The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 49°
Humidity: 54%
Saturday, 11/28/09
Home »   Latest News »   Nation/World » 

Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookMySpaceDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published July 04, 2009
South Korea: North Korea fires 7 missiles off east coast

SEOUL — North Korea fired seven ballistic missiles off its eastern coast Saturday, South Korea said, a violation of U.N. resolutions and an apparent message of defiance to the United States on its Independence Day.

The launches, which came two days after North Korea fired what were believed to be four short-range cruise missiles, will likely further escalate tensions in the region as the U.S. tries to muster support for tough enforcement of the latest U.N. Security Council resolution imposed on the communist regime for its May nuclear test.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said three missiles were fired early Saturday, a fourth around noon and three more in the afternoon. The Defense Ministry said that the missiles were ballistic and are believed to have flown more than 250 miles (400 kilometers).

“Our military is fully ready to counter any North Korean threats and provocations based on strong South Korea-U.S. combined defense posture,” the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency quoted military officials as saying the missiles appeared to be a type of Scud missile. North Korea’s Scuds are considered short-range, the South’s military said.

But Yonhap also said it is possible they could have been longer-range Rodong missiles fired a shorter distance.

Scud missiles have a range of up to 300 miles (500 kilometers), which could hit most of South Korea. The Rodong has a range of up to 800 miles (1,300 kilometers), putting most parts of Japan within striking distance.

North Korea is not allowed to fire Scuds, medium-range missiles or long-range missiles. They are banned under U.N. resolutions, including Resolution 1874 passed after North Korea’s May 25 nuclear test, that prohibit any launch using ballistic missile technology.

Thursday’s launches, on the other hand, did not violate the resolution, according to South Korea’s Foreign Ministry. Kim Tae-woo, vice president of the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses, said it was believed North Korea launched cruise missiles Thursday.

Ballistic missiles are guided during their ascent out of the atmosphere but fall freely when they descend. Cruise missiles fly low and straight to their target.

The North has a record of timing missile tests for the U.S. national day, which fell on Saturday.

“The missiles were seen as part of military exercises, but North Korea also appeared to have sent a message to the U.S. through the missile launches,” a senior official in South Korea’s presidential office said, without elaborating.

The official told The Associated Press that North Korea could fire more missiles in coming days, but said there was little possibility it could fire an intercontinental ballistic missile, as it threatened in April.

He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to media.

Daniel Pinkston, a Seoul-based analyst for the International Crisis Group think tank, said both political and military reasons were behind the launches.

“I think it’s a demonstration of their defiance and rejection of the U.N. Security Council Resolution 1874, for one thing, and to demonstrate their military power capabilities to any potential adversaries,” Pinkston said.

He also pointed out that July 4 is not only U.S. Independence Day but also the anniversary of a 1972 joint communique in which the two Koreas agreed to work toward peacefully reunifying their divided peninsula.

During the U.S. Independence Day holiday in 2006, Pyongyang fired a barrage of missiles, including a long-range Taepodong-2 that broke apart and fell into the ocean less than a minute after liftoff. Those launches, which occurred on July 5 in North Korea, also came amid tensions with the U.S. over North Korea’s nuclear program.

North Korea’s state news agency carried no reports on the launches. But the North had warned ships to stay away from its east coast through July 10 for military exercises — an indication it was planning launches.

The chief of U.S. Naval operations, Adm. Gary Roughead, said Saturday the American military was ready for any North Korean missile tests.

“Our ships and forces here are prepared for the tracking of the missiles and observing the activities that are going on,” Roughead said after meeting Japanese military officials in Tokyo before news of the launches.

South Korea and Japan, which are within easy range of North Korean missiles, condemned the launches as a “provocative” act that violates the U.N. resolution.

South Korea “expressed deep regret over the North’s continuous behavior that escalates tensions in Northeast Asia by repeatedly defying” the resolution, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

In Tokyo, Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo Kawamura said in a statement that the launch of missiles “is a serious act of provocation against the security of neighboring countries, including Japan, and is against the resolution of the U.N Security Council.”

In Beijing, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said he had no immediate comment. China is the North’s closest ally.

———

Associated Press writers Yuri Kageyama and Tomoko A. Hosaka in Tokyo, Henry Sanderson in Beijing, and Jae-soon Chang in Seoul contributed to this report.

/AP-CS-07-04-09 0732EDT


Permanent Link

 RECENT RELATED ARTICLES

The Korean gambit | 08/07/2009
Kirk - Bill Clinton and Kim Jong Il | 08/06/2009
Freed reporters receive warm welcome home | 08/06/2009
Freed U.S. journalists return home to emotional family reunion | 08/05/2009
Bill Clinton, freed journalists depart North Korea for United States | 08/04/2009
Cyberattacks stall Web sites across U.S., South Korea | 07/09/2009
Government Web sites attacked; North Korea suspected | 07/08/2009
North Korea test-fires 4 short-range missiles | 07/02/2009
North Korea threatens U.S.; world anticipates missile | 06/24/2009
North Korea sentences 2 U.S. reporters to 12 years of labor | 06/08/2009
Another provocation | 05/29/2009
North Korea test-fires missile, slams Security Council | 05/29/2009

Nation/World
Updated: 1:50 pm
Dinner crashers shook hands with President Obama >>
Blade Area
Updated: 1:44 pm
Telb will shift appraisal job to deputies >>
Blade Area
Updated: 1:44 pm
Vandals strike foe of deer kill >>
Blade Area
Updated: 1:44 pm
Crash near Port Clinton kills pregnant woman >>
Cops/Courts
Updated: 1:44 pm
Man shot in fight outside Toledo bar >>
Blade Area
Updated: 8:35 am
Davis-Besse security guard injured when gun discharges >>
More news stories
 



click here!

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
S. Amjad Hussain
Updated: 4:26 am
Muslims must do more than condemn acts of violence >>

Marilou Johanek
Updated: 5:40 am
2009 top turkey was a flock of tax-dollar gobblers >>

Jack Kelly
Updated: 6:32 am
Obama's false 'stimulus' >>

Jack Lessenberry
Updated: 5:41 am
Michigan's economic future is more bleak than first believed >>

Rose Russell
Updated: 6:24 am
The food you waste could feed hungry people  >>

David Shribman
Updated: 8:52 am
U.S. has much to relearn from China >>

Mike Sigov
Updated: 6:26 am
GM acted wisely by hitting brakes on Russian deal >>

Tom Walton
Updated: 4:59 am
If you're looking to go, and you just got to, then take and go >>

More columnist stories
MOST READ STORIES
1.  Vandals strike foe of deer kill
2.  Man shot in fight outside Toledo bar
3.  Crash near Port Clinton kills pregnant woman
4.  Toledo area shoppers find bounty of Black Friday bargains
5.  Toledo area Home Depots picketed
6.  Telb will shift appraisal job to deputies
7.  Patriots' run ends on somber note
8.  Bowling Green tops Toledo in I-75 rivalry
9.  Obama's false 'stimulus'
10.  Action needed on vacant land
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  First Solar plant re-energized
2.  Farmers union official’s sentencing postponed
3.  Toledo to ban texting while driving; ordinance to go into effect Jan. 1
4.  Cooper to expand, hire 100
5.  Faculty objects to changing UT’s tenure process
6.  Ban on texting while driving passed in Toledo
7.  Lucas County set to slash budget, at least 20 jobs
8.  The view from the penthouse
9.  The artist's vision: Sylvania ophthalmologist studies how painters' vision problems affect their work
10.  Toledo-based Marco's Pizza goes international


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2009 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®