North Korea has fired an “unidentified projectile”, South Korea’s military said early Sunday, what would be Pyongyang’s eighth launch this year after a month of relative calm on the peninsula during the Beijing Olympics.
Pyongyang carried out a record-breaking blitz of weapons tests last month, including of its most powerful missile since 2017, when leader Kim Jong Un baited then-US president Donald Trump with a spate of provocative launches.
Japan also confirmed Sunday’s launch, with a defence ministry spokesman telling AFP that ballistic missile was fired from North Korea, without specifying how many.
High-profile negotiations between Trump and Kim followed, but collapsed in 2019.
Since then, talks with the US have stalled, and the country is reeling economically from international sanctions and a self-imposed coronavirus blockade.
Pyongyang has doubled down on military development, warning last month that it could abandon a self-imposed moratorium on long-range missile and nuclear weapons tests.
“North Korea fired an unidentified projectile eastward,” the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement, without giving further details.
Japan also confirmed Sunday’s launch, with a defence ministry spokesman telling AFP that “potential ballistic missile(s)” were fired from North Korea, without specifying how many.
Japan’s coastguard issued a warning to vessels about a “potentially ballistic missile possibly launched from North Korea”.
North Korea paused its weapons testing during the Winter Olympic Games, likely out of deference to its only major ally China, analysts have said.
But with the international community distracted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, many analysts had expected North Korea to seize the opportunity to restart testing.
Japan’s foreign minister Masayoshi was on live TV speaking about Ukraine when news of North’s launch broke.
“This situation in Ukraine is not something that stays just in Ukraine or in Europe. But it could potentially affect the entire world, or Indo-Pacific region or in East Asia in our view,” he said.
South Korea has said it will join international economic sanctions against Russia and, as a key US security ally, Seoul is closely watching Washington’s response to Moscow’s aggression, according to local reports. AFP