North Korea displayed a newly developed ballistic missile capable of reaching the US territory of Guam during a massive military parade last week, a news report said yesterday.
The parade in Pyongyang on Wednesday featured three new models, including the medium-range missile that can travel 2,500km to 4,000km, the Chosun Ilbo reported.
The report cited an unidentified South Korean government official familiar with an analysis of US satellite images.
"All three [new] models are ground-to-ground missiles," the official was quoted as saying. "Of them, the medium-range ballistic missile is noteworthy as it ... has Guam in its range."
The Defense Ministry said it has no comment.
North Korea's missile development has been a constant concern to the region, along with its pursuit of nuclear weapons.
The regime test-fired a series of missiles in July last year, including its latest long-range model, known abroad as the Taepodong-2, which experts believe could reach parts of the US.
Pyongyang rattled the world again in October by conducting its first-ever test of a nuclear device. However, experts believe it does not have a bomb design advanced enough to be placed on a missile.
Kim Tae-woo, a top missile specialist at South Korea's state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses, said the North has been believed in recent years to be developing a brand new missile, separate from its Nodong or Taepodong missile series.
"Personally, I was thinking that it was about the time for the North to show it off," Kim said.
Wednesday's parade, which showcased 52 missiles, was reviewed by the North's leader Kim Jong-il.
"By disclosing its newest missiles in large numbers this time, North Korea showed off that its strategic weapons are centered on nuclear weapons and their means of delivery," the paper quoted a military official as saying.
The parade marked the 75th anniversary of the country's military, which dates its origin to resistance movements against Japan's occupation of the Korean Peninsula before its liberation and division after World War II.
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