UN Security Council readies N Korea missile test reply
UN Security Council Diplomats Have Warned North Korea To Expect A Response After Pyongyang’s Repeated Failed Attempts To Test-fire A Powerful Ballistic Missile, The Latest Defiance Of UN Resolutions.
UN Security Council diplomats have warned North Korea to expect a response after Pyongyang’s repeated failed attempts to test-fire a powerful ballistic missile, the latest defiance of UN resolutions.
At the request of the United States, the council held urgent closed-door consultations after North Korea’s unsuccessful launch earlier in the day of two medium-range missiles, as fears grew that the secretive country was preparing to conduct a fifth nuclear test.
North Korea has now made three bids in two weeks to test-fly a Musudan missile, which is capable of striking US bases on the Pacific island of Guam. “We are looking at a response,” China’s Ambassador Liu Jieyi, who holds the Security Council presidency this month, told reporters.
Japanese Ambassador Motohide Yoshikawa said Tokyo condemned the “grave and very clear violations” of UN resolutions that comprised a direct threat to Japan’s national security. The 15-member council was unanimous in condemning the latest launches, Yoshikawa said.
Current UN resolutions bar North Korea from developing any ballistic missile-related technology, and South Korea said it would push for fresh penalties to be slapped on Pyongyang.
Diplomats said they expected the council to issue a statement on Friday after the Chinese delegation requested time to consult with officials in Beijing.
Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday underscored Beijing’s commitment to enforcing existing UN sanctions on North Korea and to preventing any instability on its doorstep.
“As a close neighbor, we will never allow war or chaos on the (Korean) peninsula,” he told a meeting of regional foreign ministers in Beijing.
South Korea said a first launch Thursday of what was understood to be a Musudan missile saw the rocket plunge back to earth seconds after take-off. A second attempt in the evening—again of a Musudan— also appeared to have failed, a defense ministry official said.
An initial effort on April 15 -- the birthday of late founding leader Kim Il-Sung—ended in what the Pentagon described as “fiery, catastrophic” failure, with the missile apparently exploding just after take-off.
South Korean military officials say the North is desperate to register a successful launch ahead of next week’s ruling party congress, at which leader Kim Jong-Un is expected to take credit for pushing the country’s nuclear program to new heights.
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