North Korea fired another two ballistic missiles on Thursday – the sixth such banned launch in less than two weeks.
Pyongyang on Wednesday described its recent blitz as “just counteraction measures” to joint US and South Korean military drills.
On Tuesday Pyongyang fired a missile over Japan, prompting the US to call an emergency UN Security Council meeting.
At the meeting the US accused Russia and China of protecting the North from stronger sanctions.
Moscow and Beijing had given Pyongyang “blanket protection”, the US ambassador to the UN said. The Chinese and Russian representatives said increased dialogue was better than punishment.
On Wednesday the US, Japan and South Korea carried out military drills which they said were a response to Tuesday’s launch. The US said there was “no equivalency” between a banned missile test-fire and security drills.
As the Security Council wrapped up a meeting on North Korea’s dangerous ballistic missile launches, we learned that Pyongyang launched two more missiles.
Make no mistake: the two Council members that are blocking us from taking action are enabling North Korea.
— Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield (@USAmbUN) October 6, 2022
However, North Korea sees such exercises as proof its enemies are preparing for an attack.
South Korea and Japan said the first of Thursday’s missiles, launched at about 06:00 local time (21:00 GMT) flew about 350km (217 miles) with a maximum altitude of around 100km, while the second missile had a flight range of about 800km at an altitude of around 50km.
The recent flurry of launches is strongly reminiscent of the period leading up to its last nuclear weapon test in 2017.
Back then, as is happening now, the North tested missiles, there was no dialogue with the US, and Pyongyang fired two missiles over Japan.
Satellite imagery shows that the North has been restoring tunnels at their nuclear testing site, which they had claimed to have destroyed in 2018 during a short-lived diplomatic rapprochement with the US under President Trump.
Last month, North Korea also revised its nuclear laws, with leader Kim Jong Un declaring his country an “irreversible” nuclear power.
With everything in place, Kim appears to be waiting for a politically opportune moment to carry out its seventh nuclear test.
Analysts believe a test is most likely to happen during the window of three weeks between the Communist Party Congress in China later this month and the US mid-term elections in early November.