North Korea Launches Missile as Japan Issues Brief Evacuation Alarm

North Korea Launches Missile as Japan Issues Brief Evacuation Alarm

​North Korea fired a ballistic missile off its east coast on ​Thursday in its first missile test in more than two weeks, the South Korean military said.

The missile, which appeared to be intermediate or long range, was launched from near Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, and flew 621 miles before falling in waters between North Korea and Japan, the South Korean military said.

As the missile hurtled to the east, Japan issued an alarm in its northern island of Hokkaido, urging residents to seek shelter. Japan later retracted the evacuation order, saying that the missile did not fly over Japan. The confusion highlighted the growing uneasiness among Japanese over the North’s frequent missile tests.

North Korea last launched an intermediate-range ballistic missile in October. The missile flew over northern Japan, triggering alarms and prompting people there to seek cover. North Korea has since launched several powerful intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Like the ICBMs, the missile fired on Thursday was launched at a deliberately steep angle so that it did not fly over Japan and instead fell in waters west of Japan.

The missile test came three days after the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, presided over his ruling Workers’ Party’s Central Military Commission on Monday. During the meeting, he urged his country to expand its weapon capabilities “with increasing speed” and in a “more practical and offensive” manner, according to state media.

In the past week, the North has failed to answer military and government hotlines it shares with South Korea, heightening tensions between the two countries. The two Koreas operate the hotlines to help arrange dialogue and prevent accidental military clashes. The North has sometimes refused to answer daily phone checks from the South to protest matters such as U.N. sanctions or joint military exercises with the United States.

The United States and South Korea expanded their joint military drills this year to strengthen their ability to deal with rising nuclear and missile threats from the North. The North has staged 12 rounds of missile tests since January, some involving more than one projectile.

In its recent weapons tests, North Korea claimed to have simulated launching nuclear attacks with short-range ballistic missiles, strategic cruise missiles and “underwater nuclear attack drones.” It released photos of midair and underwater explosions that it said were caused when it detonated mock nuclear warheads.

In its last missile test, conducted on March 27, North Korea launched two short-range ballistic missiles off its east coast. On the same day, the country released photos of a small standardized nuclear warhead module that it said could be mounted on various nuclear-capable missiles.

It remained unclear whether the module included an operational nuclear warhead. North Korea has never tested a miniaturized warhead, although it has conducted six underground nuclear tests since 2006, according to analysts.

In 2022, North Korea launched at least 95 ballistic and other missiles, more than in any previous year, continuing its campaign of brinkmanship in the face of international sanctions. Below is a summary of the launches the North has carried out since January 2022, according to data from state news media and from the South Korean military.

March 2023

Two short-range ballistic missiles fired on March 27 | Four strategic cruise missiles launched on March 22 | A short-range ballistic missile fired on March 19 | An ICBM launched on March 16 | Two short-range ballistic missiles fired on March 14 | Two strategic cruise missiles launched from a submarine on March 12 | Six short-range ballistic missiles launched on March 9

North Korea launched six short-range ballistic missiles off its west coast on March 9, testing what it called its ability to attack military airfields in the South. North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, watched the test with his young daughter, according to North Korean state media. Three days later, the North launched cruise missiles from a submarine for the first time.

On March 13, the United States and South Korea started Freedom Shield, one of their biggest combined military exercises in years. Three days later, North Korea launched an ICBM. North Korea has vowed to take “persistent and strong” countermeasures against “frantic war preparation” by its enemies.

North Korea said it launched a short-range ballistic missile on March 19, later saying it had practiced detonating a mock nuclear warhead 2,600 feet above the sea between North Korea and Japan. It also said it had detonated mock nuclear warheads when it fired four strategic cruise missiles on March 22. In the same week, the country said it had tested an “underwater nuclear attack drone” capable of creating “a super-scale radioactive tsunami.”

FEBRUARY 2023

Four strategic cruise missiles fired on Feb. 23 | Two short-range ballistic missiles tested on Feb. 20 | An ICBM launched on Feb. 18

North Korea launched an intercontinental ballistic missile on Feb. 18, its first ICBM test in three months. The test, which the North said involved its Hwasong-15 ICBM, came a day after its Foreign Ministry had warned of taking “unprecedentedly persistent and strong counteractions” against the annual joint military drills planned by the United States and South Korea.

The United States and South Korea staged a joint air drill involving B-1B bombers on Feb. 19 in response to the North’s ICBM test. In turn, North Korea fired two short-range ballistic missiles the next day. Ms. Kim, Kim Jong-un’s sister, also threatened to use “the Pacific as our firing range.” On Feb. 23, North Korea launched four cruise missiles off its east coast to demonstrate what it called its “deadly nuclear counterattack capability.”

JANUARY 2023

A short-range ballistic missile launched on Jan. 1

North Korea started the new year by launching a short-range ballistic missile, indicating that it would persist in weapons development in 2023. The missile was fired from Pyongyang, the capital and flew 248 miles before falling into the waters off the country’s east coast, the South Korean military said.

December 2022

Three short-range ballistic missiles launched on Dec. 31 | Two short-range ballistic missiles fired on Dec. 23 | Two medium-range ones on Dec. 18

On Dec. 16, North Korea tested what it called a new, high-thrust rocket engine that used solid fuel as it looks to expand its capabilities. Two days later, it launched what the South Korean military called two medium-range ballistic missiles from the same site where the new rocket engine was tested. North Korea claimed that it was testing technologies to place a military spy satellite into the Earth’s orbit.

