Oct. 28,
2025, 7:37 p.m. ETOct. 28, 2025
Choe
Sang-HunReporting from Gyeongju, South Korea
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/10/28/us/trump-news-japan#north-korea-kim-missile-trump
North
Korea conducts a missile test ahead of Trump’s visit to South Korea.
North
Korea has yet to respond to President Trump’s repeated offers to meet with its
leader, Kim Jong-un. Instead, it fired missiles off its west coast, the
country’s state media reported on Wednesday.
The
weapons test, conducted on Tuesday, took place a day before Mr. Trump was
scheduled to arrive in South Korea. On Wednesday, he is set to attend an
Asia-Pacific economic forum in the city of Gyeongju.
During
the test, sea-to-surface strategic cruise missiles flew for more than two hours
before striking their target, according to North Korea’s official Korean
Central News Agency.
The
report indicated that the missiles were designed to carry nuclear warheads. Pak
Jong-chon, vice chairman of the Central Military Commission, said that the test
was an important success.
“It is
our responsible mission and duty to ceaselessly toughen the nuclear combat
posture,” Mr. Pak said.
The
launch was North Korea’s second missile test in a week. Last Wednesday, it
fired what it called two hypersonic missiles from Pyongyang, its capital city,
to a target on a plateau in the northeast of the country. The South Korean
military identified them as short-range ballistic missiles.
Although
North Korea has conducted various missile tests in recent years, the latest
test-launch drew attention in part because of its timing.
While on
his first trip to Asia since his return to the White House, Mr. Trump has
repeatedly expressed his eagerness to have a face-to-face meeting with Mr. Kim
again. The two leaders met three times during Mr. Trump’s first term, but their
direct diplomacy did not produce a deal on rolling back North Korea’s nuclear
weapons program or easing international sanctions placed on the country.
“I’d love
to meet with him if he’d like to meet,” Mr. Trump said on Monday, when asked if
he would meet with Mr. Kim. “If he wants to meet, I’ll be in South Korea.”
The last
time the two men met, it took a little more than 30 hours for their governments
to arrange a meeting on the border between North and South Korea. But this
time, North Korea has not responded. It has said it will not reopen dialogue
with Washington unless it is accepted as a nuclear weapons power.
In the
past couple of years, North Korea has drawn closer to Russia. It has supplied
Russia with weapons and troops to aid its war against Ukraine. Moscow has
reciprocated by providing North Korea with food, oil, weapons technologies and
a mutual defense treaty. The deepening ties between North Korea and Russia have
given Mr. Kim more diplomatic leverage in dealing with Washington.
As Mr.
Trump prepared to visit South Korea, Mr. Kim sent his foreign minister, Choe
Son-hui, to Moscow. After she met with her Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov,
on Monday, the two nations issued a press statement reaffirming “their will to
accelerate the multifaceted development of the bilateral relations.”


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário