The US Strategic Command said North Korea
fired two presumed Rodong missiles simultaneously on Wednesday.
It said initial indications reveal one of the
missiles exploded immediately after launch, while the second was tracked over
North Korea and into the Sea of Japan.
According to South Korea and Japan, one
suspected Rodong missile lifted off from the North's western Hwanghae province
and flew across the country before falling in waters between the Korean
Peninsula and Japan.
Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff said that it
"strongly condemns" the missile launch because it explicitly shows
the North's intentions of being able to launch missile attacks on South Korea
and neighbouring countries.
Japan's defence ministry said the missile
landed inside Japan's exclusive economic zone, the 200-nautical-mile offshore
area where a nation has sovereign rights for exploring and exploiting
resources.
Japanese media reported it was the first
North Korean missile that has splashed down in Japan's EEZ.
"It imposes a serious threat to Japan's
security and it is unforgivable act of violence toward Japan's security,"
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said.
North Korea has previously fired Rodong and
other missiles into the sea but South Korean analysts say Wednesday's flight
was one of the longest for a North Korean test.
Several North Korean rockets have gone
further and even over Japan. But Pyongyang called them satellite launches while
Washington, Seoul and Tokyo said they were disguised tests of missile
technology.
After several failures, the North put its
first satellite into space aboard a long-range rocket in December 2012 and
conducted another successful satellite launch in February.
In June, North Korea, after a string of
failures, sent another type of mid-range missile known as "Musudan"
more than 870 miles high.
Analysts say the high-altitude flight meant
North Korea had made progress in its push to be able to strike US forces
throughout the region.
North Korea routinely conducts weapons tests,
but the latest launch came after North Korea warned of unspecified "physical
counter-actions" against a US plan to deploy an advanced missile defence
system in South Korea by the end of next year.
Seoul and Washington officials said they need
the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defence, or THAAD, system to better cope with
what they call North Korea's increasing military threats.
North Korea called the system a provocation
that it says is only aimed at bolstering US military hegemony in the region.
Pyongyang is expected to carry out more
weapons launches in coming weeks to protest against annual US-South Korean
military drills that begin later this month. North Korea describes the drills
as an invasion rehearsal.
The Korean Peninsula remains in a technical
state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice, not a
peace treaty. About 28,500 US troops are stationed in South Korea and tens of
thousands of more in Japan.
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