Failed N Korean missile may have crashed into its own city
06 Jan 2018
A North Korean missile apparently crashed into one of its own cities after it failed just minutes following its launch.
US officials said the Hwasong-12 intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) was initially thought to have disintegrated mid-flight after it was fired on 28 April last year.
However, new data suggests it landed in the city of Tokchon, around 90 miles north of the reclusive communist country's capital, Pyongyang, the UK's reports on Friday said. Tokchon has a population of around 200,000.
The missile likely exploded on impact, causing significant damage to a complex of industrial or agricultural buildings, The Diplomat magazine reported, citing a US intelligence source alongside satellite imagery.
After its launch from the Pukchang airfield, the missile flew approximately 24 miles to the north-east, the report stated, adding that it flew no higher than around 43 miles. A US government source said the missile's first stage engines failed around a minute after it was launched.
Liquid-fuel missiles can cause massive explosions when they fail, and satellite images from Google Earth taken after the test show a cleared area where a building once stood and damage to a greenhouse caused by debris.
However, as the publication pointed out, it is impossible to verify whether the accidental strike caused any deaths due to the secretive nature of the North Korean regime. The report highlights the danger of another North Korean missile test failing at the wrong time. If the missile fell towards Japan, its trajectory may resemble an attack.
The hermit kingdom, which has launched ballistic missiles over Japan since August 2017, gives no warnings before its tests, leaving nearby countries and the United States little time to determine whether missile launches are a test or an actual attack.
The report also warned that the North's newly constructed tunnels, hangars and storage sites mean its missiles won't be "sitting ducks" easily targeted on known launch pads. The Diplomat article comes as Japan's Prime Minister warned that the security situation facing his country is the most perilous since the Second World War because of North Korea's "unacceptable provocations".
"It is not an exaggeration to say that the security environment surrounding Japan is at its severest since World War Two," Shinzo Abe said, as he vowed to bolster the country's defences and protect the Japanese people. "By raising pressure on North Korea, together with the international community, I intend to do my utmost to solve North Korea's nuclear, missiles and abduction issues."