N.Korea fires short-range missiles

Source:AFP Published: 2014-3-4 0:38:02

North Korea fired short-range missiles into the sea off its eastern coast for the second time in a week on Monday, prompting a warning from South Korea of "reckless provocation."

The missile tests have clearly been timed to coincide with annual South Korea-US military exercises, which kicked off a week ago and run until mid-April.

Two missiles were fired Monday and both flew around 500 kilometers into the Sea of Japan, according to South Korea's defense ministry.

Four short-range Scud missiles were fired in a similar fashion on Thursday.

Both tests were condemned by Seoul, which urged the North to cease all testing immediately and said it would consider calling for sanctions.

"The North is taking a double-faced stance by making conciliatory gestures on one hand and pushing ahead with reckless provocation on the other," said defense ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok.

The Scuds are at the longer edge of the short-range spectrum, with an estimated reach of 300-800 kilometers - capable of striking any target in the South.

It is not unusual for North Korea to carry out such tests, which often go unreported by South Korea.

But Kim said the Scud firings were of particular concern.

"We believe that the North is testing various ballistic missiles with various ranges as a show of force to threaten us," he said.

Washington initially played down Thursday's firings, but later suggested they violated UN sanctions imposed on the North's missile program.

UN Security Council resolutions prohibit North Korea "from launching any ballistic missile, and this includes any Scud missile," Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren said Friday.

Pyongyang routinely condemns the South-US joint exercises as rehearsals for invasion.

Last year they coincided with a sharp and unusually protracted surge in military tensions, which saw North Korea issuing apocalyptic threats of pre-emptive nuclear strikes.

By contrast, this year's drills overlapped with the end of the first reunion for more than three years of families divided by the Korean War (1950-53), an event that raised hopes of greater cross-border cooperation.

Most analysts believe the missile tests reflect Pyongyang's need to flex its muscles in the wake of the reunion compromise.

From Monday, South Korea launched a two-day live-fire exercise involving an army artillery, naval ships and jet fighters to test their readiness against a North Korean incursion off the east coast, the South's defense ministry said.

It declined to confirm a Yonhap News Agency report that the exercise also involved drones, multiple rocket launchers and various other weapons.

AFP



Posted in: Asia-Pacific

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