SEOUL, South Korea
North Korea has claimed it fired a new intermediate-range ballistic missile tipped with a hypersonic warhead which "will reliably contain any rivals in the Pacific region".
The launch on Monday -
Pyongyang's first in two months - came as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken
was in Seoul for talks with some of South Korea's key leaders.
Hypersonic weapons are more
difficult to track and shoot down, as they are able to travel at more than five
times the speed of sound.
North Korea is claiming their
missile flew 12 times the speed of sound, for about 1,500km.
South Korea's military earlier
said the missile flew 1,100km before falling into the sea, adding that it
"strongly condemns" this "clear act of provocation".
North Korea has previously
test-fired hypersonic missiles. Pictures published by KCNA showed that Monday's
missile resembled one that was launched in April last year, but Pyongyang
claims the recent one features a new "flight and guidance control system"
and a new engine made of carbon fibre.
The country's leader Kim Jong
Un said Monday's launch "clearly showed the rivals what we are doing and
that we are fully ready to use even any means to defend our legitimate
interests", state news agency KCNA said on Tuesday.
Ankit Panda, a nuclear weapons
specialist at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said the launch
of a new weapon is "unsurprising".
"We've known that North
Korea has been working with composite materials for use in missiles for a
number of years now.
"The appeal of these
materials is to broadly improve the performance and reliability of the
payload... Better materials can increase the odds of their survival to the
target," he told our correspondent.
Earlier on Monday, Blinken met
acting president Choi Sang-mok, where he described the alliance between
Washington and Seoul as a "cornerstone of peace and stability on the
Korean peninsula".
South Korea's military says it
has strengthened surveillance for the North's future missile launches and is
"closely sharing information" on the launch with the US and Japan.
The launch took place amid
political chaos in South Korea, which has embroiled the country for weeks after
suspended President Yoon Suk Yeol's short-lived
martial law attempt in December.
Yoon, who was stripped of his
presidential powers after lawmakers voted to impeach him, now faces arrest. The
constitutional court is also deliberating whether he should be removed from
office.
Pyongyang previously mocked
Yoon's shock martial law declaration as an
"insane act" and, with no suggestion of irony, accused Yoon
of "brazenly brandishing blades and guns of fascist dictatorship at his
own people".
North Korea is widely regarded
as one of the world's most repressive totalitarian states. Its leader Kim Jong
Un and his family have ruled the hermit nation for decades as a dictatorial
dynasty, developing and promoting a cult of personality.
The last time Pyongyang fired
missiles was in November, a day before the US presidential election, when it
launched at least seven short-range ballistic missiles off its east coast.
Earlier that week, the US had
flown a long-range bomber during trilateral military drills with South Korea
and Japan in a show of power, drawing condemnation from Kim's sister Kim Yo
Jong.
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