North Korea tests long-range missile in Iran
North Korea has used a launch-pad in Iran to test-fire a new long-range missile capable of hitting American bases in the Pacific, according to reports from Japan and South Korea. The missile, known as a Musudan-type, was shown to the public at a vast military parade in the North Korean capital Pyongyang, according to the reports.
South Korean and American intelligence reports suggest it was then tested not from North Korean soil but from Iran, with which North Korea is known to have close military co-operation. The missile, which could target the US military on the Pacific island of Guam, was previously unrecorded.
North Korea has a known capacity in short and medium-range missiles, including the Taeopodong-1 which it fired over Japan in 1998 to the alarm of Tokyo and its allies in Washington. However, it has had less success developing long-range missiles. It has been working for several years on a Taepodong-2, which would be targeted at the western seaboard of the United States. But a test last July failed, landing in the sea not far from the North Korean and Russian border.
The new missile is said have been identified by American military satellite pictures of the April rally to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the founding of the North Korean army, and to be based on Soviet technology. The Japanese defence ministry said that the new missile might be able to travel 3,000 miles at middle altitude.
Strange reporting. The missile was shipped to Iran, and yet the entire article is devoted to the threat the Musudan poses to Guam. FYI, the distance between Berlin and Tehran is 1899 nautical miles. The distance between Tehran and the offices of the Telegraph is 2380 nautical miles
Posted by: mrp 2007-05-16 |