An attempted missile launch by North Korea on Sunday failed, US and South Korean defense officials told CNN. The attempted launch occurred a day after the regime of Kim Jong Un showed off a bevy of new missiles and launchers at a large-scale military parade on its most important holiday.
A South Korean defense official said the
action took place in Sinpo, a port city in eastern North Korea. That
was the site of a ballistic missile test earlier this month in which the
projectile fell into the Sea of Japan, also known as the East Sea.
The
North Koreans use Sinpo shipyard for their submarine activity, and US
satellites have observed increased activity there in April, a US
official said at the time of the previous test.
South
Korean and US intelligence officials are trying to determine what type
of missile was used Sunday, but initial reports said it could be a
medium-range missile, according to a White House foreign policy adviser.
US Vice President Mike Pence, who is in
the area as part of previous scheduled trip, was briefed on the launch,
administration officials said.
President
Donald Trump have been in contact, aides to the vice president said.
"The President and his military team are aware of North Korea's most
recent unsuccessful missile launch. The President has no further
comment," US Defense Secretary James Mattis said.
Addressing
US service members and their families at a "fellowship meal" in Seoul,
Pence noted the "challenging time" for the world.
Our commitment to this
historic alliance with the courageous people of South Korea has never
been stronger, and with your help and with God's help, freedom will ever
prevail on this peninsula," he said.
South Korean officials convened a
meeting of the National Security Council in the wake of the failed test.
"Our government condemns this serious threat on the Korean peninsula
and overall international society," the South Korean foreign ministry
said in a statement.
If Sunday's
missile launch leads to a nuclear test or an ICBM launch, there would be
"a powerful punishing measure that North Korean authority can't
endure," South Korean officials said.
US Pacific Command said it tracked a
missile launch at 5:21 p.m. ET and said the missile blew up almost
immediately. The missile was launched from the same point of the April 5
launch, a White house foreign policy adviser said.
US
military officials don't believe the missile had intercontinental
capabilities, a US defense official told CNN. The official said there
was limited data as the missile blew up so quickly.
Bruce Bennett, a senior defense analyst
at the think tank RAND Corporation, said he thinks the missiles were not
the kind that could reach the United States' mainland. "The North
doesn't seem to be quite at the place to test an ICBM (intercontinental
ballistic missile)," he said.
CNN's
Will Ripley in Pyongyang, North Korea, reported there was no immediate
confirmation from North Korean state media about the launch.
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