By John J. Metzler

There they go again! North Korea’s reclusive communist regime ended the year with a provocative intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) launch, flying near Japan and splashing down in the Pacific. The ominous firing of a powerful Hwasong-18 rocket came a month after Pyongyang put a spy satellite into orbit.

The latest ICBM launch, the fifth this year, along with over 25 other ballistic missiles, plus three satellite firings using ballistic missile technology, places the quaintly titled Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) in a league of its own for missile proliferation.

These launches send the undeniably menacing message that the DPRK intends to hide in the shadows of the Ukraine and Gaza wars and develop its offensive military capacity, to bully nearby South Korea and Japan, and to set the political template that North Korea remains a nuclear power.

Pyongyang thumbs its nose at the international community despite multiple U.N. Security Council resolutions prohibiting these actions.

During a Security Council meeting following the latest launches, a joint statement on North Korea’s proliferation warned, “We condemn, in the strongest terms, the DPRK’s Dec. 17 ICBM launch and those before it. Because we cannot become inured to this behavior. We cannot turn a blind eye to the DPRK’s continued pursuit of nuclear weapons, or for that matter, its malicious cyber activity and flagrant human rights violations and abuses.”

The statement added sternly, “Council silence sends the wrong message to Pyongyang and all proliferators.”

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres has strongly condemned the launch and urged the DPRK to fully comply with its international obligations under Security Council resolutions.

Thus while nine Council members including the United States, France, Japan, South Korea and the United Kingdom called for restraint, the glaring political reality remains that China and Russia, two UNSC members holding the powerful veto, remain committed to their comrade the DPRK as a disrupter of East Asia’s status quo.

Significantly, South Korea’s Ambassador Hwang Joon-kook voiced his deep concern that the UNSC is “locked in a stalemate and being ridiculed by the DPRK.”

The council’s statement added, “While we urge the DPRK to abandon its unlawful WMD and ballistic missile programs, and instead invest in feeding the people in North Korea, we also urge the Security Council, every member of the Security Council, to exercise its responsibility and overcome its prolonged silence.”

Diplomats added hopefully, “We encourage the DPRK to engage in diplomacy…and help the North Korean people suffering from food insecurity and a lack of basic humanitarian goods.”

That’s wishful thinking. As this column has long asserted, the Pyongyang leadership has long favored neutrons for the regime over nutrition for its own people as a state policy.

DPRK proliferation is sadly nothing new; in fact it’s been expanding dangerously in the past three years. While the Security Council now almost ritualistically condemns the launches, it’s time to ask a few obvious questions.

First, Pyongyang communists want a “deterrent” to guarantee regime survival. Speaking at the UNSC briefing, DPRK Delegate Kim Song said that the latest ICBM launch by Pyongyang is a “warning countermeasure.” In a rash and reckless statement, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un said the firing of the ICBM demonstrated his commitment not to hesitate to launch a nuclear attack in the event of nuclear provocations from the enemy.

U.S. Deputy Ambassador Robert Wood stressed before the Security Council, “Meanwhile, the DPRK itself announced it is undertaking not defensive countermeasures, but offensive ones. No claim by the DPRK can repudiate that fact.”

Second, as U.N. Assistant Secretary General Khaled Khiari stated, “The launch of yet another ICBM is of serious concern…regrettably the DPRK did once again not issue any airspace or maritime safety notifications. The unannounced launches represent a serious risk to international civil aviation and maritime traffic.” Air traffic corridors around Japan and South Korea are densely packed with civilian flights. It’s just a matter of time and bad luck before a missile returning to the sea near the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido accidentally hits a passenger aircraft causing civilian carnage.

Third, the firings of these ICBMs pose a clear and present danger to East Asia and equally to the continental United States. And this is OK? Though the missiles are not carrying warheads, what if they were? Let’s get real, what is the ultimate purpose of these rockets? Clearly they are offensive military weapons of mass destruction, not Pyongyang’s pyrotechnic displays to woo the world with the power of the Kim Dynasty.

John J. Metzler is a United Nations correspondent covering diplomatic and defense issues. He is the author of "Divided Dynamism The Diplomacy of Separated Nations; Germany, Korea, China."

QOSHE - North Korean missile launches: there they go again! - John J. Metzler
menu_open
Columnists Actual . Favourites . Archive
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close
Aa Aa Aa
- A +

North Korean missile launches: there they go again!

43 0
27.12.2023

By John J. Metzler

There they go again! North Korea’s reclusive communist regime ended the year with a provocative intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) launch, flying near Japan and splashing down in the Pacific. The ominous firing of a powerful Hwasong-18 rocket came a month after Pyongyang put a spy satellite into orbit.

The latest ICBM launch, the fifth this year, along with over 25 other ballistic missiles, plus three satellite firings using ballistic missile technology, places the quaintly titled Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) in a league of its own for missile proliferation.

These launches send the undeniably menacing message that the DPRK intends to hide in the shadows of the Ukraine and Gaza wars and develop its offensive military capacity, to bully nearby South Korea and Japan, and to set the political template that North Korea remains a nuclear power.

Pyongyang thumbs its nose at the international community despite multiple U.N. Security Council resolutions prohibiting these actions.

During a Security Council meeting following the latest launches, a joint statement on North Korea’s proliferation warned, “We condemn, in the strongest terms, the DPRK’s Dec. 17 ICBM launch and those before it. Because........

© The Korea Times


Get it on Google Play