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Asia/ East Asia

North Korea fires more missiles amid coronavirus outbreak

  • North Korea test-fired a number of ballistic missiles over the course of March, following a three-month pause
A tactical guided weapon fired this month at an undisclosed location in North Korea. File photo: AP

North Korea fired what appeared to be two short-range ballistic missiles into the ocean off its east coast on Sunday, the latest in an unprecedented flurry of launches that South Korea decried as “inappropriate” amid the global coronavirus pandemic.

Two “short-range projectiles” were launched from the coastal Wonsan area, and flew 230km (143 miles) at a maximum altitude of 30km (19 miles), South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff reported.

“In a situation where the entire world is experiencing difficulties due to Covid-19, this kind of military act by North Korea is very inappropriate and we call for an immediate halt,” South Korea’s JCS said in a statement, according to Yonhap.

South Korea’s national security team convened an emergency video conference, the presidential Blue House said in a separate text message on Sunday.

Japan’s Ministry of Defence said they appeared to be ballistic missiles, and they did not land in Japanese territory or its exclusive economic zone.

They would be the eighth and ninth missiles launched in four rounds of tests this month as North Korean troops conduct ongoing military drills, usually personally overseen by leader Kim Jong-un.

That would be the most missiles ever fired in a single month by North Korea, according to a tally by Shea Cotton, senior researcher at the James Martin Centre for Nonproliferation Studies.

“Coming this early in the year, the only time we’ve seen tests this frequently were in 2016 and 2017, both of which were huge years for North Korea’s missile programme,” he said in a post on Twitter.

All of the missiles fired so far this year have been small, short-range weapons, such as the KN-24 fired during the last launch on March 21.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un inspects a military drill at undisclosed location in North Korea. File photo: AP
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un inspects a military drill at undisclosed location in North Korea. File photo: AP

But Kim has warned that North Korea is developing a new “strategic weapon” to be unveiled this year, with analysts speculating that it could be a new long-range ballistic missile, or a submarine capable of launching such missiles.

United Nations Security Council resolutions bar North Korea from testing ballistic missiles, and the country has been heavily sanctioned over its missile and nuclear weapons programmes.

This month’s military drills have been conducted despite a border lockdown and quarantine measures imposed in North Korea in an effort to prevent an outbreak of the new coronavirus.

South Korea and the United States have postponed some of their joint military exercises because of the coronavirus outbreak in South Korea.

Politically and economically isolated, North Korea has not reported any confirmed cases, though some foreign experts have expressed doubts.

In the past, North Korea has typically conducted military drills, including tests of its ballistic missiles, in March as the wintry weather turns warmer. For the previous two years, however, it had avoided such springtime launches amid denuclearisation talks with the United States.

Those talks have since stalled, and this year’s string of tests and military drills appear aimed at underscoring North Korea’s return to a more hardline policy, said Ankit Panda, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Federation of American Scientists.

“There is an element of projecting a business-as-usual image amid the Covid-19 situation, but I think it’s not overriding,” he said. “These tests do allow Kim Jong-un to show that he’s sticking to the hard-line policy he laid out in December 2019.”

North Korean state media this month announced that US President Donald Trump had sent a letter to Kim detailing a plan to develop ties.

The report cited Kim’s powerful sister Kim Yo-jong, who warned that the apparently good personal relationship between the two leaders would not be enough to foster broader relations.

“In the letter, he … explained his plan to propel the relations between the two countries of the DPRK and the US and expressed his intent to render cooperation in the anti-epidemic work,” an apparent reference to the coronavirus pandemic, she said in the statement reported by the North’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

A senior US administration official confirmed Trump had sent a letter to Kim, “consistent with his efforts to engage global leaders during the ongoing pandemic”.

Trump famously said in 2018 that he and Kim “fell in love” and that the North Korean letter wrote him “beautiful letters”.

Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse and DPA