North Korea fires two missiles as US condemns flurry of tests
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A TV screen showing a news broadcast about a North Korean missile test, in a railway station in Seoul on Jan 27, 2022.
PHOTO: AFP
SEOUL (REUTERS) - Nuclear-armed North Korea fired what appeared to be two ballistic missiles on Thursday (Jan 27), drawing condemnation from the United States for what would be the sixth round of missile tests this month.
The series of tests is among the most missiles ever launched by North Korea in a month, analysts said, as it begins 2022 by displaying a dizzying display of new and operational weapons.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said it had detected the launch of what it presumed were two ballistic missiles at around 8am local time from around Hamhung, on the east coast of North Korea.
They travelled for about 190km to an altitude of 20km, JCS added.
North Korea said this month it will bolster its defences against the United States and consider resuming "all temporally-suspended activities", an apparent reference to a self-imposed moratorium on tests of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles.
The launch came after North Korea had fired two cruise missiles into the sea off its east coast on Tuesday, adding to the tension over its tests.
Earlier in the month, the North tested tactical guided missiles, two hypersonic missiles capable of high speed and manoeuvring after lift-off, and a railway-borne missile system.
"The (Kim Jong Un) regime is developing an impressive diversity of offensive weapons despite limited resources and serious economic challenges," said Dr Leif-Eric Easley, an international affairs professor at Ewha University in Seoul.
Certain tests aim to develop new capabilities, especially for evading missile defenses, while other launches are intended to demonstrate the readiness and versatility of missile forces that North Korea has already deployed, he added.
"Some observers have suggested that the Kim regime’s frequent launches are a cry for attention, but Pyongyang is running hard in what it perceives as an arms race with Seoul," Dr Easley said.
In a speech to the UN-sponsored Conference on Disarmament on Tuesday, North Korea’s Ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Mr Han Tae Song, accused the United States of staging hundreds of "joint war drills" while shipping high-tech offensive military equipment into South Korea and nuclear strategic weapons into the region.
"(This) is seriously threatening the security of our state," Mr Han said.
A US State Department spokesperson condemned the launches as a violation of multiple UN Security Council resolutions and a threat to North Korea’s neighbours and the international community.
The United States remains committed to a diplomatic approach and calls on North Korea to engage in dialogue, the spokesperson said.
As with other recent tests, the US military’s Indo-Pacific Command said that the launch was destabilising but did not pose an immediate threat to US territory or personnel, or to its allies.
North Korea’s recent "remarkable development" in nuclear and missile technology could not be overlooked, Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told a briefing.

South Korea’s National Security Council convened an emergency meeting, at which it said the launches were "very regrettable" and went against calls for peace and stability in the region, the presidential Blue House said in a statement.
US President Joe Biden’s administration sanctioned several North Korean and Russian individuals and entities this month on accusations they were helping North Korea’s weapons programmes, but China and Russia delayed a US bid to impose UN sanctions on five North Koreans.
On Wednesday, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Japan and Korea Mark Lambert said that Washington has "no reservations" about talking with North Korea and is willing to meet anywhere and talk about anything.
"We have to have a serious discussion about the denuclearisation of North Korea, and if North Korea is willing to do that, all sorts of promising things can happen," he said during a webinar hosted by the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
North Korea has defended its missile tests as its sovereign right for self defence, and said the US sanctions proved that even as Washington proposes talks, it maintains a "hostile" policy toward Pyongyang.
"The recent test-firing of new types of weapons was part of activities for carrying out a medium- and long-term plan for development of national science," Mr Han said in his speech on Tuesday. "And it does not pose any threat or damage to the security of neighbouring countries and the region."
North Korea has not launched long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) or tested nuclear weapons since 2017, but began testing a slew of shorter-range missiles after denuclearisation talks stalled following a failed summit with the United States in 2019.


