SEOUL News - North Korea attempted to fire a missile from its east coast
on Tuesday but the launch appears to have failed, South Korean
officials said, in what would be the latest in a string of unsuccessful
ballistic missile tests by the isolated country.
The
launch attempt took place at around 5:20 a.m. Seoul time (4.20 p.m.
ET), said the officials, who asked not to be identified. They did not
elaborate.
Tension
in Northeast Asia has been high since North Korea conducted its fourth
nuclear test in January and followed that with a satellite launch and
test launches of various missiles.
Japan put its military alert on Monday for a possible North Korean missile launch.
"North
Korea shows no sign of abandoning the development of nuclear missiles
and so we will continue to work closely with the U.S. and South Korea in
response and maintain a close watch," Japanese Minister of Defence Gen
Nakatani told a media briefing.
North Korea appeared to have attempted to launch an intermediate-range Musudan missile, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency said.
North
Korea attempted three test launches of the Musudan in April, all of
which failed, U.S. and South Korean officials have said.
Yonhap
quoted a South Korean government source as saying the missile was
likely to have exploded at about the time it lifted off from a mobile
launcher.
China, North Korea's only major ally, called for the cessation of any action that would exacerbate tension.
"The
situation on the peninsula remains complex and sensitive," Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a briefing when asked
about the launch.
"We think that all sides should avoid any actions that further worsen tensions."
China
has been angered by North Korea's nuclear and missile tests and signed
up to tough U.N. sanctions against its reclusive neighbor in March.
North Korean state media did not mention any missile launch.
A
Pentagon statement said that a failed North Korean intermediate-range
ballistic missile launch had been detected, but did not pose a threat to
North America.
"We
strongly condemn North Korea's missile test in violation of UN Security
Council resolutions, which explicitly prohibit North Korea's use of
ballistic missile technology," the Pentagon statement said.
IN A RUSH?
The
North's flurry of weapons technology tests came in the run-up to the
first congress in 36 years of its ruling Workers' Party this month,
where young leader Kim Jong Un consolidated his control.
Tuesday's
launch appears to have been its first missile test since then, and
experts said it was unusual to test-fire a missile so soon after a
failure.
The
South Korean military said the successive tests could stem from Kim's
order in March for further tests of nuclear warheads and ballistic
missiles.
"They
must've been in a rush. Maybe Kim Jong Un was very upset about the
failures," said Lee Choon-geun, senior research fellow at South Korea's
state-run Science and Technology Policy Institute.
North
Korea has never carried out a successful launch of the Musudan missile,
which theoretically has the range to reach any part of Japan and the
U.S. territory of Guam.
The
North is believed to have up to 30 Musudan missiles, according to South
Korean media, which officials said were first deployed in around 2007.
"It
could have cracks and something wrong with the welding," Lee said of
possible causes for the latest failure. "But deployment before
test-firing these to complete development seems unusual."
The
attempted launch took place near the east coast city of Wonsan, one of
the South Korean officials said, the same area where previous Musudan
tests had taken place.
Separately,
the international department of China's Communist Party said diplomat
Ri Su Yong, one of North Korea's highest-profile officials, visited
China on Tuesday, meeting the department's head, Song Tao.
The
two expressed a desire to increase cooperation between their parties
and work hard to promote regional peace and stability, the department
said in a brief statement.
There was no indication of any link between the missile launch and Ri's visit.
Ri was foreign minister until he was named a member of the politburo during the recent Workers' Party congress.
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