South Korean officials are analyzing data to determine if the tests had anything to do with the North’s efforts to build a solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile. Such a missile would be easier to transport and hide, and faster to launch — and thus harder to intercept — than the North’s existing ICBMs, all of which depend on liquid fuel.

Kim Yo-jong, the sister and spokeswoman for the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un, warned on Dec. 20 that the country may launch a missile on a full ICBM range for the first time in the country’s history. Experts have questioned whether North Korea possesses the technology to do so on full trajectory — entering space and blasting back through the Earth’s atmosphere to hit its intended target. Ms. Kim threatened to put those doubts to rest.

NOVEMBER 2022

A Hwasong-17 ICBM fired on Nov. 18 | Six ballistic missiles, including an ICBM, on Nov. 3 | At least 29 short-range ballistic and other missiles on four different days

November was the busiest month in North Korean missile tests in 2022, with at least 46 ballistic and other missiles launched, half of them on Nov. 2 alone. One of the missiles fired that day flew over the inter-Korean maritime border and fell into waters off the east coast of South Korea, triggering an aerial-attack warning alarm on a populated island. In response, the South fired three air-to-surface missiles across the border into waters near North Korea.

The North capped its brisk weapons activities in November by test-firing the Hwasong-17, its newest and most powerful ICBM, on Nov. 18. The missile was launched at a deliberately steep angle, high into space. The flight data indicated that if launched at a normal angle, the missile theoretically could reach anywhere in the continental United States.

October 2022

An intermediate-range ballistic missile launched on Oct. 4 | Two “long-range strategic cruise missiles” on Oct. 12 | Nine short-range ballistic missiles on five different days

In the fall, South Korea, the United States and Japan stepped up joint military exercises to strengthen their deterrence against North Korea’s growing missile and nuclear threat. At the same time, North Korea’s missile tests became increasingly provocative. On Oct. 4, North Korea fired an intermediate-range ballistic missile that flew over northern Japan, triggering alarms and prompting residents to seek cover. On Oct. 12, it launched what it called two “long-range strategic cruise missiles” that it said were deployed at units operating “tactical nukes.” It also claimed that it rehearsed the launching of “nuclear warheads” at “the enemies’ main military command facilities” during tests conducted on Oct. 6.

September 2022

Five short-range ballistic missiles launched on three different days

As the American aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan sailed to waters off the Korean Peninsula for joint military drills with South Korea and Japan in September and October, North Korea began testing short-range ballistic missiles. It said that one test simulated the launch of a nuclear missile from an underwater silo; another rehearsed the launch of “nuclear warheads” at airports in South Korea.

August 2022

Two cruise missiles fired on Aug. 17

North Korea fired two cruise missiles off its west coast, two days after President Yoon Suk Yeol of South Korea made what he called an “audacious” proposal to the North. Mr. Yoon said South Korea would start providing economic incentives immediately if the North began serious negotiations to denuclearize. North Korea called him “simple” and “childish.”

June 2022

Eight short-range missiles fired on June 5

Eight short-range ballistic missiles were fired from four different locations in North Korea. The missiles flew between 68 and 416 miles to the east. Over the next two days, South Korea and the United States conducted live-fire missile and joint air force drills to counter the North’s escalation.

May 2022

A submarine-launched ballistic missile fired on May 7 | Seven other ballistic missiles on three different days

North Korea launched three ballistic missiles on May 25 while President Biden was flying home after a visit to South Korea and Japan. The first missile was believed to be an ICBM fired on a reduced range, covering a distance of only 224 miles. In response, the United States and South Korea each fired a ballistic missile in a counter military drill.

April 2022

Two short-range ballistic missiles fired on April 16

North Korea fired two short-range ballistic missiles off its east coast in April. It later indicated that the “new-type tactical guided weapon” was developed as a means of delivering “tactical nukes.”

March 2022

An ICBM launched on March 24 | A failed ICBM test on March 16 | A ballistic missile on March 5

North Korea said on March 5 that it launched a rocket as part of its efforts to send a reconnaissance satellite into space. But South Korean and American officials said that the North was testing a Hwasong-17 ICBM. Not all of the Hwasong-17 tests were successful, with one rocket exploding shortly after takeoff. On March 24, a missile soared 3,850 miles into space in one of the North’s most powerful ICBM launches.

February 2022

A ballistic missile fired on Feb. 27

A projectile soared from the Sunan district of Pyongyang and flew 186 miles to the east in February. North Korea said the launch was part of its preparations to place a reconnaissance satellite in the Earth’s orbit. But South Korean and American officials said the North was testing a Hwasong-17, its latest-generation ICBM.

January 2022

An intermediate-range ballistic missile fired on Jan. 30 | Eight cruise or short-range ballistic missiles on four different days | Two “hypersonic” missiles on two days

North Korea began the year with a series of short-range ballistic missile tests, including “hypersonic” missiles and some launched from train cars. On Jan. 27, it launched its Hwasong-12 intermediate-range ballistic missile. The missile was first tested in 2017. This time, the North said it randomly selected one for testing from multiple Hwasong-12s “being produced and deployed” by the North Korean military.

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