Friday, April 5, 2013

Washington warns North Korea against any further provocation


    The Pentagon Friday that any provocative action would be unfortunate extra after North Korea's decision to publish two medium-range missiles on the east coast.
The Pentagon spokesman George Little - for journalists - "The missile tests outside the framework of the obligations they will constitute a provocation ... the application of international regulations and respect their commitments."
 
And prohibits a number of UN Security Council resolutions on Pyongyang to undertake any activity or nuclear ballistic.
 
An official at the South Korean government was "sure that North Korea was quoted by train in the first week Musudan missile mid-range to the east coast and Nspthma on the mechanics of equipped with obsolete firing".
 
Little refused to confirm this information, speaking of "intelligence affairs."
 
Was presented Musudan medium-range missile for the first time in a military parade in October 2010 and theoretically range up to 3000 km, meaning it can hit territory of South Korea or Japan.
 
May also affects the missile targets after 4000 km in the case were shipped lightweight, and is thus able to hit the island of Guam in the Pacific Ocean, which lies 3380 km from North Korea and stationed 6,000 American soldiers.
 


The South Korean official said himself that "the North seems ready to launch the rockets without warning."
 
The news agency Yonhap - Thursday - military sources as saying that the North might be a missile test on April 15, which falls festival birth of the founder of the communist regime North Korea's Kim Il-Sung, who died in 1994.
 
He also called Little Pyongyang to ease her speech, which he described as a "rough and escalation," adding that the United States and South Korea joint military Stnfman course of maneuvering within the specified period, which ends on April 30.

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