North Korea caps month of tests with longest-range missile since 2017

United States condemns test and calls for Pyongyang to engage in diplomacy

People watch a television screen showing a news broadcast with file footage of a North Korean missile test, at a railway station in Seoul on January 30th, 2022. Photograph: Jung Yeon-je / AFP via Getty Images
People watch a television screen showing a news broadcast with file footage of a North Korean missile test, at a railway station in Seoul on January 30th, 2022. Photograph: Jung Yeon-je / AFP via Getty Images

North Korea conducted its largest missile test since 2017 on Sunday, sending a suspected intermediate-range ballistic missile soaring into space, in a development seen as taking the nuclear-armed country a step closer to resuming long-range testing.

South Korea’s joint chiefs of staff reported that a projectile believed to be a single ballistic missile was launched about 7.52am (10.52pm on Saturday Irish tim) from North Korea’s Jagang Province toward the ocean off its east coast.

South Korea's National Security Counci, which convened a rare emergency meeting presided over by President Moon Jae-in, said the test appeared to involve an intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM), which North Korea has not tested since 2017.

The launch takes North Korea a step closer to fully scrapping a self-imposed moratorium on testing its longest-range intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), Mr Moon said.

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He noted that this month's flurry of missile tests was reminiscent of the heightened tensions in 2017, when North Korea conducted multiple nuclear tests and launched its largest missiles, including some that flew over Japan.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has said he is no longer bound by that moratorium, which included a stop to nuclear weapons tests and was announced in 2018 amid a flurry of diplomacy and summits with then-US president Donald Trump.

North Korea's rulers suggested this month they could restart those testing activities because the United States and its allies had shown no sign of dropping their "hostile policies"."The United States condemns these actions and calls on [North Korea] to refrain from further destabilising acts," the US military's Indo-Pacific Command said in a statement after Sunday's launch.

Missiles

A US state department spokesperson said the launch demonstrated the threat posed by North Korea’s unlawful weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programmes, and called for it to engage in diplomacy.

"It is provocative," US ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said in an interview with ABC. Washington has repeatedly offered to hold discussions with North Korea without preconditions, she said.

It is unclear if IRBMs were included in Mr Kim's moratorium, but those, too, have not been tested since 2017. South Korea's joint chiefs of staff and Japanese chief cabinet secretary Hirokazu Matsuno separately said the missile was estimated to have reached an altitude of 2,000km and flown for 30 minutes to a distance of 800km. IRBMs typically have ranges of 3,000 to 5,500km, while ICBMs have ranges exceeding 5,500km.

Missile experts said the data could indicate a test of an IRBM such as the Hwasong-12, which was last tested in 2017, or a new type.

"Regardless of whether it's a IRBM or ICBM, this is a strategic missile of some sort and clearly not the same as the prior tests in the January 2022 test series to date," George William Herbert, an adjunct professor at the Center for Nonproliferation Studies and a missile consultant, said on Twitter.

The launch could make January the busiest ever for North Korea's missile programme, which analysts say is expanding and developing new capabilities despite strict sanctions and United Nations Security Council resolutions that ban the country's ballistic missile tests.

Its latest launches included a test of two short-range ballistic missiles and their warheads on Thursday, and an updated long-range cruise missile system tested on Tuesday.

Dialogue

Noh Kyu-duk, Seoul's special representative for Korean peninsula peace and security affairs, held a phone call with his US counterpart Sung Kim. They both condemned the latest missile launch.

Mr Noh also held a call with his Japanese counterpart and agreed to continue working toward resuming dialogue with North Korea, according to the South Korean government.

The test comes less than a week before the opening of the Winter Olympics in Beijing, which is North Korea's main political and economic partner. Pyongyang has said it would be skipping the Games because of the Covid-19 pandemic and "hostile forces."

In an address ahead of the New Year, Kim Jong-un called for bolstering the military with cutting-edge technology at a time when talks with South Korea and the United States have stalled.

Since then, North Korea has tested a dizzying array of weapon types, launch locations, and increasing sophistication as denuclearisation talks remain stalled.

Jagang Province was the site of two launches this month of what North Korea said was a “hypersonic missile,” which could reach high speeds while flying and maneuvering at relatively low altitudes, but the ranges reported on Sunday were higher and farther than those earlier tests. – Reuters