SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea fired a hypersonic missile this week that successfully hit a target, state news agency KCNA reported on Thursday, its second such test as the country pursues new military capabilities amid stalled denuclearization talks.
The launch on Wednesday was the first by North Korea since October and was detected by several militaries in the region, drawing criticism from governments in Japan, South Korea and the United States.
North Korea first tried a hypersonic missile in September, joining a race led by major military powers to deploy the advanced weapons system.
Hypersonic weapons typically fly toward targets at lower altitudes than ballistic missiles and can achieve more than five times the speed of sound - or about 6,200 km per hour 3,850 mph Despite their name, analysts say the main feature of hypersonic weapons is not speed, which can sometimes be exceeded by traditional ballistic missile warheads, but their maneuverability.
In Wednesday s test, the hypersonic gliding warhead detached from its rocket booster and maneuvered 120 km 75 miles laterally before it hit a target 700 km 430 miles away, KCNA reported.
The missile demonstrated its ability to combine multistep glide jump flight and strong lateral maneuvering, KCNA said.
The flight control and its ability to operate in the winter were confirmed by the test, according to KCNA.
The KCNA report said that the success in the test launches in the hypersonic missile sector has strategic significance in that they haveten a task for modernizing the strategic armed force of the state.
In recent years, North Korea has developed and launched a range of more maneuverable missiles and warheads that could be used to defeat missile defenses like those used by South Korea and the United States, although it has not tested nuclear bombs or long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles ICBMs.
Ankit Panda, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said that the North Koreans identified hypersonic gliders as a potentially useful qualitative means to cope with missile defense.
Hypersonic weapons are considered the next generation of arms that aim to rob adversaries of reaction time and traditional defeat mechanisms.
Last month, the United States completed the construction of a massive, 1.5 billion long-range radar for a homeland missile defense system in Alaska that it says can track ballistic missiles as well as hypersonic weapons from countries such as North Korea.
Photos of the missile used in Wednesday's test show what analysts say is a liquid-fueled ballistic missile with a cone-shaped Maneuverable Re-Entry Vehicle MaRV blasting off a wheeled launch vehicle in a cloud of flame and smoke.
Panda said that it is a different version than the weapon tested last year, and was first unveiled at a defense exhibition in Pyongyang in October.
He said that they likely set up at least two separate development programs. One of these was the Hwasong- 8, which was tested in September. This missile, which shares a number of features in common with the Hwasong- 8, is another. In a call with Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken condemned North Korea's missile launch and discussed cooperation to achieve complete denuclearization and lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula, the U.S. State Department said in a statement.
Since a series of summits between Kim Jong Un and then-U., talks aimed at persuading North Korea to surrender its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile arsenal have stalled. S. President Donald Trump broke down with no agreement.
U.S. President Joe Biden s administration has said it is open to talking to North Korea, but Pyongyang has said American overtures are empty rhetoric without more substantive changes to policies such as military drills and sanctions.
The latest test came just hours before South Korean President Moon Jae-in attended a groundbreaking ceremony for a rail line that he hopes will eventually connect the Korean peninsula, casting doubts over his hopes for an eleventh-hour diplomatic breakthrough with North Korea before his five-year term ends in May.