Banned N. Korean ICBM Takes Longest Flight Yet

Banned N. Korean ICBM Takes Longest Flight Yet
Above: A man watches a news broadcast with file footage of a North Korean missile test in Seoul on Oct. 31, 2024. Image copyright: Jung Yeon-Je/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

The Facts

  • North Korea confirmed on Thursday that it launched an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), which is in violation of UN sanctions. According to South Korea and Japan, the ICBM flew for 86 minutes before falling into the water.

  • This is believed to be the longest time an ICBM from North Korea has ever been in the air. According to South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), Pyongyang fired the missile at a "lofted angle," meaning it rose almost vertically instead of horizontally.

  • According to Japan, which monitored the ICBM's trajectory, the missile traveled at an altitude of over 4K miles for approximately 620 miles before landing in the water just outside Japan's exclusive economic zone.

The Spin

Pro-establishment narrative

This launch is unacceptable. To maintain peace and security across the Korean Peninsula and beyond, Pyongyang must stop its provocative and destabilizing acts. North Korea must also promptly resume disarmament talks instead of cooperating with Russia by providing weapons and soldiers.

Establishment-critical narrative

The US and its regional allies are to blame for escalated tensions on the peninsula, and this test should wake them up to their approach to relations in this region. North Korea, Russia, and China have never been closer, and the US must rethink its policies if it wants to ensure its security moving forward.

Metaculus Prediction

Establishment split

CRITICAL

PRO

More neutral establishment stance articles

Sign Up for Our Free Newsletters
Sign Up for Our Free Newsletters

Sign Up!
Sign Up Now!