
This has become a record-breaking year for the nuclear-armed country’s missile programme, after it resumed testing ICBMs for the first time since 2017 and broke its self-imposed moratorium on long-range launches as denuclearisation talks stalled.
Japan’s Coast Guard said the missile was likely to have landed in the sea roughly 210km west of Hokkaido.
Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida said there had been no reports of damage but the North’s repeated missile launches could not be tolerated. He said the missile appeared to have landed inside Japan’s exclusive economic zone.
ICBMs are North Korea’s longest-range weapon and are designed to carry a nuclear warhead as far as any location in the continental US.
A day earlier, North Korea fired a short-range ballistic missile while its foreign minister, Choe Son-hui, warned of “fiercer military responses” to US moves to boost its military presence, saying Washington was taking a “gamble it will regret”.
In a statement carried by state media, Choe condemned a Sunday trilateral summit of the US, South Korea and Japan during which those countries’ leaders criticised Pyongyang’s weapons tests and pledged greater security cooperation.
This year North Korea has conducted a record number of ballistic missile tests, which are banned by United Nations Security Council resolutions that have sanctioned the country over its missile and nuclear weapons programmes.
Friday’s launch came as US vice-president Kamala Harris was in Thailand for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit, amid geopolitical tensions over the war in Ukraine and other flashpoints such as Taiwan and the Korean peninsula.
Long-range missiles
ICBMs are ballistic missiles with a minimum range of about 5,500km, chiefly designed for nuclear weapons delivery. Some are capable of travelling 10,000km or more.
Some missiles carry only one warhead but analysts suspect that North Korea is seeking to develop ICBMs that can carry multiple warheads, each able to navigate to a separate aimpoint, on independently targetable re-entry vehicles.
North Korea’s last suspected ICBM test was on Nov 3, when it fired multiple missiles into the sea in what it said was a protest against allied military drills by South Korea and the US.
Based on photos released by state media, analysts said the Nov 3 launch appeared to be a previously unseen ICBM, possibly a variant of the Hwasong-15 ICBM, which was first tested in 2017 and may have been launched in March as well.
A South Korean official said the Nov 3 test may have failed at high altitude. South Korean and US officials have reported that a number of North Korean ICBM tests appeared to have failed this year.
North Korea claimed to have successfully launched its massive new Hwasong-17 ICBM for the first time on March 24, but South Korean and US officials concluded that launch appears to have been the previously launched Hwasong-15.
The March 24 launch was nevertheless the biggest ICBM test ever staged by the North, flying 67.5 minutes to a maximum altitude of 6,248.5km, North Korean state media reported.
The North has also fired hundreds of artillery shells into the sea recently as South Korea and the US staged exercises, some of which involved Japan.