By Alex Jensen
SEOUL
North
Korea appears to have botched a third major ballistic missile launch in
less than two weeks Thursday, according to South Korea's military.
Having
failed with an attempted launch of a medium-range Musudan projectile
earlier this month, the same model is believed to have crashed early in
the morning.
"The
missile, presumed to be a Musudan, was fired around 6.40 a.m. [2140GMT
Wednesday] from the vicinity of Wonsan, but it appears to have crashed a
few seconds later," a South Korean military official was quoted as
saying by local news agency Yonhap.
Pyongyang
first paraded the Musudan back in 2010, and the missile could pose a
threat as far as the United States territory of Guam if successfully
deployed.
South Korea and its military ally the U.S. are reportedly "conducting a detailed assessment", the official added.
The
North launched a Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile (SLBM) last
weekend, immediately drawing a statement of condemnation from the United
Nations Security Council -- even though that test was also deemed a
failure.
Strengthened
U.N. sanctions were imposed on North Korea earlier this year in
response to its fourth ever nuclear test and subsequent rocket launch.
Seoul
has been on guard for a fifth test ahead of a party congress in the
authoritarian state next week -- leader Kim Jong-un is thought to be
keen on using a significant provocation as a way of consolidating power.
South
Korean President Park Geun-hye insisted at a Cabinet meeting Thursday
that another North Korean nuclear test would "shake the security order
of Northeast Asia and we can never condone it".
Pyongyang is barred from both nuclear and ballistic missile tests under multiple U.N. resolutions.
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