North Korea fires unidentified projectiles into Sea of Japan

Image from North Korean media of four missile launches on 7 March 2017Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

North Korea continues to test missiles (file picture)

North Korea has fired two unidentified “projectiles” into the sea, the South Korean military says.

If confirmed as a missile test, it would be the North’s 12th this year.

The projectile was fired into the East Sea, also known as the Sea of Japan. The launches are thought to have come from South Pyongan province, according to Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Earlier this month, North Korea test-fired a new type of a missile capable of being launched from a submarine.

That missile was, in theory, able to carry a nuclear weapon. Being launched from a submarine can make missiles harder to detect, and allows them to get closer to other targets.

Image copyright
KCNA via REUTERS

Image caption

A North Korean picture said to be of the submarine missile

Thursday’s projectiles landed outside Japan’s maritime exclusive economic zone, the Japanese coast guard said.

The South Korean military said it would maintain its readiness to track and monitor further launches.

  • North Korea tests new submarine missile from sea
  • North Korea’s missile and nuclear programme

North Korea is widely believed to have missiles capable of striking long-range targets, including the US mainland.

It also claims to have a nuclear bomb it can mount it on a missile.

The apparent testing comes as nuclear talks between Pyongyang and Washington remain at a deadlock.

The last time US President Donald Trump met the North’s Kim Jong-un was in June, when the two leaders met at the inter-Korean border.

Talks between US and North Korean officials in Sweden earlier this month failed to make any progress.

source: bbc.com