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North Korea Unveiled New Ballistic Missile

A missile unit of Korean People's Army (KPA) march during a grand military parade to celebrate its 75th founding anniversary at the Kim Il Sung square in Pyongyang, April 2007. North Korea has unveiled its latest intermediate-range ballistic missile at the parade, amid an international standoff over its nuclear programme, according to a report released on Sunday. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) May 13, 2007
North Korea has unveiled its latest intermediate-range ballistic missile at a military parade, amid an international standoff over its nuclear programme, a report said Sunday. The new missile, using former Soviet Union's technologies of the 1960s, is estimated to have a range of about 5,000 kilometres (3,100 miles), the Asahi Shimbun daily reported, citing unnamed government sources from Japan and South Korea.

After studying satellite photographs of a major military parade on April 25 attended by North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il, the United States concluded there was a newly developed missile and told the governments of Japan and South Korea about it, the report said.

Although no test-launch of the new missile has been confirmed, the Pacific island of Guam, an unincorporated US territory, is presumably within range of the missile, it said.

North Korea tested seven ballistic missiles last July, sparking international alarm and United Nations sanctions.

A nuclear test last October further heightened tensions. In February the communist state agreed to scrap its nuclear programme as part of a six-nation deal, but the agreement is in limbo amid a row over US financial sanctions.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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India Tests Nuclear-Capable Surface Missile
Bhubaneswar (AFP) India, May 9, 2007
India on Wednesday successfully tested a nuclear-capable ballistic missile from a site in the eastern state of Orissa, defence sources said. The test of the Prithvi-1 (Earth 1) surface-to-surface missile took place at Chandipur-on-sea, about 200 kilometers (125 miles) northeast of Orissa's state capital Bhubaneswar.







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