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PYONGYANG, North Korea -- North Korea said Saturday that
it successfully test-fired a newly developed ballistic missile from a
submarine in what would be the latest display of the country's advancing
military capabilities. Hours after the announcement, South Korean
officials said the North fired three anti-ship cruise missiles into the
sea off its east coast.
Experts in Seoul say
the North's military demonstrations and hostile rhetoric are attempts at
wresting concessions from the United States and South Korea, whose
officials have recently talked about the possibility of holding
preliminary talks with the North to test its commitment to
denuclearization.
For the second straight day,
North Korea said it would fire without warning at South Korean naval
vessels that it claims have been violating its territorial waters off
the west coast of the Korean Peninsula. South Korea's presidential Blue
House held an emergency national security council meeting to review the
threat and discuss possible countermeasures.
"By
raising tensions, North Korea is trying to ensure that it will be able
to drive whatever future talks with the U.S. and South Korea," said Yang
Moo-jin, a professor from the Seoul-based University of North Korean
Studies.
South Korean officials previously had
said that North Korea was developing technologies for launching
ballistic missiles from underwater, although past tests were believed to
have been conducted on platforms built on land or at sea and not from
submarines.
Security experts say that North
Korea acquiring the ability to launch missiles from submarines would be
an alarming development because missiles fired from submerged vessels
are harder to detect before launch than land-based ones. North Korea
already has a considerable arsenal of land-based ballistic missiles and
is also believed to be advancing in efforts to miniaturize nuclear
warheads to mount on such missiles, according to South Korean officials.
North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un personally directed the submarine test
launching and called the missile a "world-level strategic weapon" and an
"eye-opening success," said the North's official Korean Central News
Agency, or KCNA. The report did not reveal the timing or location of the
launch.
Kim declared that North Korea now has
a weapon capable of "striking and wiping out in any waters the hostile
forces infringing upon the sovereignty and dignity of (North Korea)."
The
North's state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper published photos of a
projectile rising from the sea's surface and Kim smiling from a distance
at what looked like a floating submarine.
The
test might have taken place near the eastern coastal city of Sinpo,
where satellite imagery in recent months, analyzed by a U.S. research
institute, appeared to have shown North Korea building missile-testing
facilities and equipping a submarine with launch capabilities. In a
separate report Saturday, KCNA said Kim visited a fisheries facility in
Sinpo to offer "field guidance."
In
Washington, the U.S. State Department said it was aware of the reports
about the firing of the submarine missile and noted that launches using
ballistic missile technology are "a clear violation" of multiple U.N.
Security Council resolutions.
The U.S. urged
North Korea "to refrain from actions that further raise tensions in the
region and focus instead on taking concrete steps toward fulfilling its
international commitments and obligations."
South Korea's defense ministry had no immediate comment on the North's claim of a successful test.
Ministry
officials have previously said that North Korea has about 70 submarines
and appears to be mainly imitating Russian designs in its efforts to
develop a system for submarine-launched missiles. The North is believed
to have obtained several of the Soviet Navy's retired Golf-class
ballistic missile submarines in the mid-1990s.
Uk
Yang, a Seoul-based security expert and an adviser to the South Korean
military, said it is unlikely that North Korea possesses a submarine
large enough to carry and fire multiple missiles. However, it's hard to
deny that Pyongyang is making progress on dangerous weapons technology,
he said.
The website 38 North, operated by the
U.S.-Korea Institute at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies, said in January that such capability posed a
potential new threat to South Korea, Japan and U.S. bases in East Asia,
although experts say North Korea's submarines tend to be old and would
be vulnerable to attack.
Meanwhile, a South
Korean Joint Chief of Staff official said the North fired three
anti-ship cruise missiles into the sea within a span of one hour early
Saturday evening from an area near the eastern port city of Wonsan. The
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, citing office rules,
identified the missiles as KN-01 missiles, which the North also
test-fired in February in an event personally attended by North Korean
leader Kim.
There had been expectations that
Kim would attend the Victory Day celebration in Russia on Saturday for
his international debut, but North Korea sent to Moscow the head of its
rubber-stamp parliament instead.
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