stressederic Posted July 4, 2006 Posted July 4, 2006 (edited) North Korea test-fires missiles The Taepodong-2 missile could reach Alaska (archive picture) North Korea has test-fired a number of missiles, one of which was a long-range weapon capable of reaching the US, state department officials believe. It is thought the Taepodong-2 missile failed about 40 seconds into flight. The US said North Korea may have fired as many as six missiles. At least three - two of them said to be shorter range - fell into the Sea of Japan. US envoy to the UN, John Bolton, said he was "urgently consulting" with other Security Council members on the issue. Both the US and Japan had said they would consider a range of options - including economic sanctions - if a launch of the Taeopdong-2 missile went ahead. A state department official called the launch a "provocative act designed to get attention". See the range of North Korea's missiles "The North Koreans have again clearly isolated themselves," White House press secretary Tony Snow told reporters. He said President George W Bush had consulted Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley. The Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill is set to fly out to the region later on Wednesday, while Mr Hadley would be meeting his South Korean counterpart in Washington, in a meeting which had already been scheduled. Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe said Tokyo "strongly protested" the move by North Korea. "This is a grave problem in terms of peace and stability not only of Japan but also of international society," he said. In Seoul, the South Korean government called an emergency cabinet meeting. Heightened alert The first missile was launched at 0332 Japan Time (1832 GMT) and crashed into the sea 600 km (373 miles) from the Japanese mainland, the public broadcaster NHK TV said. The second was fired at about 0400, Japanese news agency Kyodo said. Kyodo news agency said the first two were believed to be mid-range Rodong missiles, while Pentagon officials said they were Scud missiles. The third missile to be fired was reported to be the Taepodong-2 weapon, which the US state department said it believed had failed 40 seconds into flight. The US and North Korea's neighbours had been on heightened alert in recent days amid suspicions that Pyongyang was preparing to launch the Taepodong-2 from the Musudan-ri launch site in the north-east of the country. The Taepodong-2 has a range of up to 6,000 km (3,730 miles), putting parts of the US within striking distance. 'Strong protest' The BBC's Charles Scanlon says North Korea has been feeling under pressure and ignored in recent months with the US refusing to negotiate on its demands over its nuclear plans. This may be a way for North Korea to get attention and break the diplomatic log jam, our correspondent adds. On Monday, Pyongyang warned it would launch an "annihilating" nuclear strike if its atomic facilities were pre-emptively attacked by the United States. Washington dismissed the threat as "deeply hypothetical" and urged the North Koreans to return to six-party talks aimed at curbing the country's nuclear activities. The talks stalled last year. North Korea had agreed with Japan to a moratorium on missile tests in 2002 and this was reaffirmed two years ago. The last time North Korea tested a long-range missile was in 1998, when it launched a Taepodong-1 over northern Japan. BBC News Protests At Missile TestUpdated: 23:35, Tuesday July 04, 2006 North Korea has test-fired at least three missiles into the Sea of Japan, prompting strong protests from several countries. One of the missiles was the long-range Taepodong 2 capable of hitting US soil, a senior US official said. The US says it is urgently consulting the UN Security Council. South Korea has called an emergency cabinet meeting, and Japan says the launch of the missiles is a grave move for peace. The launch was described as a "provocative act", by the US ambassador to Japan. Japanese officials, meanwhile, said the coast guard was chasing a South Korean survey ship that has entered waters claimed by Japan. Sky News Hey whats the worst that could happen? Oh and this is possibly the most surreal news story I've read in ages. Edited July 4, 2006 by stressederic
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