SEOUL, South Korea — The U.S. believes North Korea fired its first intercontinental ballistic missile on Tuesday, two U.S. officials confirmed to NBC News — a significant step forward in Pyongyang’s weapons program.
The ICBM, which is believed to be “two-stage,” officials said, would have a range of at least 3,500 miles, and thus be capable of reaching Alaska.
The North Korean regime earlier Tuesday claimed it successfully fired a long-range missile into the Sea of Japan, declaring itself a “proud nuclear state.”
“It is a major celebration in our history,” said an announcer on North Korean state television. “[North Korea] is now a proud nuclear state, which possesses [an] almighty ICBM rocket that can now target anywhere in the world.”
The Hwasong-14 hit its target precisely after flying for 39 minutes, state television said.
The test — one of several this year — was detected at about 9:40 a.m. local time (8:40 p.m. ET Monday), a South Korean military official told NBC News. Seoul condemned the launch as a “reckless provocation.”
Russia and China responded to the news by proposing that North Korea declare a moratorium on nuclear and missile tests while the U.S. and South Korea refrain from large-scale military exercises. The call was issued in a joint statement after talks between President Vladimir Putin and President Xi Jinping on Tuesday.
President Donald Trump tweeted an apparent reference to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, asking: “Does this guy have anything better to do with his life?”
Although North Korea is barred under a U.N. resolution from firing ballistic missiles, it routinely does so, saying its arsenal is a necessary tool to defend itself from the United States. The country has conducted five nuclear weapons tests since 2006, with two last year alone.
U.S. Pacific Command in Hawaii said it detected what it assessed as an intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) near North Korea’s Panghyon Airfield. The missile landed inside Japan’s maritime economic area, just outside its territorial boundary.
IRBMs have a range of up to about 3,400 miles, according to the U.S. Missile Defense Agency. ICBMs, meanwhile, can travel further, although varying performance means there can be a significant overlap between the two.
Missile scientist and security expert David Wright earlier wrote in a blog update that the missile “would need to fly on a very highly lofted trajectory to have such a long flight time” and could have a possible maximum range of 4,160 miles — enough to put Alaska within range.
The Japanese government’s main spokesman, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, told reporters that there were no immediate reports of damage to planes or ships in the area where the missile hit the water.
Joseph Dempsey, a defense specialist and long-term observer of North Korea at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, said the launch was a clear sign that Pyongyang’s weapons program was advancing.
“Is it an IRBM or ICBM? Regardless of the distinction, this is the longest-range subsystem they have successfully tested to date,” he said. “That indicates they’re making progress.”
He added that the timing, on the Fourth of July, was “symbolic.”
“It’s worth bearing in mind that Trump tweeted on Jan. 2 about North Korea developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching parts of the U.S., saying: ‘It won’t happen.’ Well, this is a continuation of North Korea doing what it said it would do,” Dempsey said.
“We’re on course to see more,” he added. “They would have worked on those for a number of years. They’ve had failures but the trajectory is there.”
The test comes days before the leaders of the world’s major economies (G-20) are due to meet and discuss ways to rein in Pyongyang’s weapons program, which the North has pursued in defiance of U.N. Security Council and unilateral U.S. and South Korean sanctions.
And it comes three months after the regime paraded its military might in a massive public parade. That latest test-launch could help answer the question of what was in canisters seen on display during the April 17 event.
“We seriously urge North Korea to immediately stop all activities resulting in tension and instability on the Korean peninsula,” South Korean defense ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Cho Han Kyu told reporters in a briefing.
“If North Korea ignores our warning and continues with provocation … we are clearly warning that Kim Jong Un’s regime will be destroyed,” he said.
Koh Yuwhan, professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul, said Kim’s regime had “crossed a red line.”
“North Korea has declared itself a true nuclear state and it looks like Kim Jong Un is not going to give up on nuclear power now,” he told NBC News. “We now seem to have entered the beginning of the end-game.”
He said China faces a “dilemma” in how to respond to Pyongyang’s latest action.
“China is probably feeling the most humiliated of any country at this moment as this is like a confirmation that China has no influence over North Korea,” he said.
Beijing could force North Korea to the negotiating table by cutting off oil supplies, Koh added, “but China is afraid of North Korea collapsing and they are not likely to choose that option.”
Washington has grown increasingly frustrated with Kim’s regime in recent months.
Last week, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin announced sanctions targeting a China-based bank accused of laundering money for the North Korean government.
During a joint appearance with South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Friday, Trump recalled the death of 22-year-old American student, Otto Warmbier, who had been imprisoned in North Korea and died shortly after being returned unconscious to the U.S.
“The era of strategic patience with the North Korean regime has failed,” Trump said alongside Moon.
Kim Jung FK U
You want to play MTFKR, lets play!, FK U and your fag hair cut.
Bring out your boy Dennis Rodman, lets get it on!
Yawn! This again?
If the government said it then you know it is a lie.
Maybe an Estes model rocket that went 5.78 miles. Lol.
N Korea is the biggest generator of take american currency notes. Been that way since the treaty. Real slime balls kind of like the cops here.
Definition of cop- certified original psychopath.