South Korea’s military said North Korea’s ballistic missile test on Wednesday may have failed.
Jung Sung-joon | Getty Images News | Getty Images
South Korea’s military said Wednesday’s ballistic missile test by North Korea may have failed, days after it protested recent regional deployments U.S. aircraft carrier Trilateral military exercises were held with South Korea and Japan.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that North Korea launched a ballistic missile from the capital area around 5:30 a.m. on Wednesday. According to reports, the missile was launched into the waters east of North Korea, but the launch was suspected to have failed.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff said South Korean and U.S. intelligence authorities were analyzing details of the North Korean launch. But it did not immediately explain why the launch was thought to have failed. Japan’s Defense Ministry said earlier on Wednesday it had also detected suspected ballistic missile launches from North Korea.
South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency reported that the North Korean missile flew about 250 kilometers (155 miles). Yonhap News Agency quoted an unidentified South Korean military source as saying that North Korea is believed to have tested a missile. Hypersonic missile.
Japanese media reported that North Korea’s projectiles landed outside Japan’s exclusive economic zone.
North Korea’s launch also reportedly came hours after South Korea said it was floating. huge balloon Possibly carrying trash across the border for the second day in a row.
North Korea has conducted a series of Balloon launch carrying garbage Since late May, the United States has launched a so-called tit-for-tat response to South Korea korean activist Distribute political leaflets through your own balloons. On June 9, South Korea briefly restarted propaganda broadcast responded from its border speakers for the first time in years. South Korea’s military said on Monday it was ready to launch speaker again.
The USS Theodore Roosevelt arrived in South Korea on Saturday, and South Korean President Yun Seok-yeol boarded the aircraft carrier on Tuesday – the first sitting South Korean president to board a U.S. aircraft carrier since 1994.
Yoon told the U.S. and South Korean troops on the aircraft carrier that the two countries’ alliance is the greatest alliance in the world and can defeat any enemy. He said the U.S. airline would leave on Wednesday to take part in the South Korea-U.S.-Japan exercise known as “Freedom’s Edge.” This training aims to strengthen the joint response capabilities of various countries in various operational fields such as air, maritime and cyberspace.
North Korea’s Vice Defense Minister Kim Kang-il on Monday called the deployment of the U.S. aircraft carrier “reckless” and “dangerous.” North Korea previously called large-scale drills by the United States and South Korea an invasion drill and responded with missile tests.
Officials in Seoul said the upcoming South Korean, U.S. and Japanese training aimed at strengthening the three countries’ ability to deal with North Korea’s evolving nuclear threat comes as North Korea advances its military partnership with Russia.
At a summit in Pyongyang last week, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed an agreement requiring both countries to provide assistance in the event of an attack and vowed to strengthen other cooperation. Observers say the agreement represents the strongest ties between the two countries since the end of the Cold War.
The United States and its partners believe North Korea has been providing Russia with much-needed conventional weapons for its war in Ukraine in exchange for military and economic aid.
According to reports, North Korea’s missile launch is the first weapons display since Kim Jong-un supervised the missile launch on May 30. Nuclear capable multiple rocket launcher Simulating a preemptive attack on South Korea. The drills come days after North Korea’s failed attempt to put a second spy satellite into orbit when the rocket carrying it exploded in mid-air shortly after liftoff.
Since 2022, North Korea has significantly accelerated the pace of weapons tests to enhance its nuclear attack capabilities in response to what it calls a deepening U.S. military threat. Foreign experts say North Korea’s ultimate goal is to use its larger nuclear arsenal to extract greater concessions from the United States when diplomacy resumes.