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https://scmp.com/news/asia/east-asia/article/3021057/north-koreas-latest-missile-tests-not-violation-kim-jong-uns
Asia/ East Asia

North Korea has conducted three missile launches in eight days but Donald Trump says ‘no problem’

  • Pyongyang is furious over joint US-South Korean military exercises due to start next week
  • Progress towards actual denuclearisation has been slow, with Pyongyang yet to agree to give up any of its weapons
A screen grab image taken on Thursday shows a ballistic missile being launched from an unknown location in North Korea early on Wednesday. Photo: KCTV via AFP

North Korea carried out its third weapons test in eight days on Friday, according to the South’s military, but US President Donald Trump said he had “no problem” with the spate of launches by Pyongyang.

The nuclear-armed North is barred from ballistic missile tests under UN resolutions and its actions have drawn condemnation from European members of the Security Council but a comparatively sanguine response from Trump, who has met North Korean leader Kim Jong-un three times.

“I have no problem. We’ll see what happens but short range [missiles] are very standard,” Trump told reporters as he left the White House for a rally in Ohio.

Kim Jong-un watching the launch of a ballistic missile at an unknown location in North Korea on July 31. Photo: KCTV/AFP
Kim Jong-un watching the launch of a ballistic missile at an unknown location in North Korea on July 31. Photo: KCTV/AFP

Kim and Trump agreed to resume denuclearisation talks during their impromptu June encounter in the Demilitarised Zone that divides the peninsula, but that working-level dialogue has yet to begin.

Pyongyang is furious over joint US-South Korean military exercises due to start next week, and analysts say the launches are intended to raise the pressure on Washington. But the situation could see negotiations delayed until late this year, they said.

The North fired two short-range projectiles from its east coast in the early hours of Friday that came down in the sea, the South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.

It came two days after the North fired what Seoul said was two short-range ballistic missiles and Pyongyang described as “newly developed large-calibre multiple launch guided rocket system”.

Pyongyang launched two devices last week that Seoul also said were short-range ballistic missiles, one of them travelling almost 700km.

Kim had been “emboldened” by his DMZ handshake with Trump, said Jean Lee of the Wilson Centre in Washington, and was “seeking to create a sense of urgency on the Korean peninsula to improve his hand in anticipated nuclear negotiations”.

People at a railway station in Seoul on Thursday watch a television news screen showing an image of North Korea's new rocket launcher. Photo: AFP
People at a railway station in Seoul on Thursday watch a television news screen showing an image of North Korea's new rocket launcher. Photo: AFP

“This is Kim’s answer to Trump’s claim that he’s in ‘no hurry’ to negotiate a nuclear deal,” she added.

After high tensions in 2017, when the two leaders traded personal insults and threats of war, last year saw a rapid diplomatic rapprochement on and around the peninsula. But progress towards actual denuclearisation has been slow, with Pyongyang yet to agree to give up any of its weapons and Washington insisting the sanctions against it must remain in place.

“Trump gave them a pass on short-range ballistic missiles, so they’re clearly taking advantage of this time to perfect these weapons that threaten South Korea and Americans living here,” said Duyeon Kim, a Korea expert at the Centre for a New American Security.

“Pyongyang is avoiding provoking the US to keep the dialogue door open by engaging in gray-zone provocations to strengthen its missiles while protesting the upcoming US-South Korea military drills. But short-range ballistic missile tests are still a violation of UN Security Council resolutions and last year’s inter-Korean military agreement.”

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un seen supervising the launch of a ballistic missile at an unknown location in North Korea. Photo: KCTV/AFP
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un seen supervising the launch of a ballistic missile at an unknown location in North Korea. Photo: KCTV/AFP

Pyongyang has signalled the negotiations could be derailed by Washington and Seoul’s refusal to scrap the annual manoeuvres between their forces and described last week’s launch as a “solemn warning to the South Korean warmongers”.

Pyongyang had an “array of military platforms” it could test in response to the exercises, said Harry Kazianis of the Centre for the National Interest.

“This tit-for-tat brinkmanship will clearly delay working-level talks for at least until the fall to allow both sides to save face,” he said.

The Pentagon has said the joint military drills will press ahead. There are 28,500 US troops stationed in South Korea to protect it against its nuclear-armed neighbour, many of them based south of Seoul at Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek – Washington’s biggest overseas military facility.

“This new test of missiles or ‘projectiles’ by Pyongyang is a message to Washington and Seoul: stop joint exercises or we will continue to show off our own offensive military capabilities and raise tensions to a slow boil over time,” Harry Kazianis, a security analyst at the Centre for the National Interest, wrote on Twitter.

On Thursday, pictures carried by the North’s state television showed Kim supervising the previous day’s launch from what appeared to be a mobile command post.

Pyongyang has long possessed the ability to devastate Seoul – which is only around 60km from the border – with artillery fire but a working guided rocket system capable of precision targeting would pose a new threat to installations in the South such as Camp Humphreys.

Analysts said the images appeared to show a multiple rocket launcher but some of them were heavily pixelated, indicating the North was still keeping secret some of its features.

Trump has repeatedly touted his relationship with Kim, while three UN Security Council members – Britain, France and Germany – have condemned Pyongyang over the spate of tests.

They urged the North to “take concrete steps towards its complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearisation and to engage in meaningful negotiations with the US”.

Additional reporting by The Washington Post