North Korea Fires Two Ballistic Missiles Into East Sea, Says South

North Korea has fired two ballistic missiles across its east coast, South Korea’s military has confirmed.

Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has called the launch “outrageous”, saying it threatened peace and security in the region.

It is North Korea’s second weapons test in recent days, after the launch of a new long-range cruise missile.

Short-range missiles flew around 800 km (500 miles) at a maximum altitude of 60km.

According to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, they were launched from central inland areas of North Korea and flew east towards the Sea of Japan, also known as the East Sea.

It says its military was maintaining “a full readiness posture in close cooperation with the US”.

The US says the launches do not pose an immediate threat to “US personnel or territory, or to our allies”.

Ballistic missile tests contravene United Nations resolutions designed to curb the North’s nuclear activities.

They can carry either nuclear or conventional warheads and are classed according to how far they can travel – the furthest of which being an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).

North Korea has in the past tested ICBMs said to be capable of reaching nearly all of western Europe and about half of the US mainland.

Pyongyang has said that over the past weekend it tested a long-range cruise missile capable of hitting much of Japan, calling it “a strategic weapon of great significance”.

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