North Korea fired what appears to be a long-range ballistic missile on Wednesday. The
following is a chronology of the North's major missile provocations.
― Aug. 31, 1998: North Korea fires off its first ballistic missile, the Unha-1, also known as the Taepodong-1, from the launch site of Musudan-ri in North Hamgyong Province.
― July 5, 2006: North Korea test-fires an advanced version of the Taepodong-2 missile at the Musudan-ri launch site.
― April 5, 2009: North Korea launches the Unha-2 rocket at the Musudan-ri launch site with the attendance of leader Kim Jong-il and his son, Kim Jong-un.
― April 13, 2012: North Korea fires off a long-range rocket, the Unha-3, from the Dongchang-ri launch site in North Pyongan Province. But the rocket crashes in pieces into the sea shortly after takeoff.
― Dec. 1, 2012: North Korea says it will launch a working satellite, the Kwangmyongsong-3, on the carrier rocket Unha-3, between Dec. 10 and 22.
― Dec. 10, 2012: North Korea extends the rocket launch window until Dec. 29, citing technical problems in the first-stage control engine module.
― Dec. 12, 2012: North Korea launches a long-range rocket from the Dongchang-ri launch site in North Pyongan Province.
― May 8, 2015: North Korea for the first time tests a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), dubbed KN-11. Seoul said that it was more of a test for the ejection rather than firing.
― Nov. 28, 2015: North Korea fires off an SLBM in the East Sea, but Seoul views the test as a failure.
― Dec. 21, 2015: South Korea's military says North Korea conducted another SLBM test in December, but the test ended in failure. The Washington Free Beacon reported that North Korea succeeded in the underwater test of a KN-11 missile near the eastern port of Sinpo on Dec. 21, citing unidentified U.S. defense officials.
― Feb. 2, 2016: North Korea notifies U.N. agencies of its plan to launch a satellite between Feb. 8 and 25.
― Feb. 6, 2016: North Korea informs the International Maritime Organization of its plan to move up the launch date to Feb. 7-14.
― Feb. 7, 2016: North Korea fires a long-range rocket from the Dongchang-ri launch site at around 9:30 a.m. The North claims it has successfully placed a satellite, named Kwangmyongsong-4, into orbit.
― March 18, 2016: North Korea launches what appears to be two mid-range Rodong ballistic missiles from its western province.
― April 15, 2016: North Korea conducts its first test-launch of an intermediate-range Musudan ballistic missile, also known as the BM-25, but the launch ends in failure.
― April 23, 2016: North Korea test-fires an SLBM in the East Sea, which flies only about 30 km
― April 28, 2016: North Korea launches two intermediate-range Musudan ballistic missiles, but the launches end in failure.
― May 31, 2016: North Korea test-fires an intermediate-range Musudan, but the launch ends in failure.
North Korea says it has achieved goal of becoming nuclear state 2017-11-29 14:40 | North Korea
― June 22, 2016: North Korea fires off two intermediate-range Musudan missiles. One missile flies about 400 km, which experts widely view as a success.
― July 9, 2016: North Korea launches an SLBM off its east coast, but Seoul says the missile appears to have exploded at an altitude of some 10 kilometers.
― July 19, 2016: North Korea test-fires two mid-range Rodong missiles and a shorter-range Scud missile.
― Aug. 3, 2016: North Korea fires off two mid-range Rodong ballistic missiles from near the southwestern area. One missile flies about 1,000 km before falling into Japan's exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
― Aug. 24, 2016: North Korea test-fires an SLBM in waters off its east coast towards Japan. The missile flies about 500 km, making it the longest flight by such a missile.
― Oct. 15, 2016: North Korea fires off an intermediate-range Musudan ballistic missile, but it explodes after launch.
― Oct. 20, 2016: North Korea launches what appears to be an intermediate-range Musudan, but the test ends in failure.
― Feb. 12, 2017: North Korea launches a new intermediate-range ballistic missile, Pukguksong-2, into the East Sea. Experts say the country appears to apply technology used in the SLBM to have developed a new missile.
― March 6, 2017: North Korea fires four ballistic missiles from its the Dongchang-ri launch site toward the East Sea.
― March 22, 2017: North Korea launches a missile from its east coast that is presumed to have failed. The type of the missile is not confirmed.
― April 5, 2017: North Korea fires what appears to be a type of KN-15 intermediate-range ballistic missile.
― May 14, 2017: North Korea fires a new mid-to-long-range ballistic missile, the Hwasong-12, from a northwest site. It flies about 700 km before landing in the East Sea.
― May 21, 2017: North Korea fires the ground-to-ground Pukguksong-2 missile, also known as a KN-15. It flies more than 500 km.
― May 27, 2017: North Korea is presumed to have launched a surface-to-air guided missile, believed to be a KN-06, from the eastern region.
― May 29, 2017: North Korea fires what is presumed to be a Scud-type ballistic missile. It flies about 450 km.
― June 8, 2017: North Korea test-fires multiple surface-to-ship cruise missiles.
― July 4, 2017: North Korea launches a ballistic missile from a northwestern province into waters off its east coast. Pyongyang claims that it successfully test-fired an intercontinental ballistic missile and that it reached an altitude of 2,802 kilometers and flew 933 km.
― July 28, 2017: North Korea launches a ballistic missile from the northern province of Jagang into the East Sea.
― Aug. 26, 2017: North Korea fires three short-range ballistic missiles into the East Sea.
― Aug. 29, 2017: North Korea launches a ballistic missile over Japan from a region near Pyongyang. It flies more than 2,700 kmat a maximum altitude of around 550 km.
― Sept. 15, 2017: North Korea fires a ballistic missile over Japan from Pyongyang. It reaches as high as some 770 km and flies around 3,700 km. It marked the first missile launch after the U.N. Security Council implemented fresh sanctions over its sixth nuclear test.
― Nov. 29, 2017: North Korea launches a new long-range ballistic missile, called the Hwasong-15, capable of reaching anywhere in the U.S. mainland. It flied some 960 km, reaching an apogee of around 4,500 km. North Korea then announced its successful launch and declares "completing the state nuclear force." (Yonhap)