UNITED NATIONS: The UN Security Council scheduled an emergency meeting on the latest North Korean missile launch at the request of the US and Japan. The UN said the council will hold closed consultations on the launch late Wednesday afternoon.
South Korean officials said a ballistic missile fired from a North Korean submarine on Wednesday flew about 500 km, the longest distance achieved by the North for such a weapon.
The US and Japan earlier called for urgent talks at the UN Security Council after North Korea test-fired a submarine-launched missile, diplomats said.
North Korea is barred under UN resolutions from any use of ballistic-missile technology, but Pyongyang has carried out several launches following its fourth nuclear test in January. Diplomats said they expected the council to discuss the latest missile launch later Wednesday.
South Korea’s military said the missile, launched in the early morning from a submarine in the East Sea (Sea of Japan), flew about 500 km, a substantial improvement on similar tests in the past.
Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the missile breached his country’s Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) and condemned what he called an “unforgivable, reckless act” and a grave threat to Japan’s security.
Earlier this month, North Korea fired a land-launched ballistic missile directly into Japanese-controlled waters for the first time, drawing an outraged response from Tokyo.
But the council failed to condemn that Aug. 2 launch after China sought to include language in a statement opposing the THAAD missile defense system that the US plans to deploy in South Korea.
China’s Ambassador Liu Jieyi on Tuesday took a swipe at the US and its allies when he stressed the need to “avoid any action that is provocative to each other and may escalate tensions” on the Korean peninsula.
Japan is calling on all UN member-states to redouble their efforts to fully implement a resolution adopted in March that imposed the toughest sanctions yet on North Korea. North Korea has been hit by five sets of UN sanctions since it first tested a nuclear device in 2006.
UN calls emergency meet on N. Korea missile test
UN calls emergency meet on N. Korea missile test
Putin and Trump discuss Iran and Ukraine wars: Kremlin
- Putin and Trump held a one-hour call in their first talks since December
MOSCOW: Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump on Monday discussed the Iran war and Ukraine conflict during a “frank and constructive” telephone call, the Kremlin said.
Putin and Trump held a one-hour call in their first talks since December and Washington sought the discussion, Putin’s diplomatic adviser Yuri Ushakov was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.
“The accent was placed on the situation surrounding the conflict with Iran and the bilateral negotiations underway with the representatives of the United States on settling the Ukrainian question,” Ushakov said.
Ushakov said Putin called for a “quick political and diplomatic settlement” to the US-Israeli war against Iran, which has been a key ally for Russia.
The Russian leader also gave Trump “a description of the current situation on the line of contact where Russian troops are progressing with a lot of success,” he added, referring to the Ukraine war.
Putin “positively evaluated the mediation efforts undertaken” by Trump in the Ukraine conflict, the adviser said. A series of talks have been held between Russian and US officials and between Russian, US and Ukrainian officials, but with no breakthrough in efforts to reach a ceasefire.
Ushakov said Washington had wanted to “discuss a series of extremely important questions linked to the current international situation.”
“The conversation was serious and constructive,” he added.
Trump and Putin held a summit in Alaska in August last year.









