Launches come days after Pyongyang suggested docking of US submarine in South Korea could be grounds for nuclear attack
North Korea has fired “several cruise missiles” into the Yellow Sea between China and the Korean Peninsula, South Korea’s joint chiefs of staff (JCS) says.
The launches, which the military said took place about 4am on Saturday (1900 GMT Friday), come as relations between the two Koreas are at one of their lowest points ever and as Pyongyang remained silent about the fate of a US soldier who fled across the border on Tuesday.
“South Korean and US intelligence authorities were analysing the launches while monitoring signs of additional activities,” the JCS said.
North Korea fired two ballistic missiles into the sea on its opposite coast towards Japan just three days earlier.
The recent weapons tests are the latest in a series by Pyongyang and come as Seoul and Washington ramp up defence cooperation in the face of soaring tensions with the North.
Diplomacy between Pyongyang and Seoul has stalled and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has called for ramping up weapons development, including tactical nukes.
In response, Seoul and Washington have staged joint military exercises with advanced stealth jets and US strategic assets, while an American nuclear-armed submarine this week made a South Korean port call for the first time in decades.
North Korea’s defence minister, Kang Sun-nam, issued a veiled threat on Thursday, suggesting the docking of the Kentucky could be grounds for a nuclear attack by the North. Pyongyang has used such rhetoric before, but the comments underscored how strained relations are now.
A day later, South Korea’s defence ministry reiterated that any use of nuclear weapons by the North would prompt an “immediate and decisive response” resulting in the “end” of the Kim regime.
Saturday’s incident also comes as a US soldier is believed to be in North Korean custody after breaking away from a tour group visiting the Demilitarised Zone.
The US has said it is “very concerned” about how Private Second Class Travis King would be treated, and that as of Thursday, Pyongyang had yet to respond to inquiries about the soldier.
King was due to return to the US to face military discipline after serving jail time in South Korea for assault.
Associated Press contributed to this report