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TV footage of a North Korean missile test (on South Korean TV)
Photo: Ahn Young-joon/AP
North Korea apparently fired a ballistic missile after a US aircraft carrier arrived in South Korea.
The South Korean Defense Forces General Staff said a suspected short-range test missile flew about 600 kilometers toward the open sea after being launched in western North Korea.
Then she fell into the sea off the east coast of the country.
The Japanese defense minister said the North Korean missile may have reached an altitude of 50 kilometers on an irregular trajectory.
South Korea's military accused the largely isolated neighboring country of provocative behavior.
UN resolutions prohibit North Korea from testing any type of ballistic missile, which, depending on the design, can also carry one or more nuclear warheads.
These are usually surface-to-surface missiles.
South Korea fears that North Korea could soon test a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) again.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol was informed on Saturday that there were signs of preparations in North Korea, according to his office.
The USA and South Korea have also long feared that North Korea could also carry out a new nuclear test at any time.
The country is subject to tough international sanctions because of its nuclear weapons program.
US and South Korea naval maneuvers off Busan
North Korea's latest missile test came ahead of planned US-South Korean naval exercises off the Korean Peninsula.
The aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan docked in the South Korean coastal city of Busan on Friday to take part in the naval maneuver.
The maneuver is also intended to serve as a deterrent against North Korea.
North Korea feels provoked by the United States' joint military exercises with its ally South Korea.
The dispute over North Korea's nuclear program is one of the most dangerous conflicts in the world.
The dispute will therefore also be a focus of US Vice President Kamala Harris' planned talks, which are expected in South Korea next Thursday.
There she meets President Yoon, among others.
Tensions in the region have risen following a series of nuclear-capable missile tests by North Korea this year.
Most recently, in June, North Korea fired eight short-range missiles from at least four different locations towards the open sea in the east.
North Korea's parliament passed a law on state nuclear policy earlier this month.
Among other things, this provides for the use of nuclear weapons not only in the event of an attack by enemy forces, but also in the event of an impending attack on the leadership in Pyongyang.
Negotiations between the US and North Korea have been at a standstill since a failed summit between the two countries in Vietnam in February 2019.
mgo/dpa/Reuters