North Korea fires second suspected missile in six days
North Korea has fired a
suspected ballistic missile, less than a week after it launched what it claimed
was a hypersonic missile.
South Korea said it detected the launch at 07:27 local time on
Tuesday (22:27 GMT on Monday).
Japan's coast guard also reported the launch, saying North Korea
had fired a "ballistic missile-like object".
It comes shortly after six countries issued a statement urging
the North to cease its "destabilising actions".
"Our military detected a suspected ballistic missile fired
by North Korea from land towards the East Sea," South Korea's Joint Chief
of Staff (JCS) said, adding that intelligence authorities from South Korea and
the US were in the process of conducting a detailed analysis.
The latest launch underscores North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's
pledge to bolster the country's defences as part of its policy priorities for
2022, which were outlined during a key meeting in December.
On Monday, the US mission to the United Nations, joined by
France, the Irish Republic, Japan, the United Kingdom, and Albania, issued a
joint statement condemning last week's apparent test.
"These actions increase the risk of miscalculation and
escalation and pose a significant threat to regional stability," said US
ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield.
The group called for North Korea "to refrain from further
destabilising actions... and engage in meaningful dialogue towards our shared
goal of complete denuclearisation."
North Korea has welcomed in the new year with two missile tests
in quick succession.
Today's test could be timed to coincide with a UN Security
Council meeting in New York - where the US and its allies condemned last week's
launch.
But it could also serve several other functions.
One could be to divert public attention from an increasingly
severe economic situation in the country, which has been worsened by the
coronavirus pandemic.
Another could be to get the attention of Washington, which has
shown little interest in resuming negotiations with Pyongyang after the failed
summit between former President Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un in 2019.
There a third reason, which is less often reported. North and
South Korea are engaged in what observers say is an increasingly intense arms
race, with both sides working to perfect smaller, more accurate and more deadly
missile systems with which they can threaten each other's leaderships.
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