North Korea launches more missiles, blasts U.S for raising tensions
North Korea said it fired four
strategic cruise missiles Thursday, continuing its rapid pace of launches, as
it blasted the United States and its allies for escalating military tensions.
The four Hwasal-2 cruise missiles flew 2,000 kilometers in
about two hours and 50 minutes before hitting a "preset target" in
the sea off North Korea's east coast, according to the Korean Central News
Agency.
"The drill clearly demonstrated once again the war
posture of the DPRK nuclear combat force bolstering up in every way its deadly
nuclear counterattack capability against the hostile forces," KCNA added,
using the abbreviation for North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea.
Although South Korea and Japan typically issue alerts when
North Korea launches missiles, they did not do so Thursday, raising the
question of whether they detected the cruise missile exercise.
Later Friday, South Korea's military disputed North Korea's
claim about the cruise missiles, without specifying what portion it believed
was inaccurate.
"There is a difference between what South Korea-U.S.
reconnaissance surveillance assets identified and what North Korea announced,”
read a statement from South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.
“We are closely analyzing related matters in cooperation with
the United States,” the statement added.
Cruise missiles typically fly at lower altitudes than
ballistic missiles and are therefore harder for other countries to track and
potentially intercept.
North Korea claims its cruise missiles are nuclear-capable.
However, it is not clear whether it has built warheads small enough to be
carried on such missiles.
Thursday's cruise missile launch comes days after North Korea
tested an intercontinental ballistic missile — its ninth ICBM launch since the
beginning of last year.
Even as it bolsters its defenses, North Korea has expressed
outrage at the United States and its regional allies for expanding their own
military activity.
In a statement Friday in KCNA, a North Korean Foreign Affairs
Ministry official said the only way to prevent a “vicious cycle of escalating
military tension” is for the United States to halt its military drills and
deployment of advanced weaponry to the peninsula.
“The U.S. should bear in mind that if it persists in its
hostile and provocative practices against the DPRK despite the latter's
repeated protest and warning, it can be regarded as a declaration of war
against the DPRK,” said Kwon Jong Gun, the director general of the ministry’s
U.S. Affairs Department.
On Thursday, the United States and South Korea announced they
held a tabletop exercise at the Pentagon that focused on the possibility of
North Korea using a nuclear weapon.
The drill was followed by a visit to a U.S. Navy base in the
southeastern U.S. state of Georgia where key U.S. nuclear submarines are based,
according to a joint statement.
The U.S. side reaffirmed that "any nuclear attack by
North Korea against the United States or its Allies and partners is
unacceptable and will result in the end of that regime."
Washington also vowed to "continue to field flexible
nuclear forces suited to deterring regional nuclear conflict, including the
capability to forward deploy strategic bombers, dual-capable fighter aircraft
and nuclear weapons to the region."
The United States and South Korea are discussing the possible
deployment of a U.S. nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to South Korea next
month, the Yonhap news agency reported Friday.
If agreed, the carrier would make a port call in South Korea
and participate in the allies’ upcoming Freedom Shield joint military drill,
Yonhap reported.
On Wednesday, U.S., South Korean, and Japanese warships
participated in a ballistic missile defense drill, a relatively rare display of
trilateral defense cooperation that has become more frequent as North Korea
becomes more aggressive.
In a statement last week, Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, vowed that her country will use the Pacific Ocean as a "firing range" if the U.S. and its allies continue their hostile actions.
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