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Wednesday April 24, 2024

North Korea fires 'unspecified ballistic missile': Seoul military

Earlier this month, Pyongyang carried out a record-breaking blitz of weapons launches

By AFP
November 09, 2022
This combination of images taken between November 2, 2022 and November 5, 2022 and released on November 7, 2022 by North Korea´s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) shows various missile tests being performed by the North´s Korean People´s Army at undisclosed locations.— AFP
This combination of images taken between November 2, 2022 and November 5, 2022 and released on November 7, 2022 by North Korea´s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) shows various missile tests being performed by the North´s Korean People´s Army at undisclosed locations.— AFP

SEOUL: North Korea fired at least one ballistic missile Wednesday, Seoul's military said, the latest launch from Pyongyang following a record-breaking testing blitz earlier this month.

"North Korea fires an unspecified ballistic missile towards East Sea," Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff said, referring to the body of water also known as the Sea of Japan.

South Korea's military also said it had retrieved and analysed debris from a missile the North fired across the two countries' de facto maritime border during a recent blitz of launches.

North Korea fired more than 20 missiles on November 2, including one short-range ballistic missile that crossed the Northern Limit Line, prompting a rare warning for residents of South Korea's Ulleungdo island to seek shelter in bunkers.

Seoul's military said at the time it was the "first time since the peninsula was divided" at the 1953 end of Korean War hostilities that a North Korean missile had landed so near the South's territorial waters.

Shortly after, South Korea dispatched a salvaging vessel to search for the missile, which landed in waters some 5,000 to 6,500 feet deep (1,500 to 2,000 meters), Seoul-based specialist site NK News reported.

On Wednesday, the defence ministry said in a statement that it had successfully retrieved a three-meter-long, two-meter-wide piece of debris, which it identified as a North Korean SA-5 missile.

"The SA-5 is a missile that can also be used as a ground-to-ground missile," it said.

"Russia recently used a similar ground-to-air missile as a ground-to-ground missile in the Ukraine war," the statement added.

The announcement comes a day after Pyongyang denied US claims that it was covertly providing artillery ammunition to Moscow for its war in Ukraine.

Last week, White House national security spokesman John Kirby said North Korea was supplying "a significant number of artillery shells" to Russia under cover of shipments to the Middle East or Africa, adding it was not clear whether Moscow had received them.

Earlier this month, Pyongyang carried out a record-breaking blitz of weapons launches — including an intercontinental ballistic missile — in response to the biggest-ever joint air drills by Seoul and Washington.

The United States and South Korea have warned that such missile launches could culminate in a nuclear test by North Korea.