North Korea fired a suspected ballistic missile off its east coast on July 12, according to the South Korean and Japanese military, just two days after it warned of “counteraction” against alleged intrusions by U.S. spy planes and drones.
The alleged July 12 launch followed an accusation by Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, that U.S. Air Force reconnaissance planes and drones had intruded into the airspace of North Korea’s exclusive economic zone on July 10.
North Korea stated that the United States had flown spy planes and a drone—RC-135, U-2S, and RQ-4B—over the East and West seas of Korea between July 2 and July 9 and warned that Washington would “pay the price.”
“In particular, a strategic reconnaissance plane of the U.S. Air Force illegally intruded into the inviolable airspace of the DPRK over its East Sea tens of kilometers several times,” North Korea’s ministry stated, using North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
“I just don’t have anything more to say on those comments or threats coming out of North Korea, she said. ”We operate responsibly and safely in international waterways and airspace wherever we can,”
State Department spokesman Matthew Miller has urged North Korea to refrain from escalatory actions and reiterated that Washington is willing to speak with North Korea without preconditions.
“We’ve made that clear on a number of occasions, and unfortunately, they have refused to engage in a meaningful way,” Mr. Miller told reporters.
North Korea contends that a U.S. military presence in the region is proof of U.S. hostility. Pyongyang has also said its recent series of weapons launches were a response to what it called provocative military drills between the United States and South Korea.
North Korea denounced the U.S. move and said the nuclear submarine deployment would escalate the military tension in the Korean Peninsula and “may incite the worst crisis of nuclear conflict in practice.”
North Korea has conducted a record number of ballistic missile tests this year, including short-range missiles and intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). It test-fired ICBMs at full range in March, the first ICBM test since 2017.
The United States and its allies have expressed fear that North Korea could be preparing to resume testing nuclear bombs for the first time since 2017.