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Updated 17 Mar, 2022 09:52am

North Korea’s ‘projectile’ launch ends in failure

SEOUL: North Korea fired a projectile on Wednesday but the launch appears to have immediately failed, Seoul said, with analysts warning it was likely a test of Pyongyang’s so-called “monster missile”.

The launch — North Korea’s tenth suspected weapons test this year — comes after the US said the nuclear-armed country was preparing to fire an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) “at full range” for the first time since 2017.

Despite biting international sanctions over its weapons programs, Pyongyang conducted seven missile tests in January and twice launched components of what it claimed were a “reconnaissance satellite”.

South Korea and the US said last week those tests were actually of a new ICBM system that has never been launched before — likely the Hwasong-17, dubbed a “monster missile” by analysts after it was first unveiled at a parade in October 2020.

“North Korea fired an unknown projectile from the Sunan area around 09:30 today but it is presumed that it failed immediately after launch,” Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.

The February 27 and March 5 “satellite” tests were also from the Sunan area in Pyongyang, according to South Korea’s military. Japanese media reported the Wednesday launch was a “possible ballistic missile” test, citing an unnamed defence ministry official.

National broadcaster NHK reported senior government officials were meeting at the prime minister’s office to discuss the situation.

The nuclear-armed North has long coveted an ICBM that can carry multiple warheads, and the US said last week the recent tests marked a “serious escalation” of the country’s weapons programs. The US military this week said it had “enhanced” missile defence systems in South Korea.

It has also “increased the intensity” of air defence drills, as well as conducting a carrier-based air demonstration in the Yellow Sea following the recent North Korean launches.

The North has carried out three ICBM tests — the last in November 2017 of a Hwasong-15 — deemed powerful enough to reach Wash­in­gton and the rest of the continental United States.

But the country has been observing a self-imposed moratorium on testing long range and nuclear weapons since 2017 when leader Kim Jong Un embarked on a flurry of high-level diplomacy.

Negotiations with then US president Donald Trump collapsed in 2019 and since then Kim has doubled down on his plans to modernise his military while ignoring US offers of talks.

“Signs indicate the North test-fired Hwasong-17 today,” Cheong Seong-chang, a senior researcher at the private Sejong Institute said.

“With Russia now highly unlikely to agree to additional sanctions on the North in case of such a test-launch amidst its invasion of Ukraine, Pyongyang appears to have judged it was the optimal time to proceed,” Cheong said.

The failure of the Wednesday launch will be closely studied by Pyongyang, and it can take around three tests to ensure the missile is functioning, he added. “I expect the North to conduct one or two more test-launches before April 15,” he said.

Published in Dawn, March 17th, 2022

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