North Korea fired two short-range ballistic missiles into the sea off its eastern coast on Thursday, fuelling a build-up in military tensions after its recent nuclear test and long-range rocket launch.
The South Korean Defence Ministry says the missiles were fired from North Hwanghae province, flew about 500 kilometres (310 miles) and fell into the water off the country’s east coast. They are believed to be Scud-type missiles, said ministry spokesman Moon Sang Gyun.
Such missile firings by the North are not uncommon when animosity rises here. North Korea hates the massive annual military drills staged by Seoul and Washington, calling them invasion preparations.
The allies say the drills, which this year are described as the biggest ever, defensive and routine. Pyongyang is also angry over tough United Nations sanctions following its recent nuclear test and long-range rocket launch.
The firings come a day after North Korea caused a new stir by publicising a purported mock-up of a key part of a nuclear warhead, with leader Kim Jong Un repeating a claim that his country has developed miniaturised atomic bombs that can be placed on missiles.
The North’s Rodong Sinmun newspaper carried photos on its front page showing Kim and nuclear scientists standing beside what outside analysts say appears to be a model warhead part — a small, silverish globe with a ballistic missile or a model ballistic missile in the background.
The newspaper said Kim was briefed by his nuclear scientists and declared he was greatly pleased that warheads had been standardised and miniaturised for use on ballistic missiles.
Information from secretive, authoritarian North Korea is often impossible to confirm, and the country’s state media have a history of photo manipulations. But it was the first time the North has publicly displayed its purported nuclear designs, though it remains unclear whether the country has functioning warheads of that size or is simply trying to develop one.
South Korea’s Defence Ministry quickly disputed the North’s claim that it possesses miniaturized warheads. It called the photos and miniaturization claim an “intolerable direct challenge” to the international community.
U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby declined to comment on North Korea’s nuclear capabilities, saying it was an intelligence matter, but told reporters the U.S. takes Pyongyang’s rhetoric seriously.
North Korea warned Monday of pre-emptive nuclear strikes after the United States and South Korea began the war games, which are to last until the end of April.
North Korea has previously said it has nuclear warheads small enough to put on long-range missiles capable of striking the U.S. mainland, but experts have questioned those claims.
The round object shown in the photos appears to be a model of a warhead trigger device which would contain uranium or plutonium, according to nuclear expert Whang Joo-ho of Kyung Hee University in South Korea. He said it was obviously a model because Kim and others would not stand near an actual device because of concerns about radioactivity.
Karl Dewey, a senior analyst for IHS Jane’s, a defence and aerospace publishing company, said the sphere could be a simple implosion weapon, possibly with hydrogen isotopes added to make it more efficient.
“It is unlikely that the object in the photo is a thermonuclear bomb (also referred to as a hydrogen bomb),” he said in a statement.
“Thermonuclear weapons are multistage devices and in modern weapons the need to place two separate stages together would result in a more oblong-like structure.”
Also shown in the photos is a KN-08 ballistic missile or its model, which reportedly has an estimated range of 10,000 kilometres (6,200 miles), according to South Korean analysts.
The KN-08, which North Korea showed off in 2012, is said to be capable of being launched from a road-mobile vehicle, which would make it difficult to monitor via satellite. The South Korean Defence Ministry said it believes the missile hasn’t been proven functional.
North Korea says it tested its first Hydrogen bomb on Jan. 6, followed last month by the launch of a rocket that put a satellite into orbit but which violated U.N. resolutions because it employs dual-use technology that could also be applied to long-range ballistic missiles.
(AP)
Date created : 2016-03-10
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