Warzone/The Drive: All You Need to Know After North Korea's Longest Downrange Missile Launch
The reclusive regime proved it can hit Guam as the US and its allies continue to debate the best courses of action.
North Korea has successfully conducted its longest downrange ballistic missile test ever with yet another provocative launch over Japan, showing it has at least the range to hit the U.S. Pacific Ocean territory of Guam. The incident came after the United Nations Security Council hit the increasingly isolated country with the toughest sanctions to date. At the same time there's an ongoing debate between the United states and its allies all about how to constrain the Hermit Kingdom amid concerns that whatever they decide could provoke an arms race in East Asia.
On Sept. 14, 2017, the North Koreans fired what appeared to be another Hwasong-12 intermediate range ballistic missile. It reached a maximum altitude of approximately almost 480 miles and traveled a total distance of around 2,300 miles, over the Japanese home island of Hokkaido, before falling into the Pacific Ocean some 17 minutes later. This was particularly notable since it was a much shallower launch envelope than in previous tests and more representative of what one might expect to see in an actual strike.
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WNU Editor: Bottom line .... the North Koreans are getting better at this.
1 comment:
Honestly, what are we waiting? The NoKo have 100 warheads and we can say "oh no, we cannot do anything against NoKo, now"!
We are always fearing the weapons of NoKo and fear the reaction of China and Russia because their nuclear power. Well, what if we reverse the problem? If we are taking military action vs NoKo who can think that China and/or Russia doesn't fear our nuclear power?
We are a weak democracy and we try to hide our self behind our little finger.
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