Tokyo, 2 November, /AJMEDIA/
North Korea launched at least 10 missiles from its east and west coasts on Wednesday morning, the South Korean military said, with one falling on the south side of the de facto maritime border for the first time since the Korean Peninsula was divided.
An air raid alarm was sounded around 8:55 a.m. on South Korea’s Ulleung Island off the country’s east coast, the military said, adding one missile had crossed the Northern Limit Line, a border drawn by U.S.-led U.N. forces after the Korean War.
The missiles, including short-range ballistic missiles, were launched from around the Wonsan area and several other places, according to the military. The latest launches by Pyongyang came as a joint air exercise was being conducted by the United States and South Korea.
“It is the first time since the division (of the Korean Peninsula) that a North Korean missile has fallen near South Korean territorial waters,” South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.
The JCS described the missile launches as “unprecedented” and “totally intolerable.”
In response, the South Korean air force fired three air-to-ground missiles toward the north side of the maritime border between 11:10 a.m. and 12:21 p.m., the military said.
“Though one (North Korean) missile crossed the NLL, we fired three missiles to show our willingness (to respond in a determined manner) and capability,” a military official said.
President Yoon Suk Yeol held a national security meeting with his top officials in which he ordered that resolute measures be taken to ensure North Korea “pays a price” for its provocation.
Yoon “made it clear that any attempts by North Korea to shake our society and the South Korea-U.S. alliance will not work,” the presidential office said in a statement.
In Tokyo, Japanese Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada told reporters the North had fired at least two ballistic missiles that fell outside of Japan’s exclusive economic zone without any reports of damage to aircraft or ships.
They flew about 150 kilometers and 200 km at a maximum altitude of around 150 km and 100 km, respectively, and may have flown on irregular trajectories, Hamada said.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters, “North Korea has been launching missiles at an unprecedented pace, which is totally unacceptable.”
Japan lodged a protest with North Korea via its embassy in Beijing, according to the Defense Ministry.
On Monday, the United States and South Korea began their first large joint air exercise in five years. The exercise, to be held through Friday, involves around 240 planes, including F-35 advanced stealth jets.
Prior to the missile launches, North Korea on Tuesday criticized the joint air exercise and warned that the United States and South Korea would “pay the most horrible price in history” if they attempt to use armed force against Pyongyang, according to the official Korean Central News Agency.
Pak Jong Chon, secretary of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea, said in a statement the “special means” of North Korea’s armed forces can carry out their strategic mission without delay, KCNA said.
The remarks were seen as suggesting that Pyongyang could resort to the use of nuclear weapons.
A spokesman for the North Korean Foreign Ministry also warned in a statement Monday that Pyongyang will “take into account more powerful follow-up measures” if the United States “continuously persists in the grave military provocations,” KCNA said.
Speculation has been growing that the North could conduct its seventh nuclear test and first since September 2017 in the near future.
North Korea has launched ballistic missiles regularly since the start of this year, with one in early October the first to fly over the Japanese archipelago in five years.
The North fired two short-range ballistic missiles into the Sea of Japan last Friday, marking its 28th round of launches this year if cruise missiles are included.