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North Korea missile reaches new heights, 'intensifying' threat to Japan

According to South Korea's news agency, a government official, said the first missile disintegrated mid-air after a flight of about 150 km

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An underwater test-fire of strategic submarine ballistic missile is pictured in this undated photo released by North Koreas Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang on April 24, 2016.
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North Korea launched what appeared to be an intermediate-range missile on Wednesday to a high altitude in the direction of Japan before it plunged into the sea, military officials said, a technological advance for the isolated state after several test failures.

The launch came about two hours after a similar test failed, South Korea's military said, and covered 400 km, more than halfway towards the southwest coast of Japan's main island of Honshu. The launches and earlier nuclear tests show continued defiance of international warnings and a series of U.N. Security Council resolutions and sanctions, which North Korea rejects as an infringement of its sovereignty.

Japanese Defence Minister Gen Nakatani said the second missile reached an altitude of 1,000 km, indicating North Korea had made progress. "We don't know whether it counts as a success, but North Korea has shown some capability with IRBMs (intermediate range ballistic missiles)," he told reporters in Tokyo. "The threat to Japan is intensifying."

Reclusive North Korea and the rich, democratic South are technically still at war because their 1950-53 conflict ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty. The North regularly threatens to destroy the Japan, South Korea and the South's main ally, the United States (US).

South Korean President Park Geun-hye denounced the test. "The North Korean regime must realise that complete isolation and self-destruction await at the end of reckless provocation," she said.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also decried North Korea's "provocative actions".

"I strongly condemn the launch by North Korea of two ballistic missiles," Stoltenberg said in a statement. "These repeated provocative actions ... undermine international security and dialogue," he said, calling for North Korea to "fully comply with its obligations under international law, not to threaten with or conduct any launches using ballistic missile technology and to refrain from any further provocative actions".

The first missile was launched from the east coast city of Wonsan, a South Korean official said, the same area where previous tests of intermediate-range missiles were conducted, possibly using mobile launchers.

 

FIFTH STRAIGHT FAILURE

South Korea's Yonhap news agency, quoting a government official, said the first missile disintegrated mid-air after a flight of about 150 km. Wednesday's first launch was the fifth straight unsuccessful attempt in the past two months to launch a missile that is designed to fly more than 3,000 km and could theoretically reach any part of Japan and the US territory of Guam.

Jeffrey Lewis, of the California-based Middlebury Institute of International Studies, said missiles were usually fired at a certain angle to maximise range, so the high altitude of the second launch may have been chosen to avoid Japanese airspace. "That suggests the missile worked perfectly," Lewis said. "Had it been fired at its normal angle, it would have flown to its full range."

Lewis said failures were a normal part of testing and that North Korea would fix problems with the Musudan intermediate-range missile sooner or later. "If North Korea continues testing, eventually its missileers will use the same technology in a missile that can threaten the United States," Lewis told Reuters.

Nakatani said North Korea's repeated missile launches were a "serious provocation" and could not be tolerated. Japan indicated after the first launch that it would protest strongly because it violated UN resolutions, even though the launches posed no immediate threat to Japanese security.In Seoul, South Korea's presidential office said a national security meeting was convened to discuss the latest missile launches.

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