North Korean projectile believed to have exploded soon after launch, South Korea says

This
 undated picture released from North Korea's official Korean Central 
News Agency (KCNA) on March 10, 2022 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong 
Un (C) inspecting the country's Aerospace Development Administration in 
Pyongyang. 
Seoul, South Korea (CNN)A North Korean projectile is presumed to have exploded soon after launch Wednesday, the South Korean military said, a failure in what would have been the Kim Jong Un regime's 10th such launch this year.
The explosion is believed to have come around an altitude of 20 kilometers (12.5 miles), a South Korean military official said.
South Korea said the projectile was launched from the area of Sunan, near the capital of Pyongyang.
North Korea's previous two launches, on February 26 and March 4, which were also from the Sunan area, were intended to test a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) system, the US Defense Department said last week.
South
 Korean and US intelligence authorities are continuing to analyze the 
details of Wednesday's failed launch, South Korea officials said in a 
text sent to reporters.
In
 a statement last week, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby strongly 
condemned the recent spate of North Korean launches, describing them as a
 "brazen violation of multiple United Nations Security Council 
resolutions." 
On
 Tuesday, the US military staged exercises on and around the Korean 
Peninsula to show its readiness in the wake of North Korean activity, 
including simulating ballistic missile defense systems.
The
 US Army's 35th Air Defense Artillery Brigade moved to a remote 
location, "occupying its wartime defensive position, emplacing the 
Patriot missile system, and executing air and missile defense operations
 under a simulated combat scenario," US Forces Korea said in a press 
release.
And
 at sea, F-35 and F/A-18 fighter jets flying off the aircraft carrier 
USS Abraham Lincoln along with US Air Force assets based in the region 
put on a show of force in the Yellow Sea off the western coast of South 
Korea, according to a statement from the US Navy's 7th Fleet in Japan.
The statement also said the US has increased intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance activities in the Yellow Sea.
"We
 have made clear our growing concern over the significant increase in 
DPRK's (North Korea's) missile testing, and we will continue to take all
 necessary measures to ensure the security of the United States and our 
allies," the statement from 7th Fleet spokesperson Lt. Nicholas Lingo 
said.
 
 
 

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