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Though President Donald Trump is on a high-profile visit to Asia this week, North …
After repeated tests, North Korea hasn't launched a missile in 56 days. What's going on?
Though President Donald Trump
is on a high-profile visit to Asia this week, North Korea has refrained
from testing another ballistic missile or nuclear bomb, making this the
longest stretch of time since Trump took office that the regime has not
conducted a test.
Is it a sign the administration's approach to North Korea is working,
even as Washington and Pyongyang continue to exchange volleys in a war
of words?
North Korea tested its first missile just 22 days after Trump was
inaugurated on Jan. 20. From March to May, the regime conducted tests
every one to two weeks.
It has been 56 days since North Korea's last test of a ballistic
missile, an intermediate-range KN-17 that flew over the Japanese island
of Hokkaido.
As Trump has made his way through South Korea, Japan and China this week
— touting the strength of U.S. alliances and commanding North Korea to
"not try us" — the regime has remained quiet.
In his address to the South Korean National Assembly this week, Trump directly addressed North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, telling him his weapons are putting his country in "grave danger."
"North Korea is not the paradise your grandfather envisioned. It is a hell that no person deserves," Trump said.
Shortly after that speech, North Korean officials told CNN, "We don't
care about what that mad dog may utter," referring to Trump.
It's a continuation of the war of words, even as the regime's missile
test have noticeably paused — a surprising development, given that North
Korea has often followed verbal sparring with threats and missile
tests.
On Aug. 8, Trump threatened the regime with "fire and fury like the
world has never seen," leading Kim to say he would consider sending
missiles into the waters off the coast of Guam in "mid-August."
Several weeks later, North Korea fired three short-range ballistic missiles not toward Guam but into the Sea of Japan.
In other instances, tests have followed high-profile visits from U.S. officials.
In March the regime tested mobile-launched missiles a week after Secretary of State Rex Tillerson's trip to Asia. In April the North tested a KN-17 missile as Vice President Mike Pence was en route to South Korea.
But there was no test when Secretary of Defense James Mattis traveled through Asia at end of October and none during Trump's current trip — so far.
Jenny Town, the managing editor of 38 North, a website devoted to
analysis of North Korea, said of the country's leaders, "They likely
understand that — unlike visits of high-level officials — to do an ICBM
while the president is in the region is a bigger gamble."
She told ABC News that if Pyongyang conducts a test during or after
Trump's trip, it will likely be with a Hwasong-14, which the U.S. refers
to as the KN-20 — a two-stage intercontinental ballistic missile.
A test would be the 15th ballistic missile test since Trump took office and the first since September.
The Trump administration has said all military options remain on the
table when dealing with the North Korean threat, but top U.S. officials
have consistently emphasized the U.S. is pursuing a diplomatically led
effort, including additional economic pressure.
Trump has at times expressed impatience with that effort, but this week,
he seemed to back away from his "fire and fury" stance, instead
expressing hope for diplomacy.
"I really believe that it makes sense for North Korea to come to the
table and to make a deal," Trump said in a press conference with South
Korean President Moon Jae-in.
"Ultimately, it'll all work out," Trump added.
In the White House briefing room last week, Trump's national security
adviser H.R. McMaster told reporters the administration will wait "a few
months" before reassessing its strategy.
"I think we have to be a little patient here for at least a few months
to see what more we and others can do, including China," McMaster said.
"I don't think we need to reassess our strategy now. I think we have to
give it a couple of months, a few months, and then see what adjustments
we might need to make."
But the administration shouldn't be too quick to praise North Korea's restraint.
Three days after Tillerson said he was "pleased to see that the regime
in Pyongyang has certainly demonstrated some level of restraint that
we've not seen in the past," North Korea fired three short-range
ballistic missiles into the Sea of Japan.
ABC News' Luis Martinez contributed to this report.
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