North Korea fires ballistic missile ahead of nuclear talks

Rocket believed to be submarine-launched and an attempt to gain leverage in negotiations

People in Seoul watching file footage yesterday of a North Korean missile launch, the same day the North fired what appeared to be a submarine-launched ballistic missile. Under United Nations Security Council regulations, North Korea is banned from b
People in Seoul watching file footage yesterday of a North Korean missile launch, the same day the North fired what appeared to be a submarine-launched ballistic missile. Under United Nations Security Council regulations, North Korea is banned from ballistic missile launches. PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

SEOUL • North Korea fired what appeared to be a "submarine-launched ballistic missile", Seoul said yesterday, a day after Washington and Pyongyang announced they would resume stalled nuclear talks.

Pyongyang frequently couples diplomatic overtures with military moves as a way of maintaining pressure on negotiating partners, analysts say, and may believe this weapons system gives it added leverage.

A proven submarine-based missile capability would take the North's arsenal to a new level, allowing deployment far beyond the Korean peninsula and a "second-strike" capability in the event of an attack on its military bases.

The South's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said it detected a ballistic missile early yesterday, fired around 450km in an easterly direction at a maximum altitude of 910km.

The missile was "believed to be one of the Pukkuksong models", the JCS said in a statement, referring to a line of submarine-launched ballistic missiles under development by the North.

"Such actions by North Korea to raise tensions are not helpful to efforts to ease tensions on the Korean peninsula and we urge it again to stop immediately," it added.

One of the projectiles fell into waters within Japan's exclusive economic zone, a 200km band around Japanese territory, Tokyo said.

"The launching of ballistic missiles violates UN Security Council resolutions and we strongly protest and strongly condemn it," Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters.

The North is banned from ballistic missile launches under United Nations Security Council resolutions.

The launch came a day after the North's Vice-Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui said Pyongyang had agreed to hold working-level talks with Washington later this week.

The two sides will have "preliminary contact" tomorrow and hold negotiations the following day, Ms Choe said in a statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency.

US State Department spokesman Morgan Ortagus later confirmed the talks, which she said would happen "within the next week".

Mr Harry Kazianis of the Centre for the National Interest in Washington said after yesterday's launch: "It seems North Korea wants to make its negotiating position quite clear before talks even begin.

"Pyongyang seems set to push Washington to back off from past demands of full denuclearisation for what are only promises of sanctions relief."

It is not the first time the North has followed up an offer of talks with a weapons test.

Pyongyang tested what it called a "super-large" rocket launcher last month just hours after Ms Choe released a statement saying that the North was willing to resume working-level talks with Washington.

Negotiations between the two have been deadlocked since a second summit between the North's leader Kim Jong Un and United States President Donald Trump in February ended without a deal.

The two agreed to restart dialogue during an impromptu meeting at the Demilitarised Zone dividing the two Koreas in June, but the North's anger at a US refusal to cancel joint military drills with South Korea put the process on hold.

Pyongyang also carried out several weapons tests since the meeting that have been downplayed by Mr Trump, who dismissed them as "small" and insisted his personal ties with Mr Kim remained good.

Relations thawed last month after Mr Trump fired his hawkish national security adviser John Bolton, whom Pyongyang had repeatedly denounced as a warmonger.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on October 03, 2019, with the headline North Korea fires ballistic missile ahead of nuclear talks. Subscribe