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South Korea says North Korean launch of possible hypersonic missile failed mid-flight

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South Korea’s military on Wednesday said its northern neighbors launched an alleged hypersonic missile that exploded mid-flight. 

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said North Korea launched the missile around 5:30 a.m., and it traveled off the North’s east coast before blowing up. 

The weapon was a suspected solid-fueled hypersonic missile, and the launch generated more smoke than normal launches, likely because of an engine fault, the Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters.

Contrails believed to be created by a North Korean missile are observed off Yeonpyeong Island, South Korea, on Wednesday.  (Kim Do-hoon/Yonhap via AP)

Senior diplomats from South Korea, the U.S. and Japan condemned the missile launch as a violation of U.N. resolutions, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said.

The failed missile tests come as the rival Koreas have been engaging in Cold War-style psychological warfare tactics, including using balloons and loudspeaker broadcasts, irking the other side. 

SOUTH KOREA SLAMS NORTH KOREA’S TRASH BALLOON TACTICS, THREATENS RETURN OF LOUDSPEAKER BROADCASTS

South Korea said Wednesday evening that the North had flown balloons carrying trash across the border for a third day in a row. Previous launches dropped manure, cigarette butts, waste batteries, and scraps of cloth in South Korea.

The balloon launches forced South Korea’s Incheon International Airport — about an hour’s drive from the border — to suspend takeoffs and landings for at least three hours early Wednesday, according to South Korean aviation authorities.

North Korea has said the balloons are in response to the South launching its own balloons across the North that carried political leaflets. 

south koreans watch broadcast of missile launch on television

People watch a news program broadcasting a file image of a missile launch by North Korea, at Seoul Railway Station in Seoul, South Korea, on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

Earlier this month, South Korea conducted propaganda broadcasts from loudspeakers along the border for the first time in years in response to the North Korean balloons. South Korea’s military said Monday it is ready to turn on its loudspeakers again.

16 CONFIRMED DEAD, OTHERS MISSING AFTER FIRE BREAKS OUT AT LITHIUM BATTERY FACTORY IN SOUTH KOREA

Later Wednesday, South Korea and the U.S. flew 30 advanced fighter jets as part of joint drills.

The aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt arrived in South Korea on Saturday, and North Korean Vice Defense Minister Kim Kang Il on Monday called its deployment «reckless» and «dangerous.» 

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol visited the vessel on Tuesday. Yoon told American and South Korean forces on the carrier that their countries’ alliance is the world’s greatest and can defeat any enemy. He said the U.S. carrier would depart Wednesday for the South Korea-U.S.-Japan drill, dubbed «Freedom Edge.»

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, third from left, boards the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier at the South Korean naval base in Busan, South Korea, on Tuesday.  (South Korean Presidential Office/Yonhap via AP)

South Korean officials said the training aims to strengthen the three countries’ capability to respond to North Korea’s evolving nuclear threats at a time when the North is advancing its military partnership with Russia.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin met last week for a summit in Pyongyang where they signed a deal strengthening military and economic ties. 

North Korea’s missile launch on Wednesday was its first weapons demonstration since Kim Jong Un last month supervised the firing of nuclear-capable multiple rocket launchers to simulate a preemptive attack on South Korea.

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Since 2022, North Korea has sharply increased its weapons tests to boost its nuclear attack capabilities in response to what it calls a deepening U.S. military threat.

The North has long regarded the South’s joint military exercises with the U.S. as a dress rehearsal for invasion. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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French election preview: Polls show right-wing party leads runoff as opponents urge tactical voting

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France is set to elect the right-wing National Rally (RN) as the largest party in government, yet no party may emerge with a clear majority in this tightly contested election as the second round of voting kicks off this weekend. 

The first round, which occurred June 30, resulted in just 76 of the 577 constituencies in the French National Assembly determining their representative. Any candidate who did not receive an outright majority in the first round of voting heads on to the second-round runoff, which is set for July 7.

Those few contests that concluded in the first round revealed a lot about voter sentiment and indicated trouble for the current government after RN took one-third of the vote, the most by any party.

The current government is an «ensemble,» a coalition of parties, including French President Emmanuel Macron’s Renaissance (RE), Democratic Movement, Horizons, En Commun and the Progressive federation. Despite the assembly election results, Macron will retain his mandate as president until the 2027 election. 

