North Korea Sends Missiles Past Japan
South Korea Drills On Live Fire |
US
President Donald Trump has warned that "all options are on the table"
after North Korea launched a missile over Japan early Tuesday.
The
missile was fired just before 6 a.m. in Japan, where the launch set off
warnings in the northern part of the country urging people to seek shelter.
"The
world has received North Korea's latest message loud and clear," Trump
said in a statement. "This regime has signaled its contempt for its
neighbors, for all members of the United Nations, and for minimum standards of
acceptable international behavior."
Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also denounced Tuesday's launch, saying it
represented a "most serious and grave" threat.
The
unidentified missile flew over Erimomisaki, on the northern island of Hokkaido,
and broke into three pieces before falling into the Pacific Ocean, about 1,180
kilometers (733 miles) off the Japanese coast.
The
missile was in flight for about 15 minutes, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide
Suga said at an emergency press conference. "There is no immediate report
of the fallen objects and no damage to the ships and aircraft," he added.
Tuesday's
launch is the first time North Korea has successfully fired a ballistic missile
over Japan. Various stages of launch vehicles have overflown Japan during
Pyongang's attempts to launch satellites into space in 1998, 2009, 2012 and
2016.
This
is the fourth missile North Korea has fired in four days. Pyongyang tested
three short-range ballistic missiles, one of which failed, from Kangwon
province that landed in water off the Korean Peninsula.
This
time, the missile was launched near the capital of Pyongyang, a move CNN's Will
Ripley, who is reporting from Pyongyang, say is rare and "highly
provocative."
The
test shows the mobility of North Korea's arsenal, and may have been intended to
deliver a message that pre-emptive US strikes on missile launch facilities
could land uncomfortably close to civilians, Ripley said.
North
Korea has launched missiles from various positions across the country in recent
months, and it possesses trucks that have been converted into
transporter-erector-launchers (TELs) -- vehicles for quickly deploying and
launching missiles -- including some from China.
It
also is developing missiles that use solid fuel, which are much quicker to
deploy than their liquid-fueled counterparts.
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