North Korean fires another missile over Japan

(CBS News) Seoul, South Korea — North Korea has fired an unidentified missile from its capital, Pyongyang, South Korea says, in a move that the South Korea’s foreign ministry strongly condemned.

In a statement issued today (Sept. 15), South Korea said it is fully prepared to respond against any North Korean threat.

“The government will protect the lives of the people and the security of the Republic of Korea,” a translated part of the statement read. It also mentioned that “North Korea should clearly recognize that abandoning its nuclear and missile development is a genuine way of assuring its own security and economic development.” 

According to Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga, the missile was launched at 6:57 am Japan time today, flew over Hokkaido and splashed down at 7:06 am, about 2,000 kilometers east of Cape Erimo, according to the Reuters news agency.

South Korea after North Korea missile launch

A military source tells CBS News the intermediate range missile never posed a threat to the US or Guam.

CBS News foreign correspondent Ben Tracy, who is based in Beijing, reports the playbook seems nearly identical to the last launch, appearing to have been launched from or near the airport in Pyongyang and it flew over Hokkaido.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said today that the missile was launched from Sunan, the site of Pyongyang’s international airport.

Japan’s public broadcasting organization, Nippon Hoso Kyokai (NHK), reports the missile “has flown over northern Japan and landed in the Pacific Ocean.” The Japanese government was advising people to stay away from anything that looks like missile debris, NHK reported.

The North last month used the airport to fire a Hwasong-12 intermediate range missile that flew over northern Japan in what it declared as a “meaningful prelude” to containing the US Pacific island territory of Guam and the start of more ballistic missile launches targeting the Pacific Ocean.

CBS News learned that the UN Security Council will hold closed-door consultation today at 3 pm at the request of the US, Japan and South Korea.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said today that “China and Russia must indicate their intolerance for these reckless missile launches by taking direct actions of their own.” Tillerson added, “these continued provocations only deepen North Korea’s diplomatic and economic isolation,” and “all nations to take new measures,” in wake of the North’s latest missile launch.

South Korea’s Defense Ministry says the country’s military conducted a live-fire ballistic missile drill in response to the North’s launch.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in has scheduled a National Security Council meeting to discuss the launch.  

US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis called the missile launch a reckless act by the North Koreans.

Mattis was at the US Strategic Command headquarters in Nebraska at the time of the launch and said afterward the missile “was fired over Japan and put millions of Japanese in duck and cover.”

Asked about a possible American military response, Mattis said, “I don’t want to talk on that yet.”

According to White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Mattis, President Trump has been debriefed on the missile launch, but he did not comment on it when speaking to reporters on Thursday evening in US.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said today the United Nations sanctions on North Korea needed to be firmly imposed, Reuters reports. He urged the international community must send a clear message to North Korea.

Last week, the US, Japan and South Korea said they hoped a new round of tough sanctions might bring North Korea to negotiations.

China had been on board to impose tough sanctions against North Korea in August. The latest round of UN measures showed a break on the distance to which Beijing wishes to go to pressure the government of Kim Jong Un, making options open to the UN limited.

Tillerson wrote on Thursday in US, “United Nations Security Council resolutions, including the most recent unanimous sanctions resolution, represent the floor, not the ceiling, of the actions we should take. We call on all nations to take new measures against the Kim regime.”  

During a conversation on CBSN, Isaac Stone Fish, senior fellow for Asia Society, addressed recent sanctions that the United Nations imposed this week against North Korea.

“I think we do have to realize that North Korea is a nuclear armed state,” Fish said. “I think the question is how to get them to behave more like a responsible member of the international system and less like a truculent aggressor.”

According to Fish, it remains unclear as to whether or not China is willing to sponsor additional sanctions against North Korea.

“I think the United States would certainly like that,” he said. “If China does not believe in these sanctions, they’re not going to have a bite.”

 CAPTIONS:

Top :A missile is launched in this undated photo released by the North’s Korean Central News Agency last month. Photo:  KCNA/Reuters via Aljazeera

Inset: A man distributes an extra edition of a newspaper reporting about North Korea’s missile launch, at Shimbashi Station in Tokyo, today, Sept. 15, 2017. Photo: The Associated Press by Eugene Hoshiko via USnews.com

SOURCE: CBS News

 

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