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North Korea’s Kim oversaw test of ‘super-large’ missile launcher

On June 12, 2018, in Singapore, President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shake hands after signing an agreement at the Capella Hotel. (Ministry of Communications Singapore/Zuma Press/TNS)
September 11, 2019

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un oversaw the test of a “super-large multiple rocket launcher” the state’s media said of the military display that came shortly after Pyongyang announced it was willing to restart nuclear talks with the U.S.

Kim, military leaders and top officials “in the field of national defense science” saw two rounds of test fire Tuesday of “tactical guided weapons including super-large multiple rocket launcher,” the official Korean Central News Agency said a day after the launches. South Korea said North Korea fired “short-range projectiles” into its eastern seas that flew about 330 kilometers, or 200 miles.

“The Supreme Leader said that the weapon system of super-large multiple rocket launcher has been finally verified in terms of combat operation,” KCNA said. It also released photos of the test that showed a smiling Kim, who has been on hand for almost all of his state’s series of missiles and weapon tests that started in May, standing by a launcher.

The Tuesday test came shortly after a top North Korean diplomat, Choe Son Hui, issued a statement saying the country would be willing to hold talks “at the time and place to be agreed late in September.” North Korea often ratchets up military tensions ahead of negotiations intended to end its nuclear ambitions.

The North Korean statement cited recent comments by U.S. officials expressing a desire for negotiations and made no mention of any new concessions. The remarks, which follow a speech Friday by lead U.S. negotiator Stephen Biegun, represented some of the regime’s most positive remarks about talks since President Donald Trump’s June 30 meeting with Kim.

Biegun’s remarks last week highlighted that almost no progress has been made toward an agreement on North Korea’s nuclear program despite three meetings between Trump and Kim. After their latest meeting, the U.S. said Kim had agreed to begin detailed negotiations by mid-July.

Kim, who has suspended testing of nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles while engaged in talks with the U.S., has given Trump until the end of the year to ease up on sanctions choking his state’s anemic economy. At the same time, he has threatened to take a “new path,” if the U.S. doesn’t change course.

Most of North Korea’s recent tests since May have been of a new missile known as the KN-23, which weapons experts said can deliver a nuclear warhead to all of South Korea and parts of Japan and is designed to evade U.S. missile interceptors.

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© 2019 Bloomberg News

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