Report: N. Korea launches missiles
The ministry said it had detected two launches in the morning, followed by another in the afternoon, Yonhap reported.
The missiles were fired in a northeasterly direction, away from South Korean waters, the ministry said.
South Korea has beefed up
monitoring on North Korea and is maintaining a high-level of readiness
to deal with any risky developments, the ministry added, according to
Yonhap.
According to the Arms
Control Association, a U.S.-based organization, short-range guided
missiles are generally classified as those traveling less than 1,000
kilometers (about 620 miles.)
Tensions in the region
have eased in recent days since a fraught period last month that
included near daily North Korean threats of war.
U.S. and South Korean
officials feared at that time that Kim Jong Un's regime was planning to
carry out a test launch of longer-range ballistic missiles, believed to
be Musudans. The South Korean government says they have a maximum range
of 3,500 kilometers (2,175 miles).
Andrew Salmon, a
journalist and author based in the South Korean capital, Seoul, said
North Korea's reported launch of short-range missiles Saturday should
not cause the same degree of concern as the launch of a satellite or
medium-range Musudan rocket.
"It's a short-range
tactical weapon. If any other country launched this kind of weapon, it's
a routine test, nobody would be too worried. It's really simply because
it's North Korea doing this that it raises concerns," he said.
The situation is much less tense in the region than it was last month, Salmon said.
"The North Koreans have
significantly de-escalated their bellicosity and their rhetoric since
the end of April," he said. "The South Korean government, I suspect,
will not be strongly condemnatory of this test because right now they
are very, very keen to get the North Koreans to the negotiating table."
The recent tensions
flared after the North's long-range rocket launch in December and
underground nuclear test in February, both of which were widely
condemned.
Pyongyang's fiery
rhetoric intensified in March as the U.N. Security Council voted to
tighten sanctions on the regime following the nuclear test.
Annual U.S.-South Korean
military drills in South Korea also fueled the North's anger,
especially when the United States carried out displays of strength that
included nuclear-capable B2 stealth bombers.
North Korea is demanding recognition as a nuclear power, something the United States refuses to countenance.
Last month's crisis
resulted in the closure of the Kaesong Industrial Complex, the last
major symbol of inter-Korean cooperation.
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