South China Morning Post

New missile navigation system tested

Kim vows to boost country’s nuclear force ‘without halt and hesitation’

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North Korea had test-fired a tactical ballistic missile equipped with a “new autonomous navigation system”, state media said yesterday, with leader Kim Jong-un vowing to boost the country’s nuclear force.

Kim oversaw the Friday testlaunch into the East Sea, also known as the Sea of Japan, on a mission to evaluate the “accuracy and reliabilit­y of the autonomous navigation system”, Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.

The launch was the latest in a string of ever more sophistica­ted tests by North Korea, which has fired off cruise missiles, tactical rockets and hypersonic weapons in recent months, in what the nuclear-armed, UN-sanctioned country says is a drive to upgrade its defences.

The launch came hours after Kim’s powerful sister Kim Yo-jong denied allegation­s by Seoul and Washington that Pyongyang was shipping weapons to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.

Seoul’s military described the test as “several flying objects presumed to be short-range ballistic missiles” from North Korea’s eastern Wonsan area into waters off its coast. The suspected missiles travelled about 300km before splashing down in waters between South Korea and Japan, the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Seoul said.

“The accuracy and reliabilit­y of the autonomous navigation system were verified through the test fire,” KCNA said, adding leader Kim expressed “great satisfacti­on” over the launch.

In a separate report, KCNA said Kim visited a military production facility the previous day and urged for “more rapidly bolstering the nuclear force” of the nation “without halt and hesitation”.

During the visit, he said the “enemies would be afraid of and dare not to play with fire only when they witness the nuclear combat posture of our state”.

Pyongyang’s nuclear force “will meet a very important change and occupy a remarkably raised strategic position” when its munitions production plan, aimed to be completed by 2025, was carried out, KCNC added.

Seoul and Washington have accused North Korea of sending arms to Russia, which would violate rafts of United Nations sanctions on both countries, with experts saying recent testing may be of weapons destined for use on battlefiel­ds in Ukraine.

North Korea is barred by UN sanctions from any tests using ballistic technology, but its key ally Moscow used its UN Security Council veto in March to effectivel­y end UN monitoring of violations, for which Pyongyang has specifical­ly thanked Russia.

But Kim Yo-jong said that Pyongyang had “no intention to export our military technical capabiliti­es”, adding the priority was “to make the war readiness and war deterrent of our army more perfect in quality and quantity”. She accused Seoul and Washington of “misleading the public opinion”.

The launches came as Russian leader Vladimir Putin was in China aiming to promote trade with Beijing – North Korea’s most important ally – and win greater support for his Ukraine war effort.

North Korea’s latest weapons tests were probably intended to attract the attention of Putin while he was in China, said Ahn Chan-il, a defector-turned-researcher who runs the World Institute for North Korea Studies. The North would benefit greatly from an expected visit by Putin to Pyongyang, and “they want their country to be used as a military logistics base during Russia’s ongoing war”.

Yang Moo-jin, president of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said: “China and Russia’s irresponsi­ble handling of North Korea, riding on the new cold war dynamics, is further encouragin­g Pyongyang’s nuclear armament.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Kim Jong-un visits a defence complex at an undisclose­d location. His sister Kim Yo-jong denied weapons were being shipped to Russia.
Photo: AFP Kim Jong-un visits a defence complex at an undisclose­d location. His sister Kim Yo-jong denied weapons were being shipped to Russia.

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