Kim tests Trump’s limits with submarine missile launch

Bloomberg

North Korea fired what appeared to be a ballistic missile designed for submarines, testing President Donald Trump’s tolerance for weapons tests just hours after agreeing to restart stalled nuclear talks with the US.
The South Korean military said the missile was fired near North Korea’s eastern Wonsan area just after 7 am on Wednesday and flew 910 kilometers (570 miles) into space before falling in the sea. Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the missile may have separated during flight, with at least one piece falling in the country’s exclusive economic zone near the southwestern prefecture of Shimane.
“The launch of this type of ballistic missile is a violation of United Nations resolutions,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters in an emergency news briefing.
“Japan strongly protests and condemns the action.”
The South Korean defense ministry said it couldn’t confirm whether the missile was launched at sea or from a land-based site.
The missile was the longest-range weapon that Kim Jong-un’s regime has tested since his last intercontinental ballistic missile test in November 2017, a move that may be designed to increase its bargaining leverage.
The US president has so far shrugged off a recent flurry of shorter-range missiles launches, with the State Department saying that the two sides had agreed to resume working-level talks this week.
“North Korea is always trying to push the boundaries of what the international community will accept as far as they can go,” said Mintaro Oba, a former US diplomat who worked on Korean Peninsula issues. “Timing launches at moments when the United States is less likely to object certainly meets that goal.”
The State Department on Wednesday called on North Korea “to refrain from provocations,” abide by UN Security Council resolutions, engage in negotiations and work towards the denuclearisation on the Korean Peninsula. The test comes after former National Security Advisor John Bolton, a target of Pyongyang’s ire during his time in Trump’s White House, said in Washington the US can’t “simply pretend” North Korea is making progress towards denuclearising, adding Kim will never give up his nuclear stockpile without more pressure.
The talks were the first sign of movement since Kim and Trump met on the North Korean border on June 30. The two sides have made little progress since agreeing last year to “work toward complete denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula,” as Kim seeks more sanctions relief than the US is prepared to offer.
Pyongyang has repeatedly criticised Seoul for accepting high-tech American weapons such as F-35 stealth fighters. The advanced “fifth-generation” fighter jet made its public debut in the country Tuesday.
Kim has fired off at least 20 missiles in 11 different military tests since breaking a testing-freeze in May. The launches have included blasts from multiple rocket launchers and a new short-range ballistic missile known as the KN-23, which analysts said is nuclear-warhead capable, can strike all of South Korea and is designed to evade US missile shields.
A launch of a submarine-based missile could demonstrate Kim’s progress toward a two-pronged nuclear deterrent capable of quick strikes on the US and its allies from mobile launchers on land and hard-to-track submarines.

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