FRANCE’S RIGHT-WING NATIONAL RALLY LOOKS TO SEIZE ON RECENT ELECTORAL GAINS

Macron called the snap election after RN scored enormous success in the European Parliamentary elections in June. Polling before the first round of voting indicated RN would continue to dominate, but more recent polling ahead of the runoff indicates those returns have diminished and RN will fall short of a clear majority. 

Wednesday’s poll indicates RN will end up taking between 190 and 220 seats, but it would need 289 seats to control the assembly, according to Reuters. Additionally, its closest ally, the Republicans, are projected to win – at most – around 50 seats, ruling out some kind of right-wing coalition to take control of the assembly.

Supporters of French far-right leader Marine Le Pen react after the release of projections based on the actual vote count in select constituencies June 30, 2024, in Hénin-Beaumont, northern France.  (AP/Thibault Camus)

The next largest share would go to the New Popular Front alliance, which could net between 159 and 183 seats, leaving Macron’s ensemble third with around 110 to 135 seats. Macron has already ruled out making a new alliance with the left-wing party France Unbowed (LFI), according to French daily Le Figaro.

Many candidates from Macron’s alliance who reached the runoff have already stood down in an effort to focus voters and support behind the strongest non-RN candidate in any given constituency. Former French Prime Minister Edouard Phillippe told French network TF1 TV he would vote for a Communist candidate to stop RN from winning the seat. 

FRANCE’S GOVERNMENT SPOKESPERSON IS ATTACKED ON CAMPAIGN TRAIL, DAYS BEFORE DECISIVE ELECTION

Macron insisted, however, that «withdrawing today for left-wing elected officials in the face of National Rally does not mean governing tomorrow with LFI.»

French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal last month blasted LFI as equally extreme and just as dangerous to French society as RN, writing on social media platform X that «Insoumise France fuels the National Rally and the National Rally fuels Insoumise France.

Marine Le Pen

French President Emmanuel Macron, right, meets French far-right National Rally leader Marine Le Pen at Élysée Palace June 21, 2022, in Paris. (Ludovic Marin/Pool/AP)

«They fuel hatred, fears and divisions between the French,» Attal added. «On June 30 and July 7, against the extremes and for the Republic, vote!» 

Opposition to RN stems from its roots as National Front, headed up by Marine Le Pen’s father Jean-Marie Le Pen, who was repeatedly convicted for racist and antisemitic remarks, including elements of Holocaust denial, such as when he referred to Nazi gas chambers as a «detail» of history.

RIVALS MOVE TO BLOCK FRANCE’S RIGHT-WING NATIONAL PARTY’S ELECTION MOMENTUM

But Marine Le Pen has found support among some of France’s Jewish voters as antisemitism continues to grow in Europe.

Her anti-Islam views and comments, however, have raised concerns among other voters, as well. In 2017, she suggested France expel any foreigners convicted of a crime or suspected of being radicalized and said convicted extremists with dual nationality should be stripped of their French passports, Radio France Internationale reported. 

«The measures that I want to put in place would mean that many of these people (Islamist attackers) would not have been on our territory or living freely,» she said in an interview with BFM TV. 

Macron and Attal at national tribute

French President Emmanuel Macron and French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal during the national tribute ceremony for former French Justice Minister Robert Badinter at Place Vendome Feb. 14, 2024, in Paris.  (Christian Liewig/Corbis/Getty Images)

In the event the votes should fall as the polls predict, the most likely outcome for France will be a hung parliament with some kind of begrudging alliance created to get a leader in place. The Conservative Party in Britain regained power from Labour in 2010 through a hung parliament alliance with the Liberal-Democrats, ultimately establishing an outright majority in the following election.

But, at that time, the Conservatives had 306 of 650 seats, making it far easier to broker such a deal. For France, RN would need support from two other parties or would need to form some kind of alliance with a direct rival. 

The government has urged voters to do what they can to continue diminishing RN’s chances of achieving control of the assembly, with Attal arguing voters had a «responsibility» to block RN from victory. 

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«On Sunday evening, what’s at stake in the second round is to do everything so the extreme right does not have an absolute majority,» Attal said during an appearance on France Inter radio as reported by Voice of America.

«It is not nice for some French to have to block … by using a vote that they did not want to,» he added, clarifying that he «did not speak about a coalition. I do not want to impose on the French a coalition they did not choose.» 


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