North Korea fires anti-aircraft missile before UN Security Council meeting

PYONGYANG, 03 October 2021, (TON): North Korea has successfully fired a new anti-aircraft missile, state media said on Friday, as the United Nations Security Council prepares to meet in response to a recent flurry of weapons tests by the nuclear-armed nation.

The official Korean Central News Agency said that the anti-aircraft missile had a “remarkable combat performance” and included twin rudder controls and other new technologies.

A picture in the official Rodong Sinmun newspaper showed the missile ascending at an angle into the sky from a launch vehicle.

It is the latest in a series of tension-raising steps by Pyongyang, which had until recently been biding its time since the change in US administrations in January.

In September, it launched what it said was a long-range cruise missile, and earlier this week tested what it described as a hypersonic gliding vehicle, which South Korea’s military said appeared to be in the early stages of development.

And on Wednesday, the North’s leader Kim Jong Un decried Washington’s repeated offers of talks without preconditions as a “petty trick”, accusing the Biden administration of continuing the “hostile policy” of its predecessors.

South Korea’s defence ministry told media “it was unable to immediately confirm the latest launch.”

Anti-aircraft missiles are much smaller than the ballistic missiles the North is banned from developing under United Nations Security Council resolutions, and harder to detect from afar.

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