North Korea raises tension with missile launch

SEOUL – North Korea test-fired three short-range missiles on Thursday, further stoking tension in the region that was already high due to Pyongyang’s nuclear test and threats to boost its nuclear arsenal in response to U.N. sanctions.

“Be thou prepared, and prepare for thyself, thou, and all thy company that are assembled unto thee, and be thou a guard unto them. After many days thou shalt be visited: in the latter years thou shalt come into the land that is brought back from the sword, and is gathered out of many people, against the mountains of Israel, which have been always waste: but it is brought forth out of the nations, and they shall dwell safely all of them.” Ezekiel 38:7-8

North Korea fired two surface-to-ship missiles off its east coast between 5:20 p.m and 6 p.m. (0820-0900 GMT) that flew about 100 km (60 miles) and splashed into the sea, a South Korean defense official said. A third missile was fired around two hours later.

A South Korean daily said that the secretive North may also test fire mid-range missiles in a matter of days.

North Korea was hit with U.N. sanctions following its May 25 nuclear test. Analysts said enforcement of the sanctions, aimed at halting its trade in arms, would depend heavily on China, the North’s biggest benefactor and trade partner.

Japan, a party to currently suspended six-nation talks on ending the North’s nuclear program, was quick to condemn Pyongyang’s latest action.

“We have often warned that such a provocative act is not beneficial for North Korea’s national interest,” Kyodo News Agency quoted Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso as telling reporters.

The short-range missile launches came after regional markets had closed for the day, but East Asian investors have grown used to North Korea’s saber-rattling and tend not to be fazed.

Analysts say they would likely panic only if there was military conflict on a peninsula, where 2 million troops face each other across one of the world’s most heavily armed borders.

TIGHTENING SANCTIONS

Washington said this week it had tightened its crackdown on firms linked to the North’s lucrative proliferation of missiles, a major source of cash for the destitute state, and has sent the U.S. point man for sanctions to Asia for discussions.

China said on Thursday it was sending its envoy to the six-party talks to South Korea, Japan, Russia and the United States. North Korea, the sixth party, is not on the itinerary.

“China has consistently advocated dialogue and consultation, and achieving denuclearization of the Korean peninsula through the six-party talks process,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a news briefing.

Earlier the JoongAng Ilbo daily quoted an intelligence source as saying the North was likely to fire medium or short range missiles from its east coast in early July that could include Scuds with a range of about 340 km (210 miles) or Rodong missiles with a range of up to 1,000 km (620 miles).

North Korea fired a barrage of short-range missiles following its May nuclear test, which experts said put the state closer to having a working nuclear bomb.

It launched a rocket in April in what was widely seen as a disguised long-range missile test that violated U.N. resolutions banning it from ballistic missile launches.

Philip Goldberg, the U.S. envoy who coordinates sanctions against the North, has been in China to enlist Beijing’s help in getting tough with North Korea and said he had had “good discussions” with his Chinese counterparts.

“We want all the various aspects of the resolution to work,” he told reporters after a day of meetings, adding that this included financial sanctions.

He will be in Malaysia on Sunday before heading back to Washington on Monday. It was not immediately clear why he was visiting Malaysia.

South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan said he was seeking a meeting of the foreign ministers of the six countries including the North on the sidelines of a regional security forum on July 23 in Thailand.

Officials said the North’s military grandstanding is likely related to moves by its leadership to begin readying leader Kim Jong-il’s youngest son as a future heir by consolidating the 67-year-old leader’s power base.

(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley and Emma Graham-Harrison in Beijing, Kim Yeon-hee and Jon Herskovitz in Seoul and Yoko Kubota in Tokyo; Editing by Jeremy Laurence and Alex Richardson)

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