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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and U.S. President Joe Biden / Korea Times file |
Pyongyang's missile test aims to gain edge over US in nuke talks
By Kang Seung-woo
North Korea's launch of short-range missiles over the weekend is set to pressure the new U.S. administration to come up with a policy review favorable to the totalitarian state, according to diplomatic observers.
However, they added that Pyongyang staged a toned-down provocation without defying international sanctions or shutting the door to diplomacy with the U.S., although it also means the country can go further should the U.S. mount its pressure on the regime.
According to the South Korean and U.S. military authorities, Wednesday, the Kim Jong-un regime fired two cruise missiles off the west coast, Sunday, the first such launches since the inauguration of the Joe Biden administration in January.
"We detected two projectiles presumed to be cruise missiles fired from the North's western port county of Onchon early Sunday," a Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) official told reporters without elaborating on other details, including their exact type, flight range or apogee.
The U.S. also acknowledged that the North Korean military activity was not in violation of United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolutions banning the country from testing ballistic missile technology.
"North Korea surely has a sense that the Biden administration will try and rebuild a strong sanctions regime with the intended goal of putting more pressure on the Kim regime," said Harry Kazianis, a senior director of Korean Studies at the Center for the National Interest.
"North Korea has a familiar menu of provocations when it wants to send a message to a U.S. administration," a U.S. senior official said.
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This footage, aired by the North Korean Korean Central Television on July 26, 2019, shows a short-range missile being fired from a transporter erector launcher on the Hodo Peninsula near the eastern coastal town of Wonsan the previous day. Yonhap |
Believing that the missile launch was intended to influence the ongoing U.S. review of policy toward North Korea, Park Won-gon, a professor of North Korean studies at Ewha Womans University, said North Korea likely made the launch following a heated U.S.-China meeting last week in Anchorage, Alaska.
"After witnessing the U.S. and China trading barbs in Anchorage, I think North Korea likely thought China could protect it from the U.S.," Park said.
The Biden administration is still conducting its policy review of North Korea and is expected to finish up in the coming weeks, according to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
Without knowing what the U.S. will decide about its policy, the North Korean missile tests fell on the low end of that spectrum of military activities, according to the U.S. official, who said the launch was not in breach of UNSC resolutions.
"Due to the ongoing policy review, North Korea likely tried to find an optimal way to send a message to the U.S. without facing any punitive measures," Park said.
In response to the missile tests, President Biden shrugged off the launch. "Nothing much has changed," he said, Tuesday (local time). "It's business as usual." He added that the missile launch was not considered a provocation.
Saying that the belated announcement of the North Korean missile tests was the Biden administration's "willful ignorance" to grab the initiative in its nuclear talks with North Korea, Park said the missile tests may have paid off to some extent.