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North Korea's firing of seven missiles was the first real test of the new U.S. ground-based missile defense, even though the failure of the long-range Taepodong-2 seconds after launch prevented the Pentagon from responding with a U.S.-based interceptor, defense officials said yesterday.
The 9,000-mile-range Taepodong-2 failed after 42 seconds and several hundred miles of flight, but was detected by a military Defense Support Program satellite within seconds of its engines igniting at a launch pad at a facility called Taepodong on the northeastern coast.
But NBC News last night reported, citing U.S. intelligence officials, that North Korea was not backing down and appears to be preparing another Taepodong-2 launch, having another missile in the last stages of assembly.
President Bush told reporters yesterday the long-range missile "tumbled into the sea" during the failure.
The Taepodong-2 was the most important of the seven missiles, including one short-range missile that the Japanese and South Korean militaries say was launched yesterday. U.S. officials say the series of launches was part of a show of force by the reclusive communist state.
The launch failure shows that the North Koreans will need to continue development work, the officials said. It is not known how many additional Taepodong-2s North Korea has built.
The missile volley will likely lead Japan's government to speed up development of sea-based missile defenses, the officials said.
Six shorter-range missiles were fired, including at least two Scud-C type missiles and two 620-mile range Nodongs. All were fired from a base in Kittaeryong, located along the southern part of North Korea's east coast. North Korea makes two versions of the Soviet-design Scud that have ranges of between 300 and 500 miles, in addition to Nodong and Taepodong missiles.
The South Korean defense minister also has warned that further tests were possible, according to South Korean news reports today.
"There is a possibility that North Korea will fire additional missiles," the Yonhap news agency quoted Yoon Kwang-ung as telling lawmakers, although South Korean newspapers centered their speculation on the shorter-range weapons.









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