North Korea fired two ballistic missiles on Saturday, the South Korean military said, the fourth such launch in a week, after Seoul, Tokyo and Washington held trilateral anti-submarine drills on Friday. .
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The South Korean armed forces said they “detected two short-range missiles between 6:45 a.m. and 7:03 a.m. fired from Sunan area, Pyongyang” towards the Sea of Japan.
The two craft “flew [sur une distance] approximately 350 km, at an altitude of 30 km [et] at the speed of Mach 6″, according to a press release from the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff, calling these shots a “serious provocation”.
Japan also reported the obvious launch of two ballistic missiles, saying they appeared to have ended their course outside Japan’s exclusive economic zones.
According to Japanese Deputy Defense Minister Toshiro Ino, the missiles “appear to have followed irregular trajectories”.
“North Korea has stepped up its missile launches at an unprecedented rate,” he said.
Irregular trajectories indicate the missiles are capable of maneuvering in flight, making them harder to track and intercept, experts say.
The US command in the region said in a statement that the latest missile launches “highlight the ability to destabilize illegal weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs” of North Korea.
Seoul, Tokyo and Washington on Friday conducted trilateral anti-submarine drills for the first time in five years, days after U.S. and South Korean naval forces conducted large-scale maneuvers off the peninsula.
US Vice President Kamala Harris was in Seoul on Thursday and visited the demilitarized zone (DMZ) between the two Koreas, on a trip aimed at underscoring Washington’s “unwavering” commitment to defending South Korea against the North.
Pyongyang has stepped up its banned weapons programs as talks have long stalled, conducting a record number of weapons tests this year and revising legislation to make its status as a nuclear power “irreversible”.
Visiting Kamala Harris
North Korea accompanied Harris’ trip to Seoul with several missile strikes, launching short-range ballistic missiles on Sunday, Wednesday and Thursday, just hours after the vice president left.
The United States has some 28,500 troops in South Korea to help it deal with the threat of an attack from its northern neighbor.
Since South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol took office in May, the two countries have intensified their joint exercises, which they emphasize as purely defensive in nature, but which Pyongyang considers to be rehearsals for an invasion.
Shortly before Ms. Harris’ arrival in Seoul, an American aircraft carrier docked in South Korea to carry out a joint naval exercise, in a show of force against Pyongyang.
“North Korea’s short-range ballistic missile tests are less important than a nuclear test, but they still violate United Nations Security Council resolutions,” observes Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at the Ewha University in Seoul, adding that the chosen schedule was “provocative”.
Pyongyang is “rapidly modernizing its weapons and taking advantage of a world divided by the rivalry between the United States and China and the annexation by Russia of new Ukrainian territories”, he adds.
“Pyongyang’s actions again clearly demonstrate the need for Washington and Seoul to strengthen their military deterrence, toughen economic sanctions and increase coordination. [stratégique] with Tokyo,” he said.
Another nuclear test?
US and South Korean officials have repeatedly warned that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is preparing to conduct another nuclear test.
On Wednesday, South Korean intelligence estimated that it could take place between the next Chinese Communist Party congress on October 16 and the midterm elections in the United States on November 7.
North Korea, which is subject to UN sanctions for its weapons programs, generally seeks to maximize the geopolitical impact of its tests by choosing the moment that seems most opportune to it.
The isolated regime has tested nuclear weapons six times since 2006, the most recent being in 2017.