NORTH KOREA
'TEST FIRES SHORT-RANGE MISSILES' FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 2017
North Korea
has tested several short-range missiles, according to reports from South Korea,
its neighbour.
They were
reportedly fired from the Hodo peninsula in the east of the country, said South
Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff. This will be the first missile launch since
Pyongyang tested an intercontinental ballistic missile in November 2017.
Last month
Pyongyang said it had tested what it described as a new "tactical guided
weapon". That was the first test since the Vietnam summit between the
North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, and US President Donald Trump, which ended
without an agreement.
Firing a
short range missile would not violate North Korea's promise not to test long
range or nuclear missiles, but Pyongyang appears to be growing impatient with
Washington's insistence that full economic sanctions remain until Kim takes
serious steps to dismantle his nuclear weapons programme, says the BBC's Laura
Bicker.
"We are
aware of North Korea's actions tonight. We will continue to monitor as
necessary" said White House
spokeswoman Sarah Sanders.
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