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N. Korea’s missile flies across NLL for 1st time; S. Korea sends missiles northward in its show of force
North Korea launched a barrage of missiles Wednesday, including one that flew across its de facto maritime border with South Korea for the first time since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War, according to the South’s military. In response, South Korea’s fighter jets fired three precision-guided missiles into waters north of the Northern Limit Line (NLL).
The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said it detected the North’s firing of three short-range ballistic missiles (SRBMs) from a site in or around the North’s eastern coastal city of Wonsan at around 8:51 a.m. One of them landed near South Korea’s territorial waters, further raising tensions around the inter-Korean border. It marked the first time since the two Koreas’ division that the North sent a ballistic missile southward past the NLL.
Its latest provocation came in apparent protest of the five-day large-scale combined air drills of South Korea and the United States that kicked off Monday amid growing speculation that Pyongyang may conduct a nuclear test soon.
They were among the more than 20 missiles that the North fired over a span of more than 10 hours, according to the South’s military.
The North first fired four SRBMs into the Yellow Sea at 6:51 a.m., then fired the three SRBMs into the East Sea two hours later.
Starting at 9:12 a.m., Pyongyang launched more than 10 missiles, including those presumed to be SRBMs and surface-to-air missiles, off its east and west coasts.
From 4:30 p.m. to 5:10 p.m., it fired six more missiles, including suspected surface-to-air ones, into the East and Yellow Seas.
The South Korean military also spotted more than 100 artillery shells lobbed from the North’s Kosong County, Kangwon Province, into the eastern maritime buffer zone at around 1:27 p.m. The buffer zone was set under the 2018 inter-Korean military agreement.
“North Korea’s missile launch, which marks the first time since the division of the peninsula that it has landed near our territorial waters south of the NLL, is very rare and intolerable,” the JCS said in a statement.
In response to the North’s provocations, South Korea’s F-15K and KF-16 warplanes fired three precision strike air-to-surface SLAM-ER missiles into high seas north of the NLL from 11:10 a.m.
The South’s missiles landed in a location north of the NLL at a distance almost equivalent to that of the North’s missile that dropped south of the de facto border, the JCS said.
“Our military’s response reaffirms our resolve to sternly respond to any provocations (by North Korea) and shows that we are capable of accurately striking our enemy,” it said.
Since 1984, North Korea has fired around 200 missiles toward the East Sea or the Yellow Sea but had not launched a major missile southward in a direct threat to South Korea.
In November 2010, the North carried out an artillery shelling into the South’s front-line Yeonpyeong Island, killing four people, including two civilians, with 18 others wounded.
President Yoon Suk-yeol convened an emergency National Security Council session, condemned North Korea’s latest barrage of missile launches as a de facto violation of the South’s territory and ordered “swift” action to make the North pay for the provocations.
The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said the North’s provocation highlights its “reckless behavior” and the “destabilizing” impact of the country’s unlawful ballistic missile programs.
“The U.S. commitments to the defense of the Republic of Korea and Japan remain ironclad,” the command said in a statement, using South Korea’s official name.
The North’s weapon tests came as Seoul and Washington are staging the Vigilant Storm exercise involving more than 240 aircraft, including their advanced stealth jets, across the skies of the peninsula in a bid to bolster the deterrence posture against the North’s threats.
USS Key West, a U.S. nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine, also arrived in South Korea on Monday for a “scheduled visit” as part of its deployment to the Indo-Pacific region.
The North has long denounced joint military drills between Seoul and Washington as a rehearsal for invasion. The allies stress that the exercises are defensive in nature.
Earlier in the day, Pak Jong-chon, secretary of the Central Committee of the North’s ruling Workers’ Party, warned that South Korea and the U.S. will pay a “terrible” price if they decide to attack the North.
The North’s foreign ministry also threatened on Tuesday to carry out “more powerful follow-up measures” if the U.S. continues “ceaseless and reckless” military provocations.
North Korea has fired more than 40 ballistic missiles this year, the largest number that it launched in a single year, as it is apparently bent on developing a variety of delivery vehicles for strategic and tactical nuclear warheads.