North Korean leader Kim Jong-un supervised a "new weapon" test, state media reported Sunday, the latest in a series of launches that United States (US) President Donald Trump has played down as Washington seeks to restart nuclear talks with Pyongyang.
The report carried by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) followed Trump's comments that Kim had expressed a willingness to meet once the US-South Korean exercises are over and apologised for the slew of missile tests.
Saturday's launch was the North's fifth test in two weeks as it protests the annual military drills under way between Seoul and Washington which always infuriates Pyongyang.
Defence officials in Seoul said Pyongyang fired what appeared to be two short-range ballistic missiles on Saturday, flying 400 kilometres (250 miles) before splashing down in the sea between the Korean peninsula and Japan.
KCNA provided no technical specifications but said Sunday they were a "new weapon" developed to suit the country's "terrain condition".
The official Rodong Sinmun newspaper carried several photos showing a broadly grinning Kim surrounded by his aides as he observed the test.
Kim Dong-yub, a researcher at the Institute for Far Eastern Studies, said the weapons were likely to be new short-range ballistic missiles that are part of Pyongyang's modernisation of its military capabilities.
They were the "North Korean version of a low-cost, high-efficiency retaliation system" aimed at "incapacitating missile defence systems" in the South, Kim added.
In a statement issued by KCNA on Sunday, the North's foreign ministry said the South's refusal to cancel its joint drills with the US had effectively scuppered any prospect of future talks with Seoul.
"They had better keep in mind that this dialogue would be held strictly between (North Korea) and the US, not between the North and the South," it said.
'Small apology'
Trump has appeared determined to secure a denuclearisation agreement with North Korea ahead of next year's US presidential elections, despite a breakdown in talks since he first met Kim in a historic summit in Singapore in June 2018.
Even after their abortive second summit in February – and as Pyongyang has continued to test short-range missiles – Trump has been reluctant to criticise the North Korean leader.
On Friday the US president said he agreed with Kim's opposition to the war games – albeit for financial rather than military reasons – and indicated the missile launches were not important.
"I'll say it again. There have been no nuclear tests. The missile tests have all been short-range. No ballistic missile tests, no long-range missiles," Trump said.
Then on Saturday, Trump said Kim had expressed in a letter his willingness to meet and resume negotiations once the US-South Korean exercises are over.
Kim also offered a "small apology for testing the short-range missiles," the US leader noted, and said the tests would end once the military drills wrap up on 20 August.
The pair last met in late June for brief talks in the Demilitarised Zone separating the two Koreas – and Trump became the first sitting US president ever to step inside the North.
'Licence to fire'
Shin Beom-chul, an analyst at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul, said Trump's downplaying of the launches were equivalent to endorsing the missile tests.
"If Kim felt the missile tests could jeopardise the dialogue momentum, he would refrain. But right now, it's as if North Korea has a licence to fire short-range missiles," Shin said.
The foreign ministry in Pyongyang said Trump's comments effectively recognised the North’s "self-defensive rights” as a sovereign state to conduct "small" missile tests.
Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul, said by appealing directly to Trump, Kim was "trying to drive a wedge between Washington and Seoul" as Pyongyang seeks to break the alliance.
Washington and Seoul pledged in March to scale down their joint drills in an effort to foster denuclearisation efforts.
While past exercises involved extensive combat field training – with thousands of American troops coming in from several countries to take part – the current games are decidedly low-key, with the emphasis on computer-simulated scenarios. - AFP