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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Sangmi Cha, Jeong-Ho Lee and Sophie Jackman

North Korea fires first ICBM since days of ‘fire and fury’

North Korea launched what appeared to be its first intercontinental ballistic missile in more than four years, as Kim Jong Un finally abandoned a testing freeze that had underpinned an unprecedented wave of talks with the U.S.

The missile was launched from the Sunan area outside Pyongyang on Thursday, reaching an altitude of 3,900 miles and traveling 670 miles, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said. That’s higher and farther than North Korea’s last ICBM test in November 2017, suggesting that Kim had successfully launched a long-anticipated weapon believed to be capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads.

North Korea typically doesn’t comment on its tests until the next day. The country has described recent rocket tests from the same area as efforts to launch a satellite.

“This launch is a brazen violation of multiple UN Security Council resolutions and needlessly raises tensions and risks destabilizing the security situation in the region,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement. “The door has not closed on diplomacy, but Pyongyang must immediately cease its destabilizing actions.”

The self-imposed testing freeze helped de-escalate a crisis in which former President Donald Trump threatened to unleash “fire and fury” against North Korea and ultimately paved the way for talks between the two leaders. The last time North Korea conducted such a test, in November 2017, China and Russia supported a U.S.-led effort to impose crippling sanctions on the country.

A similar effort by President Joe Biden appears unlikely now, as Beijing and Moscow oppose the international sanctions campaign over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“I believe they have completed the creation of the Hwasong-17, the so-called ‘monster missile,’” said Yang Moo-jin, professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul. “They would cite two reasons for scrapping the moratorium: No further change of stance from Washington. And a firm belief that denuclearization will only lead to destruction, based on what they are seeing from the Ukraine crisis.”

North Korea rolled out the Hwasong-17 at an October 2020 military parade. The weapon appears to be the world’s largest road-mobile ICBM and is designed to carry multiple warheads in a bid to overwhelm American missile-defense systems.

The projectile landed inside Japan’s exclusive economic zone, about 93 miles off the coast of Hokkaido prefecture, Japan’s defense ministry said. The rocket was aloft for about an hour.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, who was in Brussels to attend Group of Seven meetings, called the test “outrageous” and said his country would consult with the U.S. and South Korea on a response. South Korean President Moon Jae-in “strongly condemned” the launch and his military test-fired a volley missiles in response to demonstrate its own ability to strike.

Moon had dedicated much of his tenure to improving ties with North Korea, including holding three landmark meetings with Kim. The moratorium was one of the last remaining achievements of that effort by Moon, who leaves office in May.

His successor, President-elect Yoon Suk Yeol is a conservative who said on the campaign trail that he would consider a preemptive strike to prevent an imminent attack by North Korea. Yoon’s transition team called Thursday’s launch a “grave provocation.”

China Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin called for restraint, without criticizing North Korea. “We hope that all parties can keep in mind the big picture of peace and stability of the peninsula, stick to the right direction of dialogue and consultation, and work together for the political settle of the peninsula issue,” Wang told a regular news briefing in Beijing.

North Korea has ramped up activity at key missile and nuclear weapons sites since signaling in January that he might end the testing freeze and South Korea and the U.S. had recently detected signs of an ICBM launch. The country also appears to be undertaking construction work at its main nuclear weapons test site for the first time in about four years.

On March 16, North Korea fired a suspected ballistic missile from an the Sunan area, near Pyongyang’s international airport. South Korea’s military believes the test ended in failure with the missile exploding before reaching an altitude of 12 miles, Yonhap said.

The U.S. had said that earlier North Korean launches on Feb. 26 and March 4 that were also from the area around the Pyongyang airport were intended to test elements of the new ICBM. North Korea had described the launches as an effort to develop its satellite program, something it argues its entitled to do.

Chang Young-keun, a missile expert at the Korea Aerospace University, said North Korea’s latest ICBM was more powerful than the one launched in 2017.

“It’s not just that they have broken the moratorium, but they have crossed the line,” Chang said. “North Korea wanted the U.S. to make concessions on the sanctions front and South Korea to play the ‘mediator role,’ but didn’t work out at all. So Pyongyang has no choice but to ratchet up tensions.”

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