North Korea fires 3 ballistic missiles ahead of Biden’s visit

Bloomberg

North Korea fired three short-range ballistic missiles from an area near Pyongyang toward waters off its east coast, South Korea said, the latest in a series of volleys ahead of a planned visit to the region next week by US President Joe Biden.
Launched at 6:29 pm local time on Thursday, the missiles flew about 360 kilometres (224 miles) and reached an altitude of 90 kilometers, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said, adding it was still analysing details.
It was North Korea’s third volley of ballistic missiles this month, and came before US President Joe Biden is due to meet new South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on a trip that starts on May 20 to discuss on policy towards the northern neighbour. Yoon has pledged to take a tough line with North Korea and the launch provides an early test of his government, which took office recently.
South Korea’s presidential office, which convened a security meeting immediately after the missile launch, said in a statement that it “strongly regrets” North Korea’s hostile behavior and added it would take “stern measures” in response.
North Korea appears to have fired the missiles from a large multiple rocket launcher at intervals of approximately 20 seconds, South Korean media including Yonhap reported, citing people they didn’t identify. They were also detected by Japan’s defense ministry.
The missiles likely touched down outside of Japan’s exclusive economic zone, Japanese broadcaster NHK reported, citing an unidentified Japanese official.
The launch also came hours after leader Kim Jong-un ordered a lockdown following the country’s first reported case of Covid-19.
Health experts have doubted North Korea’s claims of having escaped Covid. Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said its announcement of its first case may be a way for Kim to signal that his regime is willing to open a channel for humanitarian assistance with the outside world.
North Korea launched what appeared to be a medium-range ballistic missile, followed by the firing of a submarine-launched ballistic missile Saturday. Kim is on pace for his busiest year of ballistic missile launches since he took power a decade ago.
Over the past several months, Kim’s regime has tested a variety of missiles designed to evade US-operated interceptors and increase the threat of a credible nuclear strike against the US and its allies in Asia.

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