North Korea claims successful test to develop multiple warhead missile
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North Korean state media KCNA said the missile succeeded in separating warheads, which were accurately guided to three preset targets.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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SEOUL – North Korea has successfully conducted an important test aimed at developing missiles carrying multiple warheads, state media KCNA said on June 27, a claim rejected by South Korea as “deception” to mask a failed launch.
North Korea said the test was carried out on June 26 using the first-stage, solid-fuel engine of an intermediate-range ballistic missile.
The dispatch came a day after South Korea’s military said North Korea had launched what appeared to be a hypersonic missile off its east coast that exploded in mid-air.
KCNA said the missile succeeded in separating warheads, which were accurately guided to three preset targets, in a test that was aimed at developing multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicle technology.
“The purpose was to secure the capability to destroy individual targets using multiple warheads,” it said.
South Korea’s military said a joint analysis by the South and the US military pointed to the missile blowing up in its initial stage of flight.
“Today, North Korea disclosed something, but we believe it’s simply a means of deception and exaggeration,” Colonel Lee Sung-joon, the spokesman for South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a briefing.
The photos released by the North purporting to be of June 26’s test were also most likely fabricated or recycled pictures from a previous launch, he said.
South Korea, the United States and Japan condemned the launch as a violation of UN Security Council resolutions and a serious threat, and warned against additional provocations in the wake of last week’s summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Pyongyang.
On June 27, the three countries began large-scale joint military drills involving navy destroyers, fighter jets and the nuclear-powered US aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt, aimed at boosting defence against missiles, submarines and air attacks.
The exercise, called Freedom Edge, was devised at a three-way summit at Camp David in 2023 to strengthen military cooperation amid tensions on the Korean peninsula stemming from North Korea’s weapons testing.
North Korea has denounced the arrival of the carrier as a “very dangerous” show of force.
During Mr Putin’s visit to North Korea, his first in 24 years, the two leaders signed a mutual defence pact, which Mr Kim lauded as an alliance but South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol called “anachronistic”.
On June 27, South Korea announced sanctions on four entities, two Russian shipping companies among them, as well as four Russian vessels, for involvement in illegal shipments of weapons and petroleum products.
South Korea and the United States have accused the North of supplying weapons to Russia that are being used in the Ukraine war. Both Russia and North Korea deny any such transactions.
South Korea separately sanctioned a North Korean entity and eight individuals for missile development projects.
In a separate KCNA report, North Korean Defence Minister Kang Sun Nam condemned Ukraine’s attack on Crimea with US-supplied ATACMS long-range missiles, which killed at least four people and injured 151, as an “inexcusable, heinous act against humanity”.
The attack highlighted how Washington has served as a “top-class state sponsor of terrorism”, he said.
The US State Department said on June 24 that Washington provided weapons to Ukraine so it could defend its sovereign territory, including Crimea. REUTERS

