Home Explainer North Korea’s Kim Oversees Successful Test Of New Hypersonic Missile

North Korea’s Kim Oversees Successful Test Of New Hypersonic Missile

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un oversaw a successful test of a new intermediate-range hypersonic ballistic missile (IRBM) on Monday, state media Korean Central News Agency said on Tuesday.

It was North Korea’s first missile launch since November 5.

It coincided with a visit by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to South Korea, where he pledged bilateral and trilateral cooperation including Japan to respond to Pyongyang’s growing military threats.

The test took place less than two weeks before U.S. President-elect Donald Trump returns to office.

Trump has held unprecedented summits with Kim during his first term and has touted their personal rapport

The missile was fired on the outskirts of Pyongyang and flew some 1,500 km (932 miles) at 12 times the speed of sound and reached the maximum altitude of nearly 100 km before accurately landing at a target off the east coast, KCNA said.

New carbon fibre composite materials were used in the missile’s engine, and it could “effectively penetrate any dense defence barrier and inflict a serious military blow on the opponent,” it said.

Nitin A Gokhale WhatsApp Channel

Kim hailed the missile as a powerful weapon to cope with security threats posed by hostile forces and the changing regional security environment.

“The development of new-type hypersonic missile is mainly aimed to steadily put the country’s nuclear war deterrent on an advanced basis by making the means of changing the war situation, the weapon system to which no one can respond, the linchpin of strategic deterrence,” he said, according to KCNA.

South Korea’s military said on Monday a suspected IRBM travelled more than 1,100 kilometres (690 miles) eastwards before falling into the sea.

Blinken condemned the latest launch together with South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Tae-yul, and also warned of Pyongyang’s deepening ties with Moscow, including illicit cooperation on space and satellite technology.

North Korea has been developing a new solid-fuel hypersonic IRBM amid an intensifying race for the next generation of long-range rockets that are difficult to track and intercept.

Last year’s tests featured a new solid-fuel design and carried what Pyongyang said was a hypersonic glide vehicle, a warhead designed to be able to manoeuvre and evade missile defences.

(With inputs from Reuters)

 

Previous articleLouisiana Reports First Bird Flu-Related Death In U.S.
Next articleUS To Lift Barriers In Civil Nuclear Cooperation, Says NSA Sullivan