Kim Jong Un humiliated as missile EXPLODES on launchpad a day after despot boasted North Korea is ‘ready for war’
EDITOR'S NOTE: President Trump is not anything like his predecessor, the pusillanimous Barack Obama. Trump has made numerous references over the past few weeks saying that he will "not allow North Korean aggression". So it's quite interesting that after many recent successful missile test launches, this one explodes mere seconds after launching.
Kim Jong-un suffered stage fright when his latest missile test exploded just seconds after launching. The North Korean tyrant continued his show of sabre-rattling earlier this morning with the latest in a series of ballistic missile tests.
But US military chiefs confirmed Kim's rocket had erupted into a ball of flames moments after take-off.
US commander Dave Benham said: "US Pacific Command detected what we assess was a failed North Korean missile launch attempt.
"A missile appears to have exploded within seconds of launch."
North Korean missile explodes seconds after launch
South Korea confirmed it had also tracked the rocket - just a fortnight after Kim's regime successfully tested four missiles. It responded by launching air force drills with the US over the Korean peninsular this morning.
Its secretive northern neighbour has made no secret of its bid to fit nuclear warheads to missiles capable of reaching the US.
A state official roared that Pyongyang has “the will and capability” for conflict with Donald Trump’s America. He said: “We have the will and capability to fully respond to any war which the US wants.
“If the businessman-turned-US officials thought that they would frighten us, they would soon recognise that their method would not work.”
Snaps from the secretive state’s
recent ballistic missile launches are shown alongside the haunting message: “A knife will be stabbed into the throat of the carrier.”
Neighbours Japan and South Korea are increasingly concerned about Kim's nuclear capabilities, with attack drills held throughout the countries in recent weeks. Meanwhile North Korea's traditional ally China has stepped in to try and ease tensions between Pyongyang and Washington.
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