North Korea’s latest missile test appeared to have “failed” immediately after launch, South Korea’s military said, an incident that comes days after a report said Kim Jong Un’s regime was preparing to fire its first ICBM in five years.
The unidentified projectile appeared to have been launched at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday from an area near Pyongyang’s international airport and is presumed to have failed shortly after it took off, the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a text message. The North Korean projectile failed to “reach its altitude,” a senior JCS official told reporters, adding that authorities were undergoing additional analysis on the specifications of the missile.
The area was used for two launches in the past few weeks that North Korea said were tests for a satellite system. The U.S. said Kim was testing components for an intercontinental ballistic missile.
While details of the launch remain sparse, a mishap could be North Korea’s biggest missile failure since August 2017, when a suspected ballistic missile broke into pieces. The increased North Korean activity comes as a conservative president prepares to take power in South Korea and the world focuses on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The test on Wednesday morning may have been of a ballistic missile, Japanese media including public broadcaster NHK reported, citing unidentified Defense Ministry officials. North Korea typically doesn’t comment on any test until at least a day after the event.
Yonhap News Agency previously reported that North Korea could fire an ICBM as soon as this week, which would be its most serious provocation in five years. Confirmation of such a test can take hours after it occurs.
North Korea May Test ICBM as Soon as This Week, Yonhap Says
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