North Korea ‘begging for war’ with ballistic missile launches
South Korea will triple its THAAD anti-missile system
Monday, 4th September 2017
North Korea appears to be preparing for the launch of ballistic missiles, possibly intercontinental, according to South Korea's defence ministry.
And US ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said earlier today that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was "begging for war" as she urged the UN Security Council to adopt the strongest sanctions measures possible to stop Pyongyang's nuclear programme.
The latest developments follow North Korea's claim on Sunday that it tested a hydrogen bomb.
This prompted the US to warn of a "massive military response" if it or any of its allies were threatened.
South Korea will now ramp up its own military response, its defence ministry said.
Since Sunday the South has fired missiles into the sea to simulate an attack on the North's main nuclear testing site.
It is also preparing fresh military drills with the US.
Chang Kyung-soo, an official with South Korea's defence ministry, told MPs that Seoul was seeing preparations in the North but did not provide details about how officials had reached that assessment.
He told a parliamentary hearing: "We have continued to see signs of possibly more ballistic missile launches. We also forecast North Korea could fire an intercontinental ballistic missile."
South Korea currently has two of the US' Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) launchers and said it would now install another four.
The South's defence ministry said in a statement: "Four remaining launchers will soon be temporarily deployed through consultations between South Korea and the US to counter growing nuclear and missile threats from the North."
Meanwhile, Japan said it would be seeking to add the US-developed Aegis shore-based missile intercept system to its defences as a result of the latest test.
North Korea ‘has miniaturised weapon’
On Sunday, Kim Jong Un's regime said North Korea's sixth nuclear test was a "perfect success" and involved a bomb designed to be mounted on its newly developed intercontinental ballistic missile.
South Korean officials said the blast was the equivalent to 50,000 tons of TNT (50kt), three times the size of that which destroyed Hiroshima at the end of WWII.
The Hiroshima blast vapourised everything within two miles of the blast centre and killed 66,000 people.
The officials later added that they believe the North's latest weapon had been miniaturised to fit into a missile.
There has been no independent confirmation that the detonation was a hydrogen bomb rather than a less powerful atomic weapon similar to those Pyongyang has tested in the past.
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