman Hirokazu Matsuno said Sunday that the
ballistic missile "was one with intermediate-range or longer range."