North Korea confirmed it had fired Hwasong-12 “middle class ballistic missiles”, the country’s media reported Monday, the first time he tested strong weapons since 2017.

The Seoul military said it had detected week launches from intermediary ballistic missiles – Pyongyang’s seventh weapon test in January.

North Korea never tested many of these missiles in a month of calendar before and last week threatened to leave the moratorium imposed on almost five years to test long-term and nuclear weapons, blame our “hostile” policy to force hands.

“The medium-to-long-to-long-term and long-term hwasong fire evaluation test ranges on Sunday,” the official Korean Central Central News Agency.

The test “confirms accuracy, security, and the effectiveness of the operation of the 12-type Hwasong weapons system under production,” added KCNA.

KCNA said this test was carried out using the “highest angle launch system” to ensure the security of neighboring countries, and that its citizens brought a camera that took photos while in space.

With peace peace with Washington traffic jam, North Korea has doubled in the oath of the leader of Kim Jong Un to modernize the armed forces of the regime, flexing the pyongyang military muscles despite biting international sanctions.

South Korea said Sunday that North Korea seemed to follow “a similar pattern” until 2017 – when the last tension at the point of solving on the peninsula – Pyongyang warnings could immediately restart nuclear and intercontinental missile tests.

The last time Pyongyang tested medium-range missiles was Hwasong-12 in 2017, which analysts said at that time were strong enough to place the US Guam region within reach.

The launch rope in 2022 came at a complicated time in the region, with the only main Ally Kim China would host the winter Olympics next month and South Korea prepared for the presidential election in March.