Trump says still confident in Kim after N.Korea test launch

AFP  |  Washington 

US voiced confidence Saturday that would not "break his promise," following what if confirmed would be North Korea's first short-range missile launch for more than a year.

"But I believe that fully realizes the great economic potential of North Korea, & will do nothing to interfere or end it," he added.

"He also knows that I am with him & does not want to break his promise to me. Deal will happen!"

Since their historic summit meeting in in 2018, Trump has said Kim remains committed to the "complete denuclearization" of the

He has insisted the two leaders remain close even after their follow-up meeting in collapsed in February, and that Kim would maintain his moratorium on long-range missile and nuclear tests.

But with negotiations lagging, the North appears to be testing the US side.

The latest launch followed last month's test-firing of very-short-range tactical weapons, and it came days after a senior North Korean chastised US for making "foolish and dangerous" comments in nuclear talks with the North.

Analysts said appears intent on raising pressure on as those talks remain deadlocked.

The two sides have been clashing over the North's demand for substantive economic sanctions relief and the US's insistence that the North make concrete concessions toward eliminating its atomic arsenal.

North stressed that Saturday's launch "does not violate Kim Jong Un's self-imposed missile-testing moratorium," which "only applied to intercontinental-range ballistic missiles." But a statement from South Korea's presidential said it was "greatly concerned," calling it a violation of a military agreement signed by both Koreas last year.

North "fired a number of short-range projectiles" from near the town of starting at 9:06 am (0006 GMT), the South's Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.

The projectiles traveled northeast from 70 to 200 kilometers towards the East Sea, also known as the Sea of Japan, the JCS added.

In an earlier statement, it had said launched an unidentified short-range missile.

The last North Korean missile launch was in November 2017.

The latest firing comes just a day after South Korean said Pyongyang should show "visible, concrete and substantial" denuclearization action if it wants sanctions relief -- the issue at the center of the debacle.

Earlier this week, North Korean warned of an "unwanted outcome" if it did not adjust its stance on economic sanctions.

Hodo Peninsula, where Saturday's firing took place, has been used since the 1960s for "live-fire testing, training exercises for artillery and coastal defense cruise missiles," according to the respected 38 North website.

In recent years, Hodo has been "increasingly used for ballistic missile and long-range artillery rocket testing," it added.

Since the collapse of the summit, South Korean Moon Jae-in -- who brokered the first meeting between the mercurial US and North Korean leaders -- has tried to salvage diplomacy, but Pyongyang has remained largely unresponsive.

Last week, on the anniversary of the Panmunjom summit between Moon and Kim, Pyongyang's state media KCNA said and "keep pushing the situation of the and the region to an undesirable phase", criticizing their joint military exercises.

Saturday's launch came days before US is to visit and South

Washington had said Biegun would discuss "efforts to advance the final, fully verified denuclearization of North Korea" with officials in and

Seoul's spoke to Biegun on Saturday to discuss Pyongyang's latest launch, the South's foreign ministry said.

"Kim has decided to remind the world -- and specifically the -- that his weapons capabilities are growing by the day," said Harry J. Kazianis, of at the Center for

"My fear is that we are at the beginning stages of a slide back to the days of nuclear war threats and personal insults, a dangerous cycle of spiking tensions that must be avoided at all costs.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, May 04 2019. 22:25 IST