Trenchcoats and rockets: Kim supervises N. Korea weapons test

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SEOUL, Nov 29, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un supervised
Thursday’s test of what it called a “super-large multiple launch rocket
system”, Pyongyang’s state media said Friday, hinting that it could be the
last in that series.

Pyongyang fired what Seoul described as “unidentified projectiles” on
Thursday — the Thanksgiving holiday in the US — South Korean officials
said, as nuclear talks between the North and the United States remain
deadlocked.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the weapons were ballistic missiles
which represented “serious defiance” of the international community —
Pyongyang is banned from such launches under UN Security Council sanctions
over its nuclear and missiles programmes.

North Korea’s KCNA news agency released pictures of a smiling Kim attending
the launch wearing a black leather trenchcoat, being applauded by fur-hatted
troops.

It also showed an image of one of the rockets ascending into the evening
sky in clouds of flame from a four-barrelled truck-mounted launching system.

The test “aimed to finally examine” the system’s combat abilities, and
“proved the military and technical superiority of the weapon system and its
firm reliability”, KCNA said, adding that Kim expressed “great satisfaction”.

The phrasing was an advance from a previous launch in September, when KCNA
said that some aspects of it remained to be tested.

Kim had ensured that “lots of arms and equipment of powerful performance
were developed and perfected this year for the military”, KCNA said.

The agency’s wording implied that Thursday’s test “may have been the last”
in the super-large multiple rocket launcher system, said Rachel Minyoung Lee,
senior analyst at specialist site NK News.

But she added: “There are no shortages of weapons North Korea can test this
year, or even in 2020, if it wants to.”

It was the fourth test of the Pyongyang’s “super-large” system since
August, and it has also fired other weapons in recent months as it seeks to
up pressure on Washington.

Nuclear negotiations between the US and North Korea have been at a
standstill since the Hanoi summit between President Donald Trump and leader
Kim Jong Un broke up in February, and Pyongyang has since demanded Washington
change its approach by the end of the year.

Trump hinted at the prospect of a fourth meeting with Kim in a tweet
earlier this month, only to be rebuffed by North Korea, which said it had no
interest in summits “that bring nothing to us”.

In recent years, North Korea has tended not to carry out launches in
December — the last was in 2015.