North Korea fires four missiles
North Korea launched four Scud missiles into the sea off its eastern coast Thursday, the South Korean Defense Ministry said.
The missiles were fired
in the direction of Russia and fell into the sea, according to the
Pentagon, which described the launch as a very low-level matter.
The missiles were fired
just days after the start of annual joint military exercises between
South Korea and the United States that North Korea opposes. The joint
military exercises routinely spark tension between North Korea, South
Korea and the United States.
For example, last year's
exercises triggered weeks of heightened tensions between the nations and
North Korean threats of nuclear war.
Report: North Korea launches missiles
North Korea threatens nuclear war
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The South Korean and U.S. militaries have not been specific about where they are conducting their drills.
The South Korean Defense
Ministry said that the North had fired the Scuds in a northeasterly
direction and that they probably fell into North Korean waters of the
East Sea, which is also known as the Sea of Japan.
It was the first time
North Korea had fired Scud missiles, which have a range that covers the
whole of the Korean Peninsula, since 2009, South Korea said.
"We consider it to be
threatening and a military provocation," said South Korean Defense
Ministry spokesman Kim Ming-seok, although he acknowledged the firings
may have been a test launch or part of military drills.
Foreign policy experts
say the North Korean missile firings may not herald a repeat of last
year's saber rattling from Pyongyang, which included threats of
preemptive nuclear strikes against the United States and South Korea and
the declaration that the armistice that stopped the Korean War in 1953
is null and void.
North Korea tested a
multistage rocket with possible intercontinental potential in December
2012, and carried out a third nuclear test in February 2013. It was then
stung by fierce international criticism and sanctions.
It reacted angrily when
2013's joint military exercises between South Korea and the U.S.
involved stealth bombers simulating bombing attacks.
The conditions of Thursday's missile launch are different.
North Korea's missile capabilities
"It may be little more
than regular military testing," said Michael O'Hanlon, a defense and
foreign policy expert at the Brookings Institution. "I'm not persuaded
it's a big deal or even a medium big deal, though."
The launch may also be an attempt by North Korea to remind the world and its own people that it has muscle, too.
Most observers say North
Korea is still years away from having the technology to deliver a
nuclear warhead on a missile, but it does have plenty of conventional
military firepower, including medium-range ballistic missiles that can
carry high explosives for hundreds of miles.
"North Korea's missile
launch is merely part of their ongoing efforts to demonstrate to the
world, and more importantly to their own people, what they are capable
of. It is more showmanship than meaningful geopolitics," David Rothkopf,
editor of Foreign Policy magazine, said Thursday. "It is not a
surprise, and we should expect more of the same so long as this regime
is in place."
Earlier this week, South
Korea said a North Korean patrol boat strayed over the maritime border
between the two countries several times. It eventually returned to the
North's side of the border after warnings from South Korea.
Such infringements happen periodically, according to the South Korean Defense Ministry.
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