North Korea’s 5th test of intermediate-range ballistic missile ‘assumed unsuccessful’

“The North launched one missile presumed to be Musudan from areas near Wonsan at around 5:58 a.m., but it is assumed to be unsuccessful,” the Joint Chiefs of Staff said according to Yonhap. The US military also detected the launch, according to the Pacific Command’s Navy Commander Dave Benham, Reuters reports.

The projectile is presumed to be a Musudan intermediate-range ballistic missile, which according to media reports had been deployed to North Korea’s east coast the day before for its fifth test. The launch, according to Seoul’s military, appeared to have failed again, similar to the four previous tests in April-May which had ended with rockets exploding mid-air or plunging into the ocean soon after lift-off.

Still, Japan’s military was on a higher alert on Tuesday, preparing to intercept “any flying objects that would hit or stray into Japanese territory or airspace,” Kyodo News reported.

The Musudan missile, first deployed in 2007, has an estimated range of 3,000-4,000km and North Korea is believed to be in possession of some 50 of the rockets, according to Seoul.

Pyongyang’s ballistic missile tests run in violation of existing UN resolutions, and actions of this sort, along with nuclear posturing, in the past have led to tighter sanctions imposed on the North.

READ MORE: North Korea reactivates nuclear weapons plant, UN says citing satellite imagery

Source Article from https://www.rt.com/news/347679-korea-ballistic-missile-launch/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